Chasing Amy & The Spirit Awards

January 9th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad @ Chris

  • Yet another of those revelations at VulgarThon was that “Chasing Amy” has been nominated twice for the Independant Spirit Awards in the categories of Best Screenplay and Best Picture! There’s been no “official” announcement yet from what we’ve seen, but it’s certainly true. Two more honors for a great flick! Let’s hope that Kevin can take one or both of those suckers home.

  • Joey Lauren Adams on Jay Leno TONIGHT!

    January 9th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • Thanks to Ron Freshour, Brock Davis, and Bill Minter, we won’t miss Joey’s appearance on Jay Leno tonight! Looks like she’s really making the circuit to milk this Golden Globe Nomination. Anyway, tune in tonight, check out her new hair color, see what clip from Amy they show, and listen to some anecdotes about what she’s been up to lately.

  • VULGARTHON PICS: WE NEED YOUR HELP!

    January 9th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • Well folks, unfortunately we just received word that our source for VulgarThon pictures got an offer at the event and will be selling the pics to another source rather than making the pics available for us here. We’re very sorry to report this, since we’d made plans for the photos to be taken ahead of time, and because of this took none of our own. That’s where YOU come in.

    Now, more than ever, we need your scans of VulgarThon pics! Any pics of the guests, fans, places, Q&A’s…Whatever you got! Send them along and we’ll do our best to get them on our VulgarThon Page. It’d be a shame to put one up without some visuals!

    Again, we’re sorry for the lack of professionalism. We promised you exclusive shots and it just looks like we can’t deliver this time. It won’t happen again. Please help!

  • Remember Project Pocketwatch?

    January 9th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • Pocketwatch himself writes us to inform us that his cool artwork series of stills from Kevin’s Superman Lives Script (as they WOULD have appeared with the right cast) has been moved from Art Askew and resurrected on a NEW SITE where all the shots will be coming up on schedule. We love what we’ve seen so far (In fact, we’re saving the pics for the archives), so do stop by and give it a looksee. Pictures will be posted on a weekly basis, and the first should be up by January 15th.

  • View Askew NewsBites™

    January 7th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • The Mallrats SE LaserDisc has been a topic of discussion lately, now that everyone’s seen the excellent Amy disc. At this point, Kevin has said that the project is definitely a “go”, but, although they have an excellent relationship with Criterion now, it is doubtful that the disc will BE a Criterion. Most likely, it will be distributed by another outfit, whenever it’s done.
  • Matt Damon, Ben Affleck, and Robin Williams will be appearing on The Charlie Rose Show this Monday, January 12th. Thanks to Adam Mark and Ross for this information.
  • We’d like to give a shout out to Garo for sending us the Charlie Rose tape with Tarantino praising “Amy”. Thanks, man!

  • Jason Lee To Play Azrael In Dogma!

    January 7th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • We were hoping to save some of these major announcements for the VulgarThon Page (although we probably shouldn’t be mentioning some of this stuff at all), but we figure, what the hell.

    The folks in theatre 2 were made privy to the big news story you saw yesterday, while in theatre 1 the big revelation was that Jason Lee will indeed appear in “Dogma” as the character of Azrael. Kevin said that he’s certain Jason will do a fantastic job with the part. Lee has given 2 show-stopping performances in Rats & Amy, and we’re sure “Dogma” will be no exception.

    Thanks to Aaron Fowler and Darl for making sure we knew the news, and to Aaron Perkins for coming up with the question that elicited this answer & news at the ‘Thon!

  • Asbury Park Press VA Articles…

    January 7th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

  • Sunday’s Asbury Park Press (Which we unforunately never got a copy of…If you have an extra by any chance and can mail it to us, you’d be our best friend.) There is, however, a local copy of the text (sans photos) that we’ve placed here for your convenience.

    The article centers around VulgarThon, but basically serves as a showcase for all the Jersey filmmakers, including Kevin, Vincent Pereira, Brian Lynch, & Bryan Johnson. It’s a good read, so don’t miss it!

    Thanks to Gramp for sending us the article links.

      N.J. filmmakers: A herd mentality
      Published in the Asbury Park Press 1/04/98
      By ELEANOR O’SULLIVAN
      MOVIE WRITER

      Eat your heart out, Hollywood.

      A mini-revolution is in the process of changing the way the film industry works: Movies are being made right here in Monmouth and Ocean counties by young men and women tuned in to a studio mogul’s dream audience — the frequent film-going, under-35 crowd.

      Consider the mounting evidence: Kevin Smith’s 1996 box-office ($12 million) and critical hit “Chasing Amy” was shot almost entirely in Monmouth County. Smith rocketed to fame in 1994 with his first, $27,000 cheapie, “Clerks,” shot completely in the Middletown Township-Highlands area.

