Posts Tagged ‘Ben Affleck’
Good
Despite the trailer showing a little too much of the movie, The Kids Are All Right looks like it’s going to be a fun movie to watch. It stars Julianne Moore and Annette Bening as a lesbian couple that, years ago, decided to have kids thanks to some donated sperm. It’s now over 18 years later and the biological father, Mark Ruffalo, come back into the picture.
Kids premiered at the 2010 Sundance Film Festival and was a quite the hit. Distribution rights were purchased by Focus Features for $4.8 million, a record high for the festival. It has already secured a solid July 7, 2010 US release date and looks to be the go-to feel good movie of the summer. Looking forward to its counter-programming against the mindless explosions and senseless violence (which I also like) of the summer’s other features.
Bad
One of my favorite comics of all time is Preacher, written by Garth Ennis with beautiful painted covers by Glenn Fabry. What’s not to like about this series? It’s got a pissed-off preacher, his hitwoman girlfriend and an Irish vampire trying to find God so they can kick his ass. Throw in gratuitous, graphic violence and you’ve got gold. When I got rid of most of my comic collection (quite the pain to move), I pretty much only kept my Preacher comics. The first time I heard that they were considering making a movie about it, was back in 1996 when I first moved to British Columbia, with Ben Affleck potentially in the titular role.
I know that HBO has been trying to get a TV series into production as well, but it looks like the movie version has been dealt another blow. An interview on Collider.com with producer Neal Moritz spills the beans on what’s going on.
We now have a terrific script that John August wrote. We were originally talking with Sam Mendes about doing the movie. Sam Mendes is going to go off and do the Bond movie, so there’s another director that we’re talking to right now.
Now why do I have this in BAD if this looks like it might actually be happening? Because I’ve been sold that line before. Until I see the trailer and there’s an actual release date, this will remain vapor.
Ugly

Looks like there’s yet another set back for I Love You Phillip Morris. After being well-received at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival, it’s been a tough road. After failing to find a distributor, most likely due to the gay themes, it was re-edited and was finally picked up by Consolidated Pictures Group.
The film, starring Jim Carrey as a conman who falls in love with his cellmate in prison, Ewan McGregor. After pushing the release date from February 14, to March 26, then to April 30, Consolidated has decided to cancel that.
Now a spokeswoman for the film confirms that the movie has been delayed again and in fact won’t be coming out at the end of the month. She adds that there is no release date scheduled at this time.
Take a look at the trailer… you’ll see that it’s been sanitized for your viewing pleasure compared to the European version.
The crazy thing is that I Love You Phillip Morris has already been released overseas. I have no doubt that we’ll be able to get uncut European versions of the DVD/Blu Ray before this movie sees a release to the silver screen here in North America.
-Mark
The urge to jump onto a new video format is pretty easy to resist, especially when the standard is not only serviceable, but ubiquitous. DVD is everywhere – in our living rooms, bedrooms, computers and cars. The picture quality is solid, especially when compared to VHS, which DVD stomped to a painful death. It’s reign as undisputed king of video was hardly the dynasty of its predecessor before HD was being touted as the next big thing. The format war between HD-DVD and Blu-Ray was at best uninteresting due to most homes being completely unprepared for it, and consumers oblivious to the revolution.
Even when the dust settled and Blu-Ray was crowned HD Champ, I was still not interested. I had an HD TV, but I also had an up-scaling DVD player, and a shit-ton of disks. What did Blu-Ray have to offer that what I had wasn’t already comparable to? Eventually studios wised up and floated the bait I could not resist… Exclusive Content.
They got me once before like this… Laserdisc! I won’t admit here what the tipping-title to that format was, but suffice is to say I owned a Laserdisc Player for one title, and ended up with a handful more before DVD came along and signed the death warrant for that format as well. DVD was an easy sell to me, and on the first week of the hardware release, I owned a $1000 DVD player! DVDs delivered on their promise of exclusive content right out of the gate, and finally Blu-Ray has caught on that content is king as well.
It was on the News Askew site that my interest for the format was piqued. News was breaking that Smith’s early catalogue titles were being tricked out for their Blu-Ray release and that the new content would be exclusive to the format.
Cut to me at Electronics Boutique buying a PS3.
