Norman Brownbutter
ask him about his bath time mishap
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2020
- Messages
- 1,668
Clerks and Mallrats are a couple of 90s staples for me. Clerks II was great too. Hoping this one lives up to the legacy.
OMFG! Jesus - please let this be good
Clerks and Mallrats are a couple of 90s staples for me. Clerks II was great too. Hoping this one lives up to the legacy.
Me too - adored the first one, had the limited edition DVD. Adored it so much and actually enjoyed the second one.I'm very conflicted on this.
It does.Looks like dog shit.
It’s going to be comedy where the main joke is about how everything these days is a remake including this very movie! Because irony and self aware = funny.It does.
Chasing Amy is another one that looks like the ramblings of a bigoted insane personAnd talking about dated, boy, Mall-rats has not aged well at all. Felt embarrassed watching it.
I've listened to many of his interviews and he comes across well and informed but his films just don't do it for me. Too many referential inside jokes and he really bangs the drum for nerd culture in his films, so much so that it gets really nauseating even for a nerd like me.It’s going to be comedy where the main joke is about how everything these days is a remake including this very movie! Because irony and self aware = funny.
I’m sure Smith is a nice guy but everything after the first Clerks has been very stupid and his recent films are just lazy cash grabs. We can see the makeup on the actors faces ffs.
Chasing Amy is another one that looks like the ramblings of a bigoted insane person
Yep.Looks like dog shit.
I had to unfollow him on twitter a while ago because he couldn't stop banging on about "oh I'm vegan, I used to be soooo fat! Everyone should listen to me over and over about that!".All of Kevin Smith’s movies have dated horrendously. Possibly worse than anything else from that period of 90s slacker Americana (and most of that has dated badly)
He’s a great public speaker though. Way more interesting than his films, where he doesn’t need to fit these long unwieldy anecdotes about his life and stuff he likes into a believable conversation or coherent story