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Clerks. (1994)
In this low-budget, foul-mouthed, R-rated comedy with
some outrageous laughs and memorable monologues by first-time writer/director
Kevin Smith - the independent film went into general release
after its successes at film festivals, and became one of the most
popular and successful comedy independent films of all time. It told
about two unambitious and irresponsible store clerks with minimum-wage
jobs as they went through their work days in a strip mall; the two
interacted with customers, discussed movies and girlfriends - all
in a spirit of Generation X gloom and ennui with multiple F-bombs;
the film's tagline accurately described the main characters: "Just
because they serve you doesn't mean they like you."
- in a series of day-in-the-life vignettes in the
grainy, 16mm B/W film, two
clerks in suburban NJ stores who both hated their dead-end jobs
in Leonardo Township in NJ were: unproductive college drop-out
and 22 year-old Quick Stop Groceries store clerk Dante Hicks (Brian
O'Halloran) and his grungy, nihilistic, slacker, anti-social RST
Video-store clerk friend Randal Graves (Jeff Anderson) who worked
next door and clearly despised and abused his rental customers
by often insulting or offending them (he advised Dante: "You'd
feel a lot better if you'd just rip into the occasional customer")
- in the film's opening (to the tune of the film's
theme song: "Clerks" performed by Love Among Freaks: "I guess I'm
livin' day to day..."), Dante's day started out badly with multiple
problems - he was phoned early at home to work the morning shift
beginning at 6 AM on his Saturday day-off when his co-worker Arthur
called in sick; he agreed when his boss promised to relieve him
at 12 noon; when Dante arrived at the store, he discovered that
the metal shutters for the storefront were jammed closed by chewing
gum stuffed into the lock; he left a make-shift message with big
letters written in shoe polish on a large bed-sheet - I ASSURE
YOU, WE'RE OPEN!
- one of Dante's early customers - later identified
as a pushy Chewlies Gum Representative (Scott Schiaffo), delivered an anti-smoking
diatribe to one of the convenience store customers in his late teens;
he pulled out a diseased and corroded lung from a bag he was carrying and placed
it on the counter, and also displayed a trach-ring, and argued
that for his health's sake, the young guy should buy his favorite brand
of gum instead of cigarettes and save his money:
("This is where you're heading. Cruddy lung,
smoking through a hole in your throat. Do you really want that?")
- from the start of the film, iconic stoner partners
and possible drug dealers Jay and Silent Bob (Jason Mewes and Kevin
Smith) loitered outside the next-door's video store as Jay spewed
obscenities: ("I'll f--k anything that moves!") and even proposed
oral sex with Silent Bob ("You're cute as hell. I could go down
on you, suck you, Line up three other guys, make like a circus
seal. Hey, what're you, a f--kin' faggot? I hate guys. I love women!")
- the customer had gathered a large audience around
him, as he delivered a more angry general rant against the cancer-causing
smoking industry that sold cigarettes: ("You're spending what? Twenty, maybe thirty dollars
a week on your cigarettes?...Fifty-three dollars a week on cigarettes!
