Review: Kevin Smith’s Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back on Dimension Blu-ray

Kevin Smith’s clever in-joke movie gets an anemic Blu-ray release.

Jay and Silent Bob Strike BackKevin Smith’s latest comedy is compact, rambling, and consistently funny; this is a jaded Hollywood-themed lark in the style of Pee Wee’s Big Adventure (a red bike is Smith’s wink to Burton). In the film, Jay (Jason Mewes) and Silent Bob (Kevin Smith) are stuck in the Jersey boondocks, oblivious to their influence on pop culture: Bluntman and Chronic, a new Hollywood film adapted from a comic book based on their superhero misadventures, is being made without their consent, but while it’s shamelessly aware of itself as a kind of Hollywood satire, Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back never takes itself too seriously. The Bluntman and Chronic film is celebrated on a website called Poop Shoot, Smith’s nod to Harry Knowles’s online talkback hot zone, where legions of sniveling prepubescents feel empowered by the expletives they shoot off and the anonymity afforded to them by the Internet, and in the film’s funniest scenario, Jay puts one of these faceless dweebs in their place. Smith can occasionally lose himself to parody (a Scooby Doo bit sticks out like a sore thumb), but Jay and Silent Bob is remarkably consistent and funny for what amounts to a 90-minute sketch comedy. Smith leaves no Hollywood stone unturned: The inexplicable presence of orangutans and chimps throughout the picture are his nods to market research while Chris Rock grapples with racial representation on the big screen via a pro-white slavery diatribe. Smith both celebrates and apologizes for adolescent male behavior, and in one scene Silent Bob is referred to as Jay’s “hetero life-mate.” He’s Smith’s representation of the sensitive heterosexual male, a voiceless warrior willing to admit that there may be something more to his friendship to the odious Jay. Does it come as any surprise that GLAAD has decided to sink its claws into Smith’s witty film (certainly his best work since Clerks) while it extols Showtime’s offensive soap opera Queer as Folk for its supposedly authentic representation of gay culture? GLAAD could use guys like Smith—incurably straight yet honest enough to ridicule bad straight male behavior.

Image/Sound

It’s all perfectly fine, neither spectacular nor embarrassing. Colors look pretty good, with a few artifacting and edge-enhancement issues. Sound, likewise, is adequate. This is probably the best the movie has ever looked or sounded, but it’s a Kevin Smith flick, so that’s not saying a whole lot.

Extras

An audio commentary with Smith, Scott Mosier, and Jason Mewes that was already available on the standard DVD. And that’s it.

Advertisement

Overall

Kevin Smith’s clever in-joke movie gets an anemic Blu-ray release.

Score: 
 Cast: Kevin Smith, Jason Mewes, Shannen Doherty, Renee Humphrey, Ben Affleck, James Van Der Beek, Jason Biggs, Matt Damon, Joey Lauren Adams, Shannon Elizabeth, Carrie Fisher  Director: Kevin Smith  Screenwriter: Kevin Smith  Distributor: Buena Vista Home Entertainment  Running Time: 104 min  Rating: R  Year: 2001  Release Date: November 17, 2009  Buy: Video

Ed Gonzalez

Ed Gonzalez is the co-founder of Slant Magazine. A member of the New York Film Critics Circle, his writing has appeared in The Village Voice, The Los Angeles Times, and other publications.

Matt Noller

Matthew Noller is a senior associate in the Sacramento office of King & Spalding and a member of the firm’s Government Matters practice.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Previous Story

DVD Review: Larry Charles’s Brüno on Universal Home Entertainment

Next Story

Blu-ray Review: Kevin Smith’s Chasing Amy on Buena Vista Home Entertainment