      Now Smith’s proteges, backed by money from his deal with Miramax Films, New York, are coming forward with their own features: “A Better Place,” from Vincent Pereira of the Leonardo section of Middletown, was shown to enthusiastic audiences at the recent Hamptons’ Film Festival and at New York’s Walter Reade Theatre. It was shot entirely in Monmouth County.

      Highlands’ Bryan Johnson’s bold and brilliant “Vulgar,” filmed locally, is now in post-production, as is the first movie from Middletown’s Brian Lynch — a sketch comedy with “Saturday Night Live” and “Kentucky Fried Movie” pedigree called “Big Helium Dog.”

      Starting at noon tomorrow, the filmmakers will show off their efforts at Vulgarthon ‘98, a sold-out festival featuring films by Smith and friends at Red Bank Arts Theatre, White Street. On the bill: Smith’s “Clerks,” “Mallrats” and “Chasing Amy”; “A Better Place” from Pereira, and Malcolm Ingram’s “Drawing Flies.” To make the Left Coast cringe further, post production on “Vulgar” and “Big Helium Dog” is taking place in a bleak but capacious space with nothing more in it than a couple of Steenbeck editing machines, old file cabinets and dilapidated couches: It’s 32 Monmouth St., until this fall, Red Bank’s municipal building. Now it’s for sale.

      Smith has a bid on the place; he figures he’ll hear if he’s got it in February, when his View Askew Productions company is on the road making his fourth movie, “Dogma.”


      Want some name-dropping? “Dogma,” written, directed and co-produced by Smith, stars the hottest of hots: Matt Damon, Ben Affleck, Chris Rock, Emma Thompson and Linda Fiorentino. Smith also appears.

      Salma Hayek co-stars along with Alan Rickman, who piqued brainy Thompson’s interest in the new project.

      “The story we heard is that Alan Rickman was telling Emma Thompson on the phone how much he liked ‘Chasing Amy.’ The budget for ‘Dogma’ is $4 million. Everybody is coming on board with the same attitude: They’re in it for loving ‘Chasing Amy’; they loved it so much they’re doing ‘Dogma’ for reduced rates,” said Smith’s film school pal and business partner, Scott Mosier.

      Now if that roster doesn’t rock Hollywood’s world, or at least nudge it a bit, what will?

      How about Smith’s View Askew company giving the big studios a run for their money with its complete line of merchandising items, tied into “Clerks,” “Mallrats,” “Chasing Amy,” and down the road, “Dogma?”

      Fans clamored for the films’ memorabilia via the company’s Web site (www.viewaskew.com), particularly after Smith and Mosier did an insider chat and outtakes show at the Count Basie Theatre in Red Bank last year.

      The View Askew offices on 69 Broad Street, best recognized by Mosier’s looming clown icon in the window (the clown is the protagonist of Johnson’s “Vulgar”), are jammed to the gills with T-shirts, tapes, books, posters, trading cards, bumper stickers. This side of the business has grown so big even Mosier and Smith don’t know the extent of it anymore.

      A nice, chunky key chain of the clown icon is available.


      “You can’t walk down Broad Street without seeing that damn clown!” Smith cracks, his affection for his first offices obvious. “But truth to tell, we have run out of room here. Our main project is moving everything into a Red Bank building. God willing, it will be 32 Monmouth. It comes with parking, which in this town, is like finding gold.”

      Smith would move his company’s other merchandising arm, a comic book store at 69 Monmouth St., into 32 Monmouth’s first floor, and turn the second and third floors into View Askew offices and production center. Smith briefly toyed with moving into 32 Monmouth’s top floor but decided “I didn’t want to live that close to work.”

      If 32 Monmouth does become the operation’s center, the place will be redubbed — The View Askew Institute. Oh, that wry Smith humor.

      Wry is obviously cool with the Left Coast. They’ve adopted an “if-you-can’t-beat-’em,-hire-him strategy”: in between pre-production work on “Dogma,” Smith is writing a script for a classic kind of Hollywood movie, Chevy Chase’s next “Fletch” comedy. Smith is being paid in the “middle three figures” for the screenplay. He says he learned how to write dialogue from reading the “Fletch” series by Gregory McDonald.

      Humor also is an important commodity for Smith, Mosier and their fledgling filmmakers, Johnson, 29, and Lynch, 24. Johnson shot his 90-minute, black comedy “Vulgar” with “enormous help from Scott” and some advice from Smith.

      “I was really concerned with the performances. Kevin brings out great stuff in actors so I asked him how he did it,” Johnson remembers. “He said, ‘You know what you want, right? Don’t stop until you get what you want!’ “

      Mosier said the budgets for “Vulgar” and “Big Helium Dog” will reach between $70,000 and $80,000 each, peanuts in Hollywood but not chopped liver in the independent world. Why risk the money on newcomers?

      “Bryan Johnson has a leg up because I’ve known him for years,” Smith says, “and he’s far more talented than anyone I know, including me. It’s … completely inventive, outrageous. It’s dealing with clown rape, and he pulls it off.”

      The same rationale applies to Lynch.

