A little bit weird, a little bit political with a lot of humor.
Good Warped fun from the mind of Kevin Smith
Published on October 21, 2004 By historyishere In TV Shows
In the summer of 2000, after 5 years of development, Kevin Smith's animated spinoff of his first film, Clerks, premiered on ABC.... and lasted two out-of sequence episodes... and I loved it then. Of course, for most tv series, that would have been the end.... they would have been merely a speck of roadkill on the side of the network superhighway, but for Kevin Smith... after so much investment... it couldn't be the end.

In late 2001, he released the 6 existing episodes of the show on video, and those of us who watched it on ABC got to really see the genius of the show. It was cheeky(like having their second episode in part be a clip show of their first episode), culturally literate and intertextual(so many great little references through the series) and extremely funny even with the network limitations put on it. Smith was also able to get more than his fair share of guest stars to appear on the show too, people like Alec Baldwin, James Woods, Gwyneth Paltrow and quite a basketball players. Let's just say it totally changed the way I look at Charles Barkley.

The strange thing is.... the six episodes sort of stand on their own as a unit. There is a development to the final episode, prophetically titled in production, "Last Episode Ever", throughout the series, so there doesn't seem to be loose ends, so it ends up being an enjoyable viewing experience. However, the best episode and keystone to the series is the fourth episode titled: A Dissertation On The American Justice System By People Who Have Never Been Inside A Courtroom, Let Alone Know Anything About The Law, But Have Seen Way Too Many Legal Thrillers. If you have to see one episode of the show... this is the one to see. Trust me. You will laugh, and if you watch it with friends, you will be bringing it up for weeks. It's that bizarrely funny.

Even if you didn't like the original movie, Clerks: the Animated series has much to recommend it. Smith and company were willing to be silly and weird in ways only cartoons could be, and if you do like Clerks the movie, it continues and fills in a lot of the details in that part of the Viewaskew universe, so I cannot recommend it more highly. Its unfortunate that Disney still has power over Miramax, because I think that this series would have worked great on Fox, and perhaps would have been given a much better chance at viability.

At least its available for home-viewing though.

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