When CLERKS opened at cinemas across the country in 1994, it took
everyone, especially the film industry, by surprise. Filmed on a
shoestring budget after hours at a convenience store, it was crude (in
technique and language), realistic and, above all, hilarious. The
movie's nationwide success helped launch the indepedent film boom of the
1990s and catapulted its director, Kevin Smith, to full-fledged stardom.
Smith's work is explored in AN ASKEW VIEW, the first ever study of his
films. John Kenneth Muir examines all of Smith's movies. including
MALLRATS, CHASING AMY, and the hugely controversial and variously
interpreted DOGMA. Muir discusses Smith's themes and obsessions in
depth: his New Jersey boosterism, the cast of characters that pop in and
out of all of his films, and the references to STAR WARS and other icons
of pop culture. AN ASKEW VIEW is a fascinating and detailed history of
the art of this visionary filmmaker, New Jersey's favorite
local-boy-makes-good since Bruce Springsteen.