Come on! Would you give somebody that much money each week to kill
you? 'Cause that's what you're doing now, by paying for this so-called
privilege to smoke... It's that kinda mentality that allows the cancer-producing
industry to thrive. 'Course we're all gonna die some day. But do
we have to pay for it? Do we have to actually throw hard-earned dollars
down on the counter and say, 'Please Mr. Merchant-of-Death, sir,
please, sell me something that'll stink up my breath and my clothes
and fry my lungs'? ...Yeah. Yeah, and now here comes the speech about
how he's just doing his job by following orders. Friends, let me
tell you about another group of hate mongers that were just following
orders. They were called Nazis!...Yeah, and they practically wiped
an entire nation of people off the Earth just like your cigarettes
are doing now")
- the mob of people shifted
the blame to "cancer merchant" Dante for "selling death"
at the check-out counter; Dante was pelted with cigarettes before
he was rescued by the arrival of his new,
current girlfriend Veronica Loughran (Marilyn Ghigliotti), who
defended him against the mob with fire extinguisher spray, and
exposed the true identity of the chewing-gum advocate before tossing
him out
- as Veronica and Dante briefly spoke, she urged him
to become motivated to quit his job if he hated it so much and
go back to college, since he dropped out five years earlier: ("All
I'm saying is, if you're that unhappy, you should leave"); Dante
delivered the first of many reminders he told others: "I'm not
even supposed to be here today"
- while they were talking about
sexual relations behind the counter on the floor, he claimed vast
differences between men's and women's orgasms: ("Making a male
climax isn't at all challenging. Insert somewhere close, preferably
moist, thrust, repeat...Now, making a woman come, therein lies
a challenge"); after Dante admitted that
he had sex with 12 different women (including her), she hit him
and called him a pig, ("You men make me feel sick. You'll sleep with anything that says yes"),
and then told him the honest truth about her
sexual history including having sex with only three guys (including
him): "I'm not the pig you are...You men make me feel sick. You'll
sleep with anything that says yes"; then she changed the subject
and returned to their previous discussion about his schooling: "You
have so much potential that's going to waste in this pit. l wish
you'd go back to school"
- after speaking to
a stoned-sounding ex-boyfriend named William
"Snowball" Black at the store's counter, Veronica ("Ronni")
described the meaning of his nickname: "After the blow job, he likes
to have it spit back into his mouth while kissing. It's called snowballing";
she also admitted that she had engaged in oral
sex with him; the flabbergasted Dante asked: "You sucked his dick?...Why
did you tell me you only had sex with three guys?"; she responded
that she didn't consider oral sex as intercourse, but only called
it 'fooling around'; in the so-called "I'm
37!?" scene, she told the shocked and nauseous Dante that she had delivered 37 instances
of fellatio before she dated him: (Dante: "How many?...How many d--ks
have you sucked?"; Veronica replied: "Something like
- 36..." and including him, it was a total of 37)
- during the work day, Dante often conversed with
his friend, next-door video-clerk Randal, who arrived late for
work, and would spend most of his day in the Quick Stop store;
he suggested that Dante give up his five-year interest in his promiscuous
high school sweetheart-girlfriend Caitlin Bree (Lisa Spoonauer)
(who was just about to finish college), due to his dating of Veronica
for seven months; Dante had been secretly
phoning Caitlin and reestablishing their relationship; Randal attempted
to convince Dante to give up on the unfaithful Caitlin and stick
with his devoted new girlfriend Veronica of seven months ("Chick's
nuts about you"); Randal showed Dante an announcement in the
local newspaper that Caitlin was engaged to be married to an "Asian
design major"; Dante was so shocked that he thought the article
was bogus or a misprint
- in an appalling scene,
clerk Randal phone-ordered from his distributor a number of X-rated
stock (with really filthy titles like "All
Tit-F--king, Volume 8," "I Need Your C--k," "Ass-Worshipping Rim-Jobbers," "My
C--t and Eight Shafts," "Cum Clean," "Cum Gargling Naked Sluts,"
"Cum Buns III," "Cumming in Socks," "Cum On Eileen," "Huge Black C--ks
With Pearly White Cum," "Girls Who Crave C--k," "Girls Who Crave C--t,"
and more), while in front of a customer at the
counter, a Mom (Connie O'Connor) and her young daughter (Ashley Pereira)
were asking to purchase "Happy Scrappy Hero Pup"
- to pass the time, Randal engaged
in a dialogue with Dante about which Star Wars film was better, The
Empire Strikes Back (1980), or Return of the Jedi (1983);
Dante voted for Empire: "I mean, Luke gets his hand cut
off, finds out Vader's his father. Han gets frozen, taken away
by Boba Fett. it ends on such a down note. I mean, that's what
life is: a series of down endings. All Jedi had was a bunch
of Muppets"
- Randal engaged in a ludicrous Return of the
Jedi (1983) dialogue with Dante about the ending of Jedi - he brought up the ethical