      “I wouldn’t make a movie with somebody I don’t know,” Smith says. “I know Brian. He’s made a film nobody else has made since ‘Kentucky Fried Movie.’ It’s sketch comedy and it’s as funny as I’ve ever seen. We’re very proud of both of them.”

      Lynch, Lincroft section of Middletown, was editing his movie on the big green Steenbeck one cold morning. Smith’s assistant and girlfriend, Kim Loughran, has a part in the movie; a novice, she’s very amusing in her bit. Smith’s in the film, too, being hilariously obnoxious.

      Lynch, a film major dropout from William Paterson College in Wayne Township, has the funny, skewed sensibility familiar to Smith’s films and heard around his office. Lynch dropped out of college in his fourth year, just before graduating — “I figured I was close to graduating so I just left,” Lynch says with irony.

      Describing his free-form, funny movie, he says “there is no character you root for. You find out in the first five minutes that the main guy is kind of a schlub, he’s incompetent, he kills people by accident and doesn’t much care.


      “Every scene is one that I thought would be funny but doesn’t fit into any plot. I just threw them all together and hoped that I could find some real bare-bone plot to drag you from sketch to sketch.”

      Like Pereira’s moving, semi-autobiographical “A Better Place,” the Lynch and Johnson films will be offered first to festivals such as Sun-dance in Park City, Utah.


      “Until you’ve gone to some kind of festival, most of the time distributors are afraid to purchase your film,” Mosier says. “So they wait for a festival. Every distributor saw ‘Clerks,’ but only until it played at Sundance, was it OK!”

      At 33, Susan Skoog, who grew up in Shrewsbury, says she has “hit the jackpot” by having her first feature, “Whatever” accepted at Sundance.

      Skoog likes the idea of paying audiences seeing her film there, but she has already accomplished the tough part: The prestigious, Oscar-winning Sony Pictures Classics has agreed to release “Whatever,” probably in May 1998.

      Tom Bernard, Middletown Township, a vice president of Sony Classics, praised Skoog’s film for its humor and realism.

      Praise is coming to director William DeVizia’s “Lesser Prophets,” especially for the bravura performance of its star, A-list actor John Turturro. Scott Glenn and Elizabeth Perkins co-star. DeVizia grew up in Matawan; his movie’s screenplay was written by Paul Diomede, Keansburg.

      And Aberdeen Township’s Robbie Bryan has assembled an impressive cast, including David Ogden Stiers, Ruth Buzzi and Dana Ivey, to star in his “The Stand-In,” set to begin shooting in Monmouth County in April for a budget in the $450,000 range. Bryan raised the money by pitching his script to Hollywood insiders and local film-friendly types such as Joe Amiel, owner of the Spring Lake Heights restaurant, The Old Mill Inn. Amiel is a partner with actor Danny Aiello in a film production company.

      Moreover, local filmmakers can skirt Hollywood and avoid the hassle of commuting to New York because support services, such as post-production studios, are popping up locally. Smith re-mixed “Chasing Amy” at a Middletown Township production facility.


      “With ‘Dogma,’ we’ll want to do that digitally, and we can do that right here,” Smith says. “The less you have to go to New York, the better.”

      After Smith concludes “Dogma” and writing “Fletch,” he’ll get to work on his next feature. Once again, Red Bank will serve as a major location.

      His distributor, Miramax, has discussed releasing “Dogma” in December, “for Oscar” consideration, Smith said.

      There is the potential for a beautiful irony here: Smith insists on avoiding the Hollywood scene by making his movie away from the Left Coast, then Hollywood pays him its highest honor. That would make some movie; they could call it “Local Boy Makes Good.”

  • Interview Askew: Ethan Suplee…

    January 6th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Ming Chen

    • Another in the fantastic series of Interviews Askew has gone online over at View Askew. In this one, Mike McCarthy sits down to chat with VA favorite Ethan Suplee. Read all about it HERE.

    Commentary

    January 6th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

    • On a final note, TONS of you have been sending in information on the Joey appearance on Conan. Anyway, thank you all, the names are just too numerous to mention (Are we the ONLY ones who MISSED this thing?). Anyway, we wish Miss Adams the best of luck with her Golden Globe nomination. If you see Joey or any other Askewniverse folks coming up on a talk show, let us know ASAP so we don’t miss the scoop again! See ya next time…

    VulgarThon ‘98 Ends…

    January 6th @ 12:00 am | No Comments » | Scooped by Brad & Chris

    • We’re back! And what a trip it was…Most of the details of our experiences will be saved for the VulgarThon ‘98 Page, currently under construction. We’re going to take a day or two to load this sucker up with info and YOUR photos (Which we thought you’d enjoy more than ours). If you got a good photo scanned, send it in! We’ll also have an exclusive gallery from Scott Benner and lots of inside information and anecdotes brought to you in our typical, News Askew conversational style. We hope you like what you see when it’s finished.