The Reason Kevin Smith Barely Speaks In Clerks

Miramax By Joshua Meyer/Dec. 16, 2021 3:04 pm EST

Kevin Smith is not usually what you would call a man of few words … except when it comes to his long-running character, Silent Bob, who first appeared in the filmmaker’s low-budget directorial debut, “Clerks.”

Since breaking onto the scene as an independent filmmaker with “Clerks” in 1994, Smith has gone on to have a career in other mediums, including comics and podcasting. In fact, he hosts several podcasts, and a quick perusal of his official YouTube channel shows that episodes regularly run two or three hours, about the length of a movie. Smith and his co-hosts and guests clearly have the gift of gab, and he’s also stood on stage and told stories for hours in his “Evening with Kevin Smith” series of Q&A sessions at colleges around the U.S., as well as San Diego Comic-Con. You wouldn’t necessarily peg Kevin Smith as the first choice to play the silent type, and, it turns out, Silent Bob wasn’t actually his first choice of roles in “Clerks.” While speaking to The Guardian for a 25th-anniversary “Clerks” retrospective, Smith explained:

“The main character – Dante, the slacker who is trapped but thinks he’s meant for something else – was based on me. Randal was Bryan Johnson, my friend who worked with me at Quick Stop Groceries and RST Video, where we shot the film. He didn’t give a f**k about what anyone thought. He would fight with people, make fun of them to their face. He was the guy I secretly wished to be. I was going to play Randal, then I realized I couldn’t memorize dialogue. So I took the role that had none – Silent Bob – and Brian O’Halloran played Dante.”

The Reason Kevin Smith Barely Speaks In Clerks

Miramax

By Joshua Meyer/Dec. 16, 2021 3:04 pm EST

Kevin Smith is not usually what you would call a man of few words … except when it comes to his long-running character, Silent Bob, who first appeared in the filmmaker’s low-budget directorial debut, “Clerks.”

Since breaking onto the scene as an independent filmmaker with “Clerks” in 1994, Smith has gone on to have a career in other mediums, including comics and podcasting. In fact, he hosts several podcasts, and a quick perusal of his official YouTube channel shows that episodes regularly run two or three hours, about the length of a movie. Smith and his co-hosts and guests clearly have the gift of gab, and he’s also stood on stage and told stories for hours in his “Evening with Kevin Smith” series of Q&A sessions at colleges around the U.S., as well as San Diego Comic-Con. You wouldn’t necessarily peg Kevin Smith as the first choice to play the silent type, and, it turns out, Silent Bob wasn’t actually his first choice of roles in “Clerks.” While speaking to The Guardian for a 25th-anniversary “Clerks” retrospective, Smith explained:

“The main character – Dante, the slacker who is trapped but thinks he’s meant for something else – was based on me. Randal was Bryan Johnson, my friend who worked with me at Quick Stop Groceries and RST Video, where we shot the film. He didn’t give a f**k about what anyone thought. He would fight with people, make fun of them to their face. He was the guy I secretly wished to be. I was going to play Randal, then I realized I couldn’t memorize dialogue. So I took the role that had none – Silent Bob – and Brian O’Halloran played Dante.”

Since breaking onto the scene as an independent filmmaker with “Clerks” in 1994, Smith has gone on to have a career in other mediums, including comics and podcasting. In fact, he hosts several podcasts, and a quick perusal of his official YouTube channel shows that episodes regularly run two or three hours, about the length of a movie. Smith and his co-hosts and guests clearly have the gift of gab, and he’s also stood on stage and told stories for hours in his “Evening with Kevin Smith” series of Q&A sessions at colleges around the U.S., as well as San Diego Comic-Con.

You wouldn’t necessarily peg Kevin Smith as the first choice to play the silent type, and, it turns out, Silent Bob wasn’t actually his first choice of roles in “Clerks.” While speaking to The Guardian for a 25th-anniversary “Clerks” retrospective, Smith explained:

“The main character – Dante, the slacker who is trapped but thinks he’s meant for something else – was based on me. Randal was Bryan Johnson, my friend who worked with me at Quick Stop Groceries and RST Video, where we shot the film. He didn’t give a f**k about what anyone thought. He would fight with people, make fun of them to their face. He was the guy I secretly wished to be. I was going to play Randal, then I realized I couldn’t memorize dialogue. So I took the role that had none – Silent Bob – and Brian O’Halloran played Dante.”

Silent Bob Speaks

The Library of Congress added “Clerks” to the National Film Registry in 2019, thereby minting it as an American movie classic that is “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.” Smith may not have gotten to play Randall or say many lines, but with “Clerks,” his overall efforts as a filmmaker still paid off. We’ll see if they’ll continue to pay off when the forthcoming “Clerks III” rolls around.