Average Rating: 
Rating: - Chasing Amy DVD Review: Very cool!
I have to admit that I didn't really understand the hype about Kevin Smith's first movie "CLERKS" aside it being low-budget and unique, the storyline didn't appeal to me. But after watching his fourth movie, "DOGMA", I had to check out the other movies he has done and his third movie, "CHASING AMY" is quite intriguing.I must admit that at first I didn't know what to expect from Kevin Smith in this movie but after seeing the performances between Ben Affleck and Joey Lauren Adams, all I can say is powerful. I've read that this movie was low-budget ($200,000) to make, I think Kevin Smith and crew did a great job! I was impressed they had a digital 5.1 soundtrack and the video had certain spots especially during the end of the rain scene and afterwards but again, this is a low-budget movie and I'm not going to hold them on that. This is a very awesome movie and I have more respect for Smith and his work now. Awesome! As for the extras on this DVD, this is a CRITERION COLLECTION and it has a lot of extras. But the extras are from the Laserdisc version. In fact, the introduction included on this DVD is Smith addressing a certain quote on the beginning commentary of the movie regarding DVD on the LD commentary. So, since I don't own the LD, I'm not disappointed, although others maybe. What I enjoyed about this movie aside from the deleted scenes and the powerful acting is the commentary. Very fun stuff from the guys this time and you can hear them! Something I bitched about on the CLERKS DVD. What I like about this DVD is that it covers something that I don't see in other movies, how to deal with a relationship with someone who has had certain sexual situations in the past. An interesting movie! Check it out!
Rating: - something more personal
The story of this film is a personal one for writer-director Kevin Smith and it's no wonder that it's his best effort to date--a great, warm film about relationships & more obscurely, a reflection on his movie career. A comic book artist named Holden McNeil (Ben Affleck) falls for a Lesbian from his hometown in New Jersey. He's old school in his ways of love & life and happens to mix it up with the more interesting crowd. At the beginning of the picture--a scene that was finally cut--Holden and Banky (Jason Lee), his best friend/roommate, receive a verbal bashing from two comic book store owners who despise their work. Kevin admitted lifting much of that dialogue from a negative review of "Mallrats" (which had studio exec hands all over it and failed I think because it tried to be a comic-book action movie.) "Clerks" (his first movie), "Chasing Amy," & his latest "Dogma" are all down-to-earth, personal movies that are funny, filled with wonderful, inspired dialogue, and unfold more like stage plays than celluloid --he decides on a location to put his characters in and has them talk; it doesn't much matter if they're in a kitchen or at a hockey rink.There's a scene in "Chasing Amy" when Holden is telling Alyssa (Joey Lauren Adams) he'd "like to get back to doing something more personal like [his] first book." This could just as easily be: "I'd like to get back to doing something more personal like our first movie." "When are you going to do that?" Asks Alyssa. "When I have something personal to say." "Chasing Amy" is that movie. Indeed, Kevin Smith put much of himself into this picture and the result is his funniest, smartest, and most dramatic work. As Holden becomes close friends with Alyssa, Banky feels rejected. He wants him to stop fooling around with Alyssa and "sign off on the whole cartoon thing," but mainly he doesn't want to lose Holden. It's also interesting to note that "Clerks" became an animated series for a short time and it's possible much of the subplot came from Smith's own feelings about selling-out his art for the big bucks (which also can be construed as his decision to make "Mallrats" the way he did). I like the subtle gestures between Banky & Holden and admire their friendship. This is Ben Affleck's best role. He doesn't seem as confident & charming in it as he does in some of his more recent roles. He's goateed and appears to be a little more bulky and chubby in the face--even his voice and his manner of speaking make him seem older. His character is average yet poetic, he makes you believe the conclusions that he comes to, as absurd as they may seem to others. They're are quiet, touching moments between characters with & without words. In a scene that'll never see the light of day, Banky holds Holden in his arms after he comes to a crossroads with Alyssa. I would've like to have seen it. It's just as much a movie about male affection (not necessarily gay either) as it is about being