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Jay
and Silent Bob Strike Back
I believe the New
York Times called Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back
the perfect movie for 14 year-olds, and the 14 year-old in me
(don’t say it) agrees wholeheartedly. Jay & Silent Bob is unbelievably juvenile.
Fart jokes, dick jokes, gay jokes, drug jokes, and hot
chicks in leather. What’s
not to love? It
may also have taken the crown from South Park: Bigger,
Longer and Uncut for most profanity used in a movie.
And like that movie, it’s explosively funny, though
not as funny as South Park was.
The plot (a better
word might be “setup”) starts with Jay and Silent Bob
(Jason Mewes and director Kevin Smith, the Gromit to Mewes’
Wallace) discovering that their “friend” Banky (Jason Lee)
has sold the rights to the comic book Bluntman & Chronic,
which was more or less the story of Jay and Silent Bob’s
lives, to Miramax. Jay
and Silent Bob are horrified that they didn’t get paid for
the sale of those rights like they were supposed to, but
they’re even madder about the fact that all of these
nameless Internet movie geeks (again, don’t say it) are
trashing their name. Guided
by their infallible logic, they decide to go to Hollywood and
stop the movie. It
would be unfair to say more.
I think this movie
served two purposes for Smith.
First off, it allowed him to kill the View Askew
universe off for good, and that’s probably not a bad idea.
Secondly, and this point is much more obvious than the
first one, it gave Smith a platform to thumb his nose at
multiple projects either recently inflicted upon us moviegoers
or on their way to a googleplex near you in the
not-too-distant future. (Miramax, which distributed Jay &
Silent Bob through their Dimension branch, took more hits than
anyone) This may
not make him many friends at the rival studios, but perhaps
it’ll make Warners think twice about that ridiculous live
action Scooby Doo movie they’re making.
Shelve it, guys, I’m begging you.
The movie is not
perfect, though. Jay and Silent Bob were my favorite parts of the first three
View Askew movies (Clerks, Mallrats and Chasing
Amy), but that’s because they were supporting
characters. The more they came into the spotlight (Dogma), the
less funny they became. Too
much of a good thing is a bad thing, I suppose.
There were a few references to older movies that could
have been better chosen (there was one very subtle Fugitive
reference, one blatant one).
I loved the cameos, however.
You name it, they’re in it, or at least they’re
made fun of in it.
Jay &
Silent Bob Strike Back is, for better and for worse, a
typical Kevin Smith movie.
If he could just shake the Farrelly Brother in him and
stick with the higher brow stuff, he’d make something truly
brilliant. As it
is, he’s making movies for 14 year-olds like me, and
that’s not so bad. But
he can do better.
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