In 1994, writer-director Kevin Smith scored a surprise indie hit with the low-budget, black-and-white CLERKS, which won awards at the Sundance and Cannes Film Festivals and has attracted a growing cult audience over the years. Following such movies as MALLRATS, CHASING AMY, and DOGMA, Smith returns to his roots for CLERKS II, a very funny, very raunchy sequel. It's been more than 10 years, but Dante Hicks (Brian O'Halloran) and Randal Graves (Jeff Anderson) are still working at the same Quick Stop video and convenience store in New Jersey--until it burns down. They both end up finding jobs at the nearby Mooby's, a fast-food joint (with the motto "I'm Eating It!") managed by Becky (Rosario Dawson). While Dante gets prepared to move to Florida to marry Emma (Smith's real-life wife, Jennifer Schwalbach), Randal harasses geeky "Funployee of the Month" Elias (Trevor Fehrman), a dweeb who worships the Transformers and believes, much to Randal's consternation, that THE LORD OF THE RINGS is superior to STAR WARS. Also back are Jay (Jason Mewes) and Silent Bob (Smith), who contribute their own warped world view of sex, drugs, and rock & roll. The film features a string of cameos by familiar faces from other Smith films, including Jason Lee, Ben Affleck, Walter Flanagan, and producer Scott Mosier, as well as Kevin Weisman (ALIAS), Ethan Suplee (MY NAME IS EARL), and Wanda Sykes (CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM); and the excellent soundtrack ranges from Talking Heads and the Smashing Pumpkins to King Diamond and Smith vet Alanis Morissette. And beware the donkey.
Theatrical Release: July 21, 2006
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Full Frame - 1.33
Widescreen - 1.85
Audio:
Closed Captioned - English
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround Sound - English
Additional Release Material:
Trailers
Deleted Scenes & Outtakes
Audio Commentary: Feature Commentary with the Filmmakers and Actors
Featurette:
1. "Train Wrecks: A Production Video Diary"
2. "Back to the Well: Making Clerks II"
3. "The Donkey Show Extended"
4. "The Dance Sequence"
Text/Photo Galleries:
MySpace Credits
Stars
Brian O'Halloran:
Jeff Anderson: Actor
Rosario Dawson: Actress
Jason Mewes: American actor, CLERKS
Kevin Smith: Writer/Director, CLERKS, DOGMA
Ben Affleck: Oscar-winning actor/screenwriter, GOOD WILL HUNTING
Jason Lee: American actor, MALLRATS/My Name is Earl
Wanda Sykes: Actress, THE NEW ADVENTURES OF OLD CHRISTINE
Earthquake: African-American Comedian
Kevin Weisman: Actor, ALIAS
Walter Flanagan: Actor, CLERKS II (2006)
Ethan Suplee: American actor, MALLRATS/REMEMBER THE TITANS
Director
Kevin Smith: Writer/Director, CLERKS, DOGMA
Producer
Scott Mosier: Producer, Kevin Smith's Partner
Bob Weinstein: Prod./Screenwriter/Director
Harvey Weinstein: Film producer
Carla Gardini: Producer, CLERKS II (2006)
Screenwriter
Kevin Smith: Writer/Director, CLERKS, DOGMA
Composer
James Venable: Composer, POWERPUFF GIRLS MOVIE (2002)
Editor
Kevin Smith: Writer/Director, CLERKS, DOGMA
Director of Photography
David Klein: Director of photography
Production Designer
Robert "Ratface" Holtzman: Production Designer, CLERKS II (2006)
Costume Designer
Roseanne Fiedler: Costume Designer, CLERKS II (2006)
Review 1:
"[A]n agreeable mischievous romp....[With] great gushing geysers of talk, much of it prickly and obscene and hilarious and, in that Kevin Smith way, so smart about being stupid that the characters' verbosity becomes, in every sense, their saving grace."
Source: Entertainment Weekly
p.44 07/28/2006
Review 2:
"[W]hat makes CLERKS II both winning and moving is its fidelity to the original CLERKS ethic of hanging out, talking trash and refusing all worldly ambition."
Source: New York Times
p.E8 07/21/2006
Review 3:
"Rosario Dawson brings plenty of charm to her role..."
Source: Sight and Sound
p.85 07/01/2007
Review 4:
5 stars out of 5 -- "[I]t is funny. Hilariously, hernia-inducingly funny....It's also surprisingly touching..."
Source: Total Film
p.39 10/01/2006
Review 5:
4 stars out of 4 -- "Smith's directing style remains basic, but he has an unusual flair for balancing slushy all-American sentiments with relentless jokes..."
Source: Uncut
p.153 10/01/2006