completely in love with a person. Jason Lee shines--he has a natural gift for comedic timing. In a typical romantic comedy, he'd by the poor schmuck sidekick who gets shunned, but his character is just as crucial to Holden's life as the woman he loves. And as Alyssa, Joey Lauren Adams is full of emotion, spontaneity, and charm. Smith's camera doesn't move often & the critics tend to knock him for it--who cares? He makes his movies fine and I've always said he's a good voice for the subculture of Generation X intellectual slacker-types. Mainly "Chasing Amy" consists of a series of wonderful moments focusing on the growing relationship between Alyssa and Holden & the deteriorating relationship of Banky and Holden. Then several key scenes of emotional fury that are so well written and acted and reveal so much that it elevates beyond a straight comedy and it becomes entirely Kevin Smith's movie--a perfect expression of being crazy & completely wrecked in love, which Holden undoubtedly is. Hooper is the voice of reason & wisdom--the gay black man, who, to sell his comic book, "White Hating Coon," pretends to be a militant Black Panther-esque speaker when he's anything but. He seems to understand the three-way situation plainly, but he's also on the outside looking in and when you're in love your mind is a complicated mess. Wanted or not, Holden also gets "advice from the 'hood" when Jay & Silent Bob meet him at a local diner (they're the inspiration for his and Banky's popular comic book, "Bluntman & Chronic"). He gives him guidance in the best way a person can--he tells him a story that echoes his own and hopes he catches a clue--He doesn't. And after a serious examination of his individual relationships with Banky & Alyssa, he suggests something both funny, unexpected and sincere. I always get the impression that when a director tries to make an enjoyable movie that will be well-received, it usually isn't. It's when they put it all on the line and make a picture altogether theirs that people respond to it. I've seen "Chasing Amy" God-knows-how-many-times now & still every time I sit down to watch it I'm touched, I still smile at some point in nearly every scene, I still get weepy-eyed. I wish every time that I could crawl up on that red coach, go to sleep, and wake up in this world. With "Chasing Amy," Silent Bob becomes less of a comic book super-hero, and more like I'd imagine Kevin Smith to be in real life, and when the big guy finally opens up, he says what he wants to say perfectly.
Rating: - Caught a good one!
Now this is Kevin Smith's most intelligent movie of his "Jersey Trilogy" of four other movies (Clerks, Mallrats, Dogma and Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back). Dogma could be seen as another intelligent movie, but more religious throughout. Chasing Amy is about love and gender issues, namely homosexuality. The way that Kevin Smith made this movie is terrific in the way that the script and lines are extremly relevant to reality. Ben Affleck plays a guy (a comic book drawer) who falls in love with a woman (played by Joey Lauren Adams, Kevin Smith's then girlfriend) who turns out to be a lesbian. And they find that the other had exactly what the other was looking for, and they fall in love eventually. However, I did feel that we were suddenly thrown into Ben's love for her without a real background or any real structure like in other movies, I dare say. So we see Ben, he sees Alyssa (Lauren Adams), he falls in love and breaks it to her during a rainy night in the car. That scene was the best of all, with a long line that Ben had to say to her. But as I said, I didn't feel any real weight for this to suddenly happen. But, things go well for a while and then when Ben hears that she had had sex with other men before (she IS a lesbian as he understands), things start to tremble down from there on. What Ben proposes in the end makes sense, which I won't reveal for those who have not yet seen the movie. Then of course we see Jay and Silent Bob, and in this movie Silent Bob actually speaks MORE that loud/foul mouthed Jay! And what he says, is wise like always. Jason Lee plays as Ben's comic book partner and he is against Ben's love for Alyssa and he does it well in the movie. Joey Lauren Adams is a good actress for this movie and her relation with Ben in the movie fits in well. This is not the best romantic comedy, but a good all-round choice for everyone, for this is his most intelligent and "serious" movie he's made so far. If you have seen this movie and like it, check out Kevin Smith's next movie "Jersey Girl", which he said would have a "Chasing Amyish" theme. In all, it's a very good movie worth to be seen by everyone.
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