issue of the construction and destruction of the second Death Star
by the rebels (led by Lando Calrissian), when innocent independent
contractors lost their lives: ("Something
just never sat right with me that second time around. I could never
put my finger on it, but something just wasn't right....The first
Death Star was manned by the lmperial Army. The only people on board
were Storm Troopers, dignitaries, lmperialists....So when they blew
it up, no problem. Evil's punished...the second time around,
it wasn't even done being built yet. It was still
under construction....in order to get it built quickly and quietly,
they'd hire anybody that could do the job....All those innocent contractors
brought in to do the job are killed, casualties of a war they had
nothin' to do with....Look, you're a roofer. Some juicy government
contract comes your way. You got a wife and kids, the two-story in
suburbia. This is a government contract which means all sorts of
benefits. Along come these left-wing militants who blast everything
within a three-mile radius with their lasers. You didn't ask for
that. You had no personal politics. You're just trying to scrape
out a living"); a roofer-contractor who overheard the conversation
confirmed for them that something similar happened to him - he rejected
a contractor job for mobster Baby Face Bambino's home, and luckily
avoided losing his life when a hit-job was conducted by the Foresie
family and one of his contractor friends lost his life
- Dante was confronted by many strange customers,
including an Egg Man (Walter Flanagan) who was sitting on the floor
and questing for "the perfect dozen"; when told he could mix &
match eggs from different cartons, he rejected the idea: "He said
it was important to have standards. He says no one has any pride
anymore"; a female customer who witnessed the man's strange behavior and was credited as a
Caged Animal Masturbator (Virginia Smith) ironically suggested
that the man work as a guidance counselor - an occupation that
caused him to go crazy: ("It's important to have a job that makes
a difference, boys. That's why I manually masturbate caged animals
for artificial insemination")
- Randal suggested that Dante occasionally vent his
frustrations on his annoying customers, and gave examples of idiotic
questions his video customers had often asked - seen in short vignettes:
("What would you get for a six-year-old boy who chronically wets
his bed?", or "So, do you have any new movies in?", or "Do you
have that one with that guy who was in that movie that was out
last year?"); Dante recalled a few ridiculous questions his own
Quick Stop customers had asked: ("What do you mean there's no ice?
I've got to drink this coffee hot?" and "So, how much is this thing
anyway?")
- Veronica arrived to bring Randal lasagna for lunch
and to reconcile with him after their volatile discussion of sexual
histories; he learned that his boss, who had promised to
relieve him at noon, had lied to take a vacation in Vermont and
would be gone for three days - causing him to miss his 2 PM street
hockey game; after realizing he was all alone
with no backup, Dante decided to play street hockey on the store's
rooftop with his friends; he posted another sign on the store's
door: "TEMPORARILY CLOSED. BE OPENED AFTER FIRST PERIOD";
after 12 minutes of play, an irate customer (Scott Mosier) emerged
on the rooftop demanding to have the store opened; after the customer
was urged to compete in the game, he deliberately knocked Dante
down during a face-off, and hit their sole hockey-ball off the
roof and into a storm drain
- Randal convinced Dante to temporarily lock up the
store at 4 pm to attend the wake of one of his other ex-girlfriends
(22 year-old Julie Dwyer) who suffered a brain embolism while
swimming in a YMCA pool; the wake was aborted when the two fled
the Paulson's funeral parlor - it was revealed in an animated "lost
scene" why they left prematurely; Dante had thrown his car keys
to Randal who wanted to wait outside in the car, but they ricocheted
off of him and landed inside Julie's pants within the casket; when
Dante attempted to reach in and retrieve the keys and he was attacked
by Julie's enraged parents, the casket was knocked over by Randal
and the body fell out
- afterwards back at the store, Randal borrowed Dante's
car to drive to the superior Big Choice video store and rent a
film; meanwhile, Dante spoke to some of his high-school classmates
in the store, including a pushy fitness trainer Rick Derris (Ernest
O'Donnell) who judged Dante as out-of-shape for struggling to pick
up a milk bottle, and for having love handles, and Heather Jones
(Kimberly Loughran) - the sister of Alyssa Jones who used to hang
out with Caitlin; the Trainer admitted to having sex with Caitlin
2-3 years earlier, and both knew of Caitlin's reputation
for having many sex partners: ("Everybody in school knew
about it")
- suddenly, Dante was unfairly served
with a court summons for allegedly selling cigarettes to a 4 year-old
girl (Frances Cresci), but it was actually Randal who, while sitting
in at the Quick Stop counter, had committed the offense; Dante
faced a $500 fine, but his protest fell on deaf ears; he asked
himself: "What next?"
