Film Threat by Bobby LePire
As a celebration, the documentary is an uplifting and joyous experience filled with amusing stories and engaging anecdotes.
Critic Rating
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Director
Malcolm Ingram
Cast
Kevin Smith,
Jason Mewes,
Scott Mosier,
Penn Jillette,
Stan Lee
Genre
Documentary
This documentary looks at the career of filmmaker, actor, and writer Kevin Smith, from his breakthrough with the low-budget 1994 comedy Clerks to his continued work in film, comics, comedy, and podcasting. Featuring interviews with collaborators like Matt Damon and Stan Lee, the film creates a portrait of a unique artist.
Film Threat by Bobby LePire
As a celebration, the documentary is an uplifting and joyous experience filled with amusing stories and engaging anecdotes.
The Film Stage by John Fink
With a conversational tone framed by extensive archival footage and access to Smith and his family, Clerk is an intimate overview of Smith’s universe, inner circle, and influence over the course of his 25-plus year career.
Paste Magazine by Natalia Keogan
Though Smith’s charisma and charm are appreciable, it simply adds an artificial sense of pleasantness by way of steering clear of thornier issues. The end result feels less like a documentary film and more like a devotional favor.
The Hollywood Reporter by John DeFore
Listening to one of Smith's speaking engagements would be a much more entertaining way for a fan to spend 115 minutes, and non-fans or fence-sitters will likely find this piece too puffy to be very useful. But few will deny that Smith is good company — an always-likable guide happy to make jokes at his own expense while he works to be the "Kevin Smith-iest" Kevin Smith he can be.
RogerEbert.com by Simon Abrams
Watching Smith's buddies pay him heartfelt tribute is one thing, but that doesn’t make spending so much time (115 minutes???) with his fawning co-conspirators feel much less oppressive.
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