Home SP Blog SP Forum Join Now Login

Switch Categories

SwitchPlanet

Switchbuc Calculator

FAQs

Mallrats (10th Anniversary Extended Edition)

Availability

Currently not available

These members have it but are not switching it at this time Xavier Valdruidspooon

Theatrical Release

October 20, 1995

Studio

Universal Studios

Rated

NR (Not Rated)

Directors

Actors

Joey Lauren Adams, Ben Affleck, Carol Banker, Priscilla Barnes, Steven Blackwell (II), Kyle Boe, David Brinkley (II), Shannen Doherty, Walter Flanagan, Ethan Flower, Claire Forlani, Chelsea Frye, Renée Humphrey, Jason Lee, Stan Lee, Jeremy London, Jason Mewes, Michael Rooker, Ethan Suplee

Switchers Rate This:

Currently selling for $12.41 NEW at Amazon.com

Formats

  • Color
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC

Additional Information

From Kevin Smith, the acclaimed director of Clerks, comes this outrageous story of two loafers, Jeremy London (The Babysitter) and Jason Lee (Kissing a Fool), who spend way too much time hanging out at the mall.

When Brodie (Lee) is dumped by his girlfriend, Shannen Doherty (Heathers, Girls Just Wanna Have Fun), he retreats to the mall with his best friend T.S. (London), whose girlfriend has also left him. Between brooding and visits to the food court, the unmotivated twosome decide to win their girlfriends back with the help of the ultimate delinquents, Silent Bob (Kevin Smith) and Jay (Jason Mewes), whose continuing adventures take the word nuisance to a whole new level.

Bonus Features
Cast Interviews From Original Set
A Brief Q&A With Kevin Smith
Outtakes
View Askiew's Look Back at Mallrats
The Erection of an Epic: The Making of Mallrats
Feature Commentary with Kevin Smith, Ben Afflect, Jason Lee, Jason Mewes, Scott Mosier and Vincent Pereira
Production Photographs
The Goops "Build Me Up Buttercup" Music Video
Theatrical Trailer



System Requirements:

  • Running Time 96 Mins.

    Format: DVD MOVIE - Product Description

    Sophomore jinx hit hard in this second film by Kevin Smith, whose debut Clerks transcended the limits of its setting and budget to become something memorably funny. (Smith followed Mallrats with the wonderful Chasing Amy, so Mallrats definitely had the old curse.) A ramshackle comedy set in a mall, the film follows several story lines involving lovers, enemies, friends, goofballs, and Smith's own "silent" character, who also appeared in Clerks and Chasing Amy. A heavy self-consciousness weighs on everything, as if Smith forgot how to make obscenity funny instead of tedious. Still, it's nice to see some of the director's film family on screen, among them Jason Lee and Joey Lauren Adams. --Tom Keogh - Amazon.com

  • _