- Caitlin arrived in town from her Ohio college by
train and came to the store, where Dante asked to speak to her
privately in the video store; she explained how the marriage announcement
was a "misunderstanding" pressured
by her mother, and that she was going to cancel the wedding and
return the ring to her fiancee Sang; torn between Veronica and
Caitlin, Dante was tempted to ask her out on a dinner and movie
date after she stated that she was no longer engaged and had become
single again: (Caitlin: "I choose you"); she left to
share with her mother her recent "disengagement" news
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Caitlin Bree (Lisa Spoonauer) with Dante
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Caitlin with Randal
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- Randal returned and bragged about renting "Best
of Both Worlds" ("Hermaphroditic porn. Starlets with both organs"),
and admitted that he had sold the cigarettes to the young girl;
Dante convinced Randal to tend the store, and also lock up later
as he briefly left to change his clothes for his date; Caitlin
returned and asked Randal if she could use the
convenience store's dark bathroom
- once Dante returned about an hour later, Caitlin
emerged from the back of the store and asked: "How did you get
here so fast?...Do you always talk this weird after you violate
a woman?...It has never been like that before....When you just
lay perfectly still and let me do everything"; she described how
she had just sexually-serviced a very "ready" Dante in the employee's
bathroom [Note: A few hours earlier, an elderly gent (Al Berkowitz) had
asked Dante to use the bathroom including soft toilet tissue, and
he had also borrowed a porno magazine from Dante for masturbation
purposes.] An obviously-aroused Caitlin mistakenly thought that
she had serviced Dante, as she had a few years
earlier:("We didn't kiss or talk or anything. He just sat there and let me
do all the work"); Dante scoffed at
her: "It wasn't me!" and Randal asked: "You just f--ked a total
stranger?"
- when the police and a coroner (Pattijean Csik) were
called, the situation was diagnosed: "The body can maintain an
erection after expiration, sometimes for hours...my guess is, he
was masturbating, his heart seized and he died. That's when the
girl found him"; an EMT ambulance took the catatonic Caitlin (suffering from "shock
trauma") and the corpse away
- afterwards, Dante whined about his many dilemmas,
and Randal reprimanded him and urged him to take
responsibility for his life and instead to dedicate his life to improving
himself rather than being self-pitying; he reminded Dante of his reluctance
to change his situation and quit working in a low-level convenience
store job: ("You should s--t or get off the pot...I'm talking about
this thing you have, this inability to improve your station in life...You
sit there and blame life for dealin' you a cruddy hand, never once
accepting responsibility for the way your situation is...If you hate
this job and the people. and the fact that you have to come in on your
day off, why don't you quit?"); he also recommended that Dante quit
equivocating between his two girlfriends; Dante was unwilling to be
courageous and change from his routine way of life: "That's the way
things are. They're not gonna change...I can't make changes in my life
like that. lf l could, l would"; Randal asked: "So you're gonna be
miserable 'cause you don't have the guts to face change?"
- Jay (obsessed with drugs, partying, and sex) and
Silent Bob briefly entered the Quick Stop to buy a few items; Silent
Bob offered wise romance-advice to Dante - a rare speaking moment
for him: "You know, there's a million fine-looking women in
the world, dude. But they don't all bring you lasagna at work.
