Clerks

2000

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1
  • 0
7.4| 0h30m| TV-14| en| More Info
Released: 31 May 2000 Canceled
Producted By: Miramax
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

The continuing adventures of store clerks Dante and Randal, who try to make the best of their menial labor, with no help from Jay and Silent Bob.

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Reviews

FeistyUpper If you don't like this, we can't be friends.
Teringer An Exercise In Nonsense
MusicChat It's complicated... I really like the directing, acting and writing but, there are issues with the way it's shot that I just can't deny. As much as I love the storytelling and the fantastic performance but, there are also certain scenes that didn't need to exist.
Bob This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.
feikk2 Just can't understand how anyone who likes the anarchistic humour of the clerks movies can find the bad jokes of this one funny. The ingenious thing about the movies were the actually intelligent characters who were just over the top politically incorrect and anti-social, nothing left of that in the cartoon, here everyone is just acting stupid with Dante wearily rolling his eyes. I guess Smith just couldn't sell his more provocative ideas to the cartoon producers, but given this turn in tone, 6 Episodes are at least five too much. If you want to watch a real funny cartoon, go with "Undergrads", "Home Movies" or "The Oblongs".
SonicStuart "Clerks" is one of my favorite movies and I discovered that they made a short lived prime time cartoon series that once aired on ABC and I rented this series on DVD and I loved it and I wish they could bring this show back on! But if they were ever to bring it back it should go on FOX or Comedy Central. Basically, the show follows the continuing adventures of Dante Hicks and Randall Graves (voiced by Brian O'Halloran and Jeff Anderson) and their every jobs at the Quick Stop and RST Video and of course dealing with Jay & Silent Bob (voiced by Jason Mewes and Kevin Smith). Also in this series we have two new characters, Leonardo Leonardo (voiced by Alec Bladwin) who is the billionaire antagonist of the series and his sidekick, Plug. Hilarious show and I think it deserved so much better and I think it should have been on a different network since ABC was too picky about censoring half of what they say on the show, if the show aired on FOX or Comedy Central then they wouldn't have that problem! Kevin Smith should really consider bringing this show back.
thebatkat Clerks: The Animated Series was something I found to be an exciting, original take on the movie. It gives a new spin to the realistic characters we were introduced to in the film version and I enjoyed it and familiarized with it even though it didn't have much to do with the original. I found it to have good animation, great acting, and hilarious stories that I would have loved to see more of. I think the network made a mistake by taking this show off the air. If you've never watched the series, and you're a fan of Kevin Smith/ Jay and Silent Bob work, go buy the DVDs (Or rent if you prefer). It's a great watch and I only hope to see this show resurrected by the request of fans ^_^
liquidcelluloid-1 Network: ABC; Genre: Animated Comedy, Parody, Movie Translation; Content Rating: TV-PG (for adult content and language); Available: on DVD; Classification: Contemporary (Star range: 1 - 4);Season Reviewed: 1 season (2 episodes)One may ask, why on Earth would I feel the need to review a show that only lasted for 2 episodes. For two reasons. One, in part of my chronicling of TV fads, Kevin Smith's animated 'Clerks' is part of the big adult animation boom that graced us at the end of the millennium. And secondly, unlike 'Bob Patterson' or the number of short lived shows I've deemed unnecessary for discussion, there is something worth talking about here. It's a formidable series - even if it isn't a complete success. For the uninitiated into writer/director Kevin Smith's View Askew-niverse (and the filmmaker's continued franchising of it), 'Clerks' is Smith's adaptation of his own 1994 live action, black-and-white film. Coming out of nowhere with a shoe-string budget (perennially quoted as costing $27,000) the movie's wit, cartoon-like lightening fast dialog, Tarantino-esque movie knowledge and outrageously scatological sense of humor has made it a modern classic. A lot gets lost in the translation from screen to television, live action to animation and frank R-rated comedy to PG-rated network series. There is an undeniable weirdness in seeing Dante, Randall, Jay and Silent Bob in color much less animated. All, by the way, voiced by movie counter part actors Brian O'Halloran, Jeff Anderson, Jason Mewes and Kevin Smith, respectively. Which is a cool thing. The excesses that made 'Clerks' such shocking - and honest - fun have been neutered for network and viewer approval. Now the show is top heavy with pop culture parody, the likes of which you can find in abundance on any other adult animated series from 'The Simpsons' to 'South Park'. Had the show come out with the movie in 1994 it might have made a splash. However, that would have been impossible because Smith had yet to build the fan base and publicity to get the series off the ground. It comes out now at the height of his career after the creative masterwork 'Dogma' and at the tail end of the animation boom. That begs another question. Why is this show animated in the first place? One would think that a dialog driven series, set primarily in one location would have been fertile ground for a live-action sitcom. In retrospect this could have been like 'The Office' in a convenience store. How great would that have been? Instead, we get the same old parody, the same old quirky characters and the same old celebrity guest stars playing themselves - such as Charles Barkley, for no comedic reason at all. The malaise of the film is nowhere in sight (apparently thinking TV viewers won't pick up that kind of nuance) and Smith regulars Jay and Silent Bob are no longer pot smoking drug dealers but simply "mischief makers". Everything hear feels warmed over. It is too little, too late and too much of a cop-out of its original cinematic vision. It is not a total dud; Smith's pop culture riffs and talented ear for dialog remains somewhat intact, but by now we've seen all of this before and much better. The show makes a Jump the Shark joke in a fruitless attempt to prove that its above absurdity. There is also the requisite and tired Japanemation sequence in here. If seeing Jay and Silent Bob animated hasn't creeped you out enough this sure will. The 2nd episode, a parody of sitcom clip-shows in which the cast gets locked in the cooler, in particular finds itself beating a dead horse coming a few years after 'South Park' had already put a moratorium on the head of clip-show parodies with their brilliant season 2 episode 'City on the Edge of Forever'. That's pretty much 'Clerks' the series. With so many new heavy-hitters competing in the realm of the adult animated series, 'Clerks' is more like the moldy old 'The Critic' than state-of-the-art juggernauts 'Family Guy', 'South Park' and 'Futurama'. Animation is a medium that can capture the imagination, create original worlds and show us things we've never seen before. 'Clerks' doesn't get any mileage out of it, instead using the style simply because it seemed to be the fad at the time. * * /4

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