So at last the disks that made me surrender to the Blu Side have arrived in stores. Now begs the question, was it worth it? Lets take a look at what I had VS what I got…
Clerks
Original DVD Release
Released in 1999, this first release of the film was a decent package with very good extras. The fact that it was a widescreen version didn’t matter very much as everyone had a standard 4×3 TV, but playback on some equipment now with a 16×9 set will result in black bars all around the picture – most of the Disney releases at this time are formatted like this; who knew then what a pain in the ass it would become.
Special features on the Disc:
- Audio Commentary with Kevin Smith and members of the cast and crew
- Deleted Scenes with Introduction by Kevin Smith
- Alternate Ending
- Soul Asylum Music Video
- Theatrical Trailer
Clerks X
This 3 Disk collection of the film, released in September, 2004, included the original theatrical version of the film as well as “Clerks: The First Cut”, the version of the film before it was sold to Miramax and ran theatrically. This cut includes its own newly recorded commentary track with Kevin Smith, Scott Mosier, Brian O’Halloran, Jeff Anderson and Jason Mewes. The deleted scenes and alternate ending are restored in “The First Cut” and are thus are not separated as they were in the original release, but otherwise all of the special features were brought back for this 16×9 anamorphic release. Oh, but that is not all… The release also includes the feature length documentary “Snowball Effect: The Story of Clerks,” about the making of “Clerks”. Other Special Features Include:
- An "enhanced playback track" featuring trivia subtitles and title card descriptions.
- "Clerks: The Lost Scene" animated short. This scene was originally written in the screenplay for the film but was never shot. For the DVD, the scene was animated in the same style as Clerks: The Animated Series. The scene can be presented in two different ways.
- The DVD also presents the owner with the ability to play the theatrical cut of the film with the animated scene as if it were part of the feature.
- ”The Flying Car”, a short film featuring Dante and Randal with an introduction from Kevin Smith.
- A series of short television ads that MTV commissioned from Kevin Smith featuring Jay and Silent Bob.
- An original film trailer for the film edited by Matthew Cohen with a brief introduction from Kevin Smith.
- Three short featurettes about the restoration process used to recreate the feature film for the Clerks X DVD.
- Original auditions for the film featuring Brian O’Halloran, Jeff Anderson, Marilyn Ghigliotti, and Ernest O’Donnell. The auditions are introduced by Kevin Smith and Scott Mosier.
- DVD-ROM features.
- “Mae Day: The Crumbling of a Documentary”, a short student film that Kevin Smith and Scott Mosier made during their time at film school. It comes with an introduction by Kevin Smith and Scott Mosier.
- 10th Anniversary Q&A session with Kevin Smith, David Klein, Scott Mosier, Marilyn Ghigliotti, Jason Mewes, Jeff Anderson and Brian O’Halloran.
- 13 deleted scenes and outtakes from "Snowball Effect"
- A still photo gallery of over 50 photographs and production images from Clerks as well as early photos of crew and cast members.
- Two collections of journal entries written by Smith. The first entries were written before finishing Clerks and the second were written while Kevin took the film to Sundance Film Festival.
- Eight articles and reviews about the film.
This is am amazing, comprehensive set that exemplifies how DVD can be done right, giving fans everything they could possibly want!
Clerks 15th Anniversary Edition (Blu-Ray)
This is, by Smith’s own admission, essentially just a format upgrade of “Clerks X” (and more money in his pocket). However, as a concession, Smith offers a 90 minute cut of “Oh! What a Lovely Tea Party,” a documentary about the making of “Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back,” directed by his wife Jennifer Schwalbach Smith. There is a three hour version of this out there somewhere, so i feel another dip coming… but likely for “Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back”
Chasing Amy
Criterion Collection
Disney/Miramax never gave “Chasing Amy” a Region One digital release before Criterion released their ported-from-laserdisc edition in 2000. Smith was initially a major laserdisc supporter, resisting the new DVD format and even saying in the commentary “Fuck DVD!” – a statement he humorously addresses in the introduction to the DVD. He is joined by Scott Mosier, Ben Affleck, Jason Mewes, Robert Hawk, Jon Gordon and Vincent Pereira on the commentary. Other features include:
- Ten Deleted Scenes
- Out-takes
- Trailer
- Special video introductions from the cast and crew
- The Askewniverse Legend – a guide to the characters in the (at the time) “New Jersey Trilogy”
Chasing Amy (Blu-Ray)
Since all the original special features of the Criterion release are owned by Criterion, this Disney/Miramax release had to go to the well to find all new features… and they took a BIG bucket! The 81 minute documentary “Tracing Amy” is a great addition to the disc and really nice retrospective on the making of the film. If you are a follower of Smith, you will know much of this information already, but it’s nice to have the variety of perspectives cooberate the story. “Was it Something I Said?” is a really nice 18 minute conversation between Kevin Smith and Joey Lauren Adams about how they tried to balance their personal relationship with their working relationship, and the effects and aftermath of the films success and conclusion of their relationship. There is also a 28 minute Q&A with Kevin and the cast. The obligatory trailer and deleted scenes and outtakes are all included here as well, Sadly, the disks weakest point is the new commentary; recorded as a SModcast, Kevin Smith and Scott Mosier revisit the film in the tangential manner they do on their podcast, which is amusing, but ultimately not what I am looking for in a commentary.
Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back
Collector’s Series DVD
Following it’s 2001 Theatrical Run, Disney/Miramax (Dimension) released this super-packed Collector’s Series edition in Early 2002. Jay & Silent Bob headline this hilarious comedy that was made directly for fans of Smith’s Askewniverse as characters from “Clerks”, “Mallrats”, “Dogma” and “Chasing Amy” all appear throughout the film. The DVD release continues to cater to fans with the following features:
- Commentary with Kevin Smith, Jason Mewes and Scott Mosier
- An hour and a half of deleted scenes with introductions from Kevin Smith, Jason Mewes, Jennifer Schwalbach, Harley Smith, Scott Mosier & Walt Flannigan
- Gag Reel
- Still Galleries
- 2 Internet Trailers
- 6 TV Spots
- 13 minute Behind the Scenes Featurette
- Morris Day and the Time: Learnin’ the Moves
- A Guide to Morris Day & the Time
- 2 music videos: Afro Man “I Got High” & Stroke 9 “Kick Some Ass”
- Comedy Central’s Reel Comedy: Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back (22 minutes)
- Cast & Crew Filmographies
- Storyboards
- DVD-ROM materials, Open Mic Commentary, Screenplay Viewer, Cast and Crew Filmographies, Guide to Morris Day and the Time and Web Links
Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back (Blu-Ray)
What-the-huh?!? Bucking the trend of adding some new original content to the Blu-Ray releases, Disney/Miramax instead here drop the ball, stumble, chase after it, kick it, follow it out into the street, and get hit by a bus. Seriously, all that is here for special features is the DVD commentary ported over from the feature rich DVD. Seriously! That’s IT!
SO, in the end, is the upgrade from DVD to Blu-Ray worth it (or in my case, purchasing a Blu-Ray player in preparation for it’s release)? Well, let’s first go title-by-title…
While Smith inclusion of the “Oh! What a Lovely Tea Party” documentary as new content to the “Clerks” Blu-Ray as it’s sole new content is appreciated, it feels out of place on this disk. Furthermore, knowing there is a cut of it that is double the running time makes this seem more like a teaser for a future release. The advents of Blu-Ray can really do nothing but draw attention to the technical flaws of the film, so that is not a big booster for this release either. Really, if you already own the “Clerks X” DVD, you are pretty much good, making this particular upgrade BAD. However, having the the 3 disk collection on a single disk is a sweet perk (no having to swap out disks to enjoy all the supplement material! Yay!)
“Chasing Amy” fairs better in the supplements department, especially the “Tracing Amy” and “Was It Something I Said” features. The SModcast commentary though, is lacking, and it would have been great to have Joey Lauren Adams participate in it since she was glaringly absent in the Criterion commentary. The film looks great though, and I would want this as a supplement to the Criterion DVD anyhow, so I would still call this a GOOD upgrade even thought I feel the DVD is still an essential disk in it’s own right.
To be fair, the “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back” Blu-Ray was not released for this collection, but in fact was released in September of 2006. This does not however excuse that hours of features were stripped away to make the release just a tit-hair above a bare-bones release. This is just UGLY, and if you own the Collector’s Series DVD, hang onto it!
Overall, “The Kevin Smith 3-Movie Collection” is a disappointment for owners of previous DVD releases. I understand that having a complete Askewniverse collection is a near impossibility, what with Universal owning “Mallrats”, and Sony having rights to “Dogma” (Lionsgate in Canada), but, c’mon! Where is “Clerks II”? Or if you really wanted to trick this bitch out, “Clerks: The Animated Series”? This is box set built around one solid release, a format release, and a rip-off, which averages out to BAD.





