Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back (Blu-ray)
Picture:
B- Sound: B- Extras: C Film: C
Kevin
Smith is the hip comic fan/filmmaker/comedian who also happens to be an
entrepreneur who understands two audiences.
One are geeks, the other are the post-Punk market. Unlike many independent filmmakers who have a
hit and disappear, his Clerks was
only the beginning. This led to
follow-up highs (Chasing Amy), lows
(Mallrats) and mixed risks (Dogma).
Though Clerks 2 just came and
went in theaters and featured Jay (Jason Mewes) and Silent Bob (Smith), the
notes on the back of Disney’s new Blu-ray version of Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back (2001) say this is the conclusion
of their story. I guess Disney is still
sore about the Weinstein Brothers leaving Miramax.
This
time, the dopey duo are peeved that someone has decided to do a film about them
without their permission, so they intend to get back at the thieves in a way
that makes stealing “intellectual properties” have a new perspective. However, this was intended as a film to make
up for how bad Mallrats was and it
seems the credibility and fun that made the earlier films inarguable unto
themselves for street credibility was shot.
Though better than that mess, the film is more miss than hit and unless
you are a diehard fan of the duo and their Bluntman/Chronic shtick, it never
takes off.
Old
friends Ben Affleck and Jason Lee return, plus the film offers appearances by
Chris Rock, Eliza Dushku, Ali Larter, Carrie Fisher, George Carlin and three
actors who have become more popular:
Seann William Scott, John Stewart and especially Will Ferrell. They help the project, but they can only
overcome a script that simply wants to reestablish a franchise that jumped the
shark just enough to make this seem forced too often throughout. On top of that, Affleck was a big star now
and was about to go into his private Jennifer Lopez cycle that became a media
frenzy.
The film
wants to criticize the Hollywood establishment, but by this time, too many had
become part of it that the critiques did not ring as true or hip. After Jersey
Girl and with hindsight, the situation has become worse. Sure, Hollywood is still so overcensored and
self-censored that it is funny at times just by being crude and daring, but
that eventually gets too repetitious and the earlier films just seem funnier
and funnier.
So you’d
think having it in Blu-ray might make it funnier by seeing and hearing
everything more clearly. Well, this
transfer is off, so off in fact that though we have seen worse. However, the 1080p 2.35 X 1 image was shot in
Super 35mm and that is a factor in why it is as weak as it is. The less definition, the more volatile and
though this is a bit better than standard DVD, it is weak like some of the Sony
titles on Blu-ray that were early Superbit DVDs. That means barely passable.
As for
the sound, the best track is the PCM 16bit/48kHz 5.1 mix, superior to the
standard Dolby Digital, but Smith’s sound mixes are always odd. Sometimes, he goes the Woody Allen route with
dialogue-based scenes to the point where they seem almost monophonic, then he
gets his Superhero/Star Wars thing going and the sound suddenly kicks in. Fans might be used to it if they have home
theater systems, but the rest should take note.
The more
deluxe DVD edition of this film has plenty of extras, but this one only has the
audio commentary with Smith, Mewes and producer Scott Mosier. It is odd more than fun and sometimes is
informative. Disney may reissue it with
those extras when 50GB Blu-rays become commonplace, but this should do for fans
at least.
- Nicholas Sheffo