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Jay and Silent Bob made a brief appearance in the 2012 final chapter of Major League Chew, set in the Image Universe. [12] Jay and Silent Bob made a brief appearance in one panel of Green Arrow (vol. 3) #6, standing outside Jason Blood's Safe House in Star City. This issue was written by Kevin Smith during his 15-issue run on the title character.
Kevin Patrick Smith (born August 2, 1970) is an American film director, producer, writer, and actor.He came to prominence with the low-budget comedy buddy film Clerks (1994), which he wrote, directed, co-produced, and acted in as the character Silent Bob of stoner duo Jay and Silent Bob, characters who also appeared in Smith's later films Mallrats (1995), Chasing Amy (1997), Dogma (1999), Jay ...
Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back is a 2001 American satirical stoner buddy comedy film written, co-edited, and directed by Kevin Smith and produced and co-edited by Scott Mosier. The film is the fifth set in the View Askewniverse , a growing collection of characters and settings that developed out of Smith's cult-favorite Clerks .
Kevin Smith and Jason Mewes have performed together as Jay and Silent Bob in eight films, including "Clerks," "Mallrats" and "Chasing Amy."
The character later appeared on a Jay and Silent Bob MTV short. On the 1997 romantic comedy film Chasing Amy, Mosier and Smith agreed with Miramax's Harvey Weinstein and Bob Weinstein to shrink the initial proposed budget from $3 million to $250,000. The compromise allowed Mosier and Kevin to cast their friends instead of established stars.
Brodie and T.S. discover Truth or Date is being filmed at the same mall, through their friend Willam, who throughout the film tries to see a sailboat in a Magic Eye poster. The two ask local slackers Jay and Silent Bob to destroy the show's stage, a task for which they devise elaborate but ultimately unsuccessful plans. Brodie and T.S. run into ...
The characters, played by Smith and Jason Mewes, have been in every one of the director's "View Askewniverse" films
"Goodbye Horses" was first released in 1988, and, in 1991, Q Lazzarus released an extended version of the song, with her song "White Lines" as a B-side. [ 2 ] [ 22 ] [ 35 ] In 2021, Ryan Leas wrote for Stereogum that the "cult icon status" of the "beloved" "Goodbye Horses" "seems to keep strengthening over the years". [ 6 ]