Search results
News about Smith County Clerk, Derek Phillips, Karen Phillips
News about Burns Harbor, Ohio, Aliza Shatzman
News about Michigan, Adams Township, election systems
News about Shelby County Clerk, DuPage County, Whitehaven
Clerks is a 1994 American black-and-white comedy film written and directed by Kevin Smith in his feature directorial debut.
- $4.4 million
- October 19, 1994
- $27,575, $230,000 (post)
Nov 9, 1994 · Dante and Randal are two friends who work in a convenience store and a video store, respectively. They spend their day complaining about their jobs, customers, and life, while discussing movies and playing hockey on the roof.
- (229K)
- Comedy
- Kevin Smith
- 1994-11-09
Clerks is a 1994 black-and-white comedy film by Kevin Smith, starring Brian O'Halloran and Jeff Anderson as two convenience store clerks. The film follows their mundane and absurd day, interspersed with flashbacks and reflections on their personal lives.
- (60)
- Kevin Smith
- R
- Brian O'halloran
Clerks. A day in the lives of two convenience clerks named Dante and Randal as they annoy customers, discuss movies, and play hockey on the store roof. 4,238 IMDb 7.7 1 h 31 min 1994. X-Ray R. Comedy · Eerie · Strange · Serious. Free trial of Paramount+, rent, or buy. Watch with Paramount+. Start your 7-day free trial. Rent. HD $4.29. Buy.
- 91 min
- 8
People also ask
Who works in 'Clerks'?
Will there be a Clerks 2?
Who are the actors in Clerks?
How much did clerks cost?
A dark comedy about two convenience store clerks, Dante and Randal, who deal with customers, bosses, and personal problems on a typical day. The film features a lot of pop culture references, black humor, and dialogue about life, love, and death.
Nov 4, 1994 · Clerks is a film about two friends who work in a convenience store and a video store in a strip mall in Asbury Park, N.J. It follows their conversations, their customers, their lives and their love interests, as well as their struggles with work and their own identity. Roger Ebert praises the film's authenticity, humor and dialogue, and its depiction of Generation X.