Showing posts with label kevin smith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kevin smith. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Clerks: The Lost Scene #1

This one-shot from Oni Press gives Clerks fans a look at an unproduced scene from the groundbreaking indy director Kevin Smith. The premise is that Dante and Randall skip out on their jobs to go to the wake of a high school friend of the two. Dante reveals that he and the deceased girl used to date and that the last time the woman's parents saw him, the pair were in flagrante delecto. Things are terse with Dante there. But things go from bad to worse when Randall loses Dante's car keys in the girl's coffin!

First of all, this lost scene technically isn't lost.( The cost of the wake was too much for Kevin Smith. I guess $27,000 on maxed out credit cards can only go so far.) So, yes, the wake sequence does not appear in the movie. But for the 10th anniversary DVD release, an animated version of the scene was added to the film. This comic book was released 5 years prior for anniversary #5. So at the time of publication, this story was unproduced.

It's been a very long while since I have seen anything unedited by Kevin Smith. Having only been watching Comic Book Men (May it rest in peace, unless somebody wisely brings it back!), I forgot how crude and vulgar the View Askewniverse can be. This comic book is definitely unedited. 

I could have done without the repulsive introduction and conclusion by Jay and Silent Bob. I mean it's explains why it's a lost scene. But anything that comes out of Jay's mouth is stuff that would make a sailor blush. 

Kevin Smith, notorious in the comic book industry for his trouble with deadlines, pens the one-shot naturally. But why was Phil Hester used? The Flash artist is definitely a talent. But I would have expected Comic Book Man Walt Flanagan to do the artwork. Was Flanagan not available? Or was he overlooked by Oni Press who wanted a more bankable name? Maybe he was too busy checking the perfectness of the next batch of eggs he was planning on buying? 

That's a Clerks reference folks! Fans had better get that one!

The story itself was funny. The bookends were regrettable. Good art. Just not who I would've guessed was behind it. 

Worth Consuming!

Rating: 7 out of 10 stars.

Saturday, April 4, 2015

Batman '66 Meets the Green Hornet


 
The year is 1967 and on ABC superhero history was made with the first live-action team-up of non-affiliated super heroes. In the two-part Batman episode, entitled  "A Piece of the Action" and "Batman's Satisfaction", the Green Hornet and his faithful valet Kato arrived in Gotham City in hopes of taking down the notorious stamp collector Colonel Gumm. Batman and Robin assume Green Hornet is a villain since in Hornet's home town he acts like a mob boss attempting to wipe out the competition. The two pairs forge an uneasy truce to take down the villain played by Roger C. Carmel (Harry Mudd of Star Trek fame.)


    Batman '66 Meets the Green Hornet is a sequel to that classic Batman series match-up. It was published jointly by DC Comics and Dynamite Comics, who currently owns the rights to the Green Hornet comic franchise. Originally a digital first comic, the book is co-written by Kevin Smith, the creative force behind Clerks and Mallrats. While Smith has written some Batman comics before, this is his first venture in the world of Batman '66. However, Smith has written several Green Hornet mini-series so it actually made perfect sense for the actor/director to write this miniseries. 

     So why does the Dynamic Duo team up again with Green Hornet and Kato? The two teams reunite when the notorious Gumm, now promoted to General, steals a train full of rare fossils. The caper turns particularly deadly when the Clown Prince of Crime, the Joker is revealed as Gumm's silent partner. When the dastardly pair rob a collection of stamps, the heroes are forced to become a team or Gotham City will be bankrupted with a $20 million lawsuit for the lost collections.

    This story was awesome. The writing was very good and without a single swear or reference to Star Wars, I cannot believe that Keven Smith wrote it. The regular covers were painted by my favorite artist of all-time, Alex Ross, with one variant by regular '66 cover artist Mike Allred. The art was also superior with amazing renderings of Adam West, Burt Ward, Caesar Romero, Van Willams, and Bruce Lee. The only actor not portrayed in comic form was Roger Carmel as Gumm. I'm wondering if his estate refused to allow his likeness to be used as Gumm's character is portrayed as being covered in an experimental adhesive much like Baron Nemo from the Avengers. If that's the case, I will approve the blatant plot device rip-off of a Marvel villain.

     Worth Consuming

    Rating: 9 out of 10 stars.