Most of 'em just cheat on you"; his words helped convince
Dante to restore and reconcile his relationship with Veronica:
(Dante: "He's right. I love her")
- however, at the same time in the video store, Randal
was informing Veronica of Dante's renewed sexual interest in the
slutty Caitlin: ("He doesn't love you anymore. He loves Caitlin");
as a result, Veronica confronted the indecisive Dante, threatened
to offer more blow jobs: ("I'm going to put the hookers in Times
Square to shame with all the guys l go down on now!"), broke
up with him, and called him a "f--king idiot" - knowing that he
would fail and be dumped again by Caitlin: ("You want your slut?
Fine, the slut is yours")
- Dante realized that Randal had informed Veronica
that she was about to be dumped, resulting in a rift and fight
in the store between Randal and Dante that caused considerable
damage; after Dante blamed everything on
him, Randal delivered the film's closing: "We're
So Advanced" diatribe: ("....Oh, f--k
you! F--k you, pal! Jesus, there you go trying to pass the buck.
I'm the source of all your misery. Who closed the store to play
hockey? Who closed the store to go to a wake? Who tried to win
back his ex-girlfriend without even discussing how he felt with
his present one?! You wanna blame somebody? Blame yourself! 'I'm
not even supposed to be here today.' You sound like an asshole!
Jesus, nobody twisted your arm to be here. You're here of your
own volition. You like to think the weight of the world rests on
your shoulder, like this place would fall apart if Dante wasn't
here. Jesus, you over-compensate for havin' what's basically a
monkey's job. You push f--kin' buttons! Anybody could waltz in
here and do our jobs. You, you're so obsessed with making it seem
so much more epic, so much more important than it really is. Christ,
you work in a convenience store, Dante, and badly I might add.
I work in a s--tty video store, badly as well. You know, that guy
Jay's got it right, man, he has no delusions about what he does.
Us - we like to make ourselves seem so much more important than
the people that come in here to buy a paper or God forbid, cigarettes.
We look down on them as if we're so advanced. Well, if we're
so f--kin' advanced, what are we doin' working here?")
- in the film's denouement, the
two reconciled and worked together to clean up the store and close
up for the day; Dante described what he would do the following
day - "Goin' to the hospital and visit Caitlin.
And then I'm gonna try to talk to Veronica"; the last line of
dialogue consisted of Randal's words to Dante as he tossed the
shoe-polish sheet hanging outside into his face: "You're
closed!"
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Quick Stop Storefront With Large Bedsheet Sign: "I ASSURE YOU, WE'RE
OPEN!"
Quick Stop Store Clerk Dante Hicks (Brian O'Halloran)
Customer's Rant Against Cigarettes to Another Customer
Jay and Silent Bob Loitering Outside the Next-Door Video Store
Customer's Further Rant to a Larger Audience Against the
Cigarette Industry
Dante Saved by the Arrival of His Girlfriend Veronica (Marilyn Ghigliotti)
Dante's and Veronica's Discussion of Previous Sexual Partners
Behind the Counter
The "I'm 37!" Scene
RST Video-store clerk Randal Graves (Jeff Anderson)
Randal's X-Rated Porn Video Phone Order in Front of Mother with
Child
Star Wars Death Star Contractors Dialogue Between Dante
and Randal
Egg-Man Searching for "The Perfect Dozen" in a Carton
Getting Ready to Play Street Hockey With His Friends On the Rooftop
Animated Lost Scene: Attending the Wake of Julie Dwyer - At the Open
Casket
Customers (l to r): Trainer, Heather, Summons-Server
Caitlin Describing Her Mistaken Sexual Encounter with "Dante"
in the Store's Dark Bathroom
The Coroner's Explanation of Caitlin Having Sex With a Dead Man
Jay and Silent Bob in the Store
Randal Informing Veronica of Dante's Interest in Caitlin
Dante Dumped by Veronica
Dante and Randal Fighting in Store
Randal's Final Advice to Dante: "We're So Advanced"
Dante with the Sheet and Randal's Last Words: "You're
closed"
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