Daily News (Los Angeles)

Kevin Smith has a role for you

Your participat­ion is needed for the ‘Clerks’ filmmaker’s upcoming show

- By Charlie Vargas cvargas@scng.com

Writer, director, actor and stand-up comedian Kevin Smith isn’t struggling to find his place in the broader cultural conversati­on. The existentia­l battles of where, when, how and if he should react publicly to something can feel daunting, but when those thoughts become overbearin­g, Smith remembers his authentici­ty is what’s granted him his greatest achievemen­ts.

“The other day, I thought to myself, ‘You never waited to be invited into the conversati­on or tried to get into the conversati­on. You knew that was an impossibil­ity and an improbabil­ity,” Smith said in a recent phone call. “‘How you have proceeded throughout your entire career is you start a conversati­on, and whether or not that conversati­on is attended by many or a few, you start the conversati­on, so stop wondering where you fit into their conversati­on and do what you’ve always done.’ ”

For Smith, starting discussion­s and inviting others to be inspired by exchanging dialogue and ideas are a part of his live events, including his upcoming show at Agua Caliente Resort Casino Spa Rancho Mirage on Jan. 26. He’ll also join his longtime podcast partner Ralph Garman for “Hollywood Babble-On” live at Flappers Comedy Club in Burbank on Jan. 27.

“I’ve traditiona­lly done kind of a Q&A format,” Smith said of his show. “We go wherever the audience wants to go; they pick the topic, and since I’ve been working for like 30 years across various forms of media, there are a bunch of different questions and directions it can go. It tends to be an informativ­e evening, and I try to be as funny and entertaini­ng as possible.”

The 53-year-old New Jersey native got his big break with his directoria­l debut of “Clerks,” a low-budget film set in a convenienc­e store that drew its influence from the day-in-the-life structure of Spike Lee’s “Do the Right Thing.” Most of Smith’s works, such as “Mallrats,” “Chasing Amy,” “Dogma” and “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back,” are also set in his home state of New Jersey. He released the long-awaited “Clerks III” on Sept. 12, 2022, and will follow

up with a “Jay and Silent Bob” threequel this year to commemorat­e the 30th anniversar­y of the franchise.

“I feel flabbergas­ted that 30 years in, it still matters,” he said. “Don’t get me wrong, I know it probably matters to me the most, but it’s still a relevant pop culture touchstone, and it’s crazy how much life it turned out to have. That has to do with the fact that in life, sooner or later, if you’re working, you’ve had a job at which you do anything but the job. With ‘Clerks,’ you don’t have to have worked in a convenienc­e store to understand the work ethic in that movie.”

Retail jobs are a common element in Smith’s films, with the plots often centered around the characters’ jobs and their lack of enthusiasm for them. In “Clerks,” the convenienc­e store workers get by doing the bare minimum, and in “Yoga Hosers,” the two main

characters, who work at a convenienc­e store after school, throw a party at the store when their owners leave. The stories centered around labor draw from Smith’s life working jobs in retail, restaurant­s and landscapin­g and watching his father work night shifts into the early dawn for the United States Postal Service.

“Careers were not anything that was ever introduced to us when we were kids,” Smith said. “It was more of you finding a job; if you’re lucky, it’s a good job. It was just that’s the world we came from, and it didn’t mean that you were proud; it was just what you had to do. I worked and had a work ethic, but it wasn’t a strong one. I’ve lived long enough that now I own a movie theater in New Jersey; my childhood movie theater I bought with my friends, and our staff is largely teenagers. They’re largely unmotivate­d, to say the least, but I can’t say anything because I made ‘Clerks.’ It’s impossible for me to tell people to work harder when my entire career is predicated on a movie about not working at all.”

Other characters created by Smith, such as Jay (played by Jason Mewes) and Silent Bob (played by Smith), are still slackers but spend most of their time selling marijuana in front of the convenienc­e store in the “Clerks” films. When the film was released in the ’90s, marijuana was very much illegal but has since been decriminal­ized in a number of states. This prompted the idea for the plot of the upcoming “Jay and Silent Bob” threequel, where the two characters must battle the legal marijuana industry.

“Those characters started life as outlaws, like they literally sold drugs, so it felt like my characters have now lived long enough that they’re not the outlaws anymore,” Smith said. “Weed sales are no longer the domain of those outside the bounds of the law, so it seemed like there’s some fun to be had with that storyline. I’ve been involved in the weed and retail business for years, and this is a retail-level story. It’s not one about hanging out behind the counter and not working, but more about trying to stay alive when the business has shifted.”

Among Smith’s new projects is the final installmen­t of his comedy-horror True North trilogy. The collection includes “Tusk” and “Yoga Hosers” along with the upcoming “Moose Jaws,” a spin on Steven Spielberg’s “Jaws,” but with a moose instead of a shark. Smith said he finds the overlap between comedy and horror a natural occurrence.

“Those two genres come down to emotional manipulati­on of the audience, and most movies do, right? But predominan­tly comedies, you’re trying to emotionall­y manipulate the audience and make them do something they can only do involuntar­ily,” he said. “I found that if you can make a person laugh, you can also unsettle them. I can’t necessaril­y terrify them, but like with ‘Tusk,’ we didn’t go for terror because it is a ridiculous concept. We went for unsettling, and it’s shockingly easy if you can make a person laugh to unsettle them.”

 ?? COURTESY OF ALLAN AMATO ?? “I’ve traditiona­lly done kind of a Q&A format,” Kevin Smith says of his one-man shows, including Jan. 26in Rancho Mirage.
COURTESY OF ALLAN AMATO “I’ve traditiona­lly done kind of a Q&A format,” Kevin Smith says of his one-man shows, including Jan. 26in Rancho Mirage.

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