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Clerks : Les Employés modèles

Original title: Clerks
  • 1994
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
238K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,082
213
Jeff Anderson and Brian O'Halloran in Clerks : Les Employés modèles (1994)
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.
Play trailer1:23
9 Videos
99+ Photos
Buddy ComedySatireComedy

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.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.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.

  • Director
    • Kevin Smith
  • Writer
    • Kevin Smith
  • Stars
    • Brian O'Halloran
    • Jeff Anderson
    • Marilyn Ghigliotti
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    238K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,082
    213
    • Director
      • Kevin Smith
    • Writer
      • Kevin Smith
    • Stars
      • Brian O'Halloran
      • Jeff Anderson
      • Marilyn Ghigliotti
    • 695User reviews
    • 136Critic reviews
    • 70Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 10 nominations total

    Videos9

    Clerks
    Trailer 1:23
    Clerks
    Clerks
    Trailer 1:28
    Clerks
    Clerks
    Trailer 1:28
    Clerks
    Jay and Silent Bob: Rebooted & Revealed
    Clip 2:58
    Jay and Silent Bob: Rebooted & Revealed
    A Guide to the Films of Kevin Smith
    Clip 6:52
    A Guide to the Films of Kevin Smith
    Clerks: Opening The Store (German)
    Clip 1:43
    Clerks: Opening The Store (German)
    Jay and Silent Bob Get Rebooted, and Jason and Kevin Test Their Friendship
    Video 8:41
    Jay and Silent Bob Get Rebooted, and Jason and Kevin Test Their Friendship

    Photos196

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
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    View Poster
    + 190
    View Poster

    Top cast50

    Edit
    Brian O'Halloran
    Brian O'Halloran
    • Dante
    Jeff Anderson
    Jeff Anderson
    • Randal
    Marilyn Ghigliotti
    Marilyn Ghigliotti
    • Veronica
    Lisa Spoonauer
    Lisa Spoonauer
    • Caitlin
    Jason Mewes
    Jason Mewes
    • Jay
    Kevin Smith
    Kevin Smith
    • Silent Bob
    Scott Mosier
    Scott Mosier
    • Willam the Idiot Manchild…
    Scott Schiaffo
    Scott Schiaffo
    • Chewlies Rep
    Al Berkowitz
    • Old Man
    Walter Flanagan
    Walter Flanagan
    • Woolen Cap Smoker
    • (as Walt Flanagan)
    • …
    Ed Hapstak
    • Sanford…
    Lee Bendick
    • #812 Wynarski
    David Klein
    David Klein
    • Hunting Cap Smoking Boy…
    Pattijean Csik
    • Coroner
    Ken Clark
    • Administer of Fine…
    Donna Jeanne
    • Indecisive Video Customer
    Virginia Smith
    • Caged Animal Maturbator
    Betsy Broussard
    • Dental School Video Customer
    • Director
      • Kevin Smith
    • Writer
      • Kevin Smith
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews695

    7.7237.5K
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    Featured reviews

    10kevin_parks

    a heaven sent movie for any real life clerk

    I am very biased on the 9 rating i gave this movie. I could have even given it a 10 for I am, and for a long time has been a clerk. This movie to me was as moving and compelling as Passion of the Christ was for some Catholic people i know. In fact, in some moments, it even brought me to tears. The film is about a guy who works in a convenience store. He comes across the weirdest and most annoying customers that, ironically, don't shy too far from those in real life that I, myself have come across. This clerk is visited by his girlfriend and regularly visiting by his distraught and careless friend who is a clerk at the neighboring video store. If you aren't a clerk, and you watch this movie, remember this: This movie is as true to form as it gets. Some people claim it to be one of the best comedies of the past decade. I say it's the best Documentary of all time.
    michaeltdavis

    A MUST SEE FOR ALL EMPLOYEES THAT ARE CLERKS AT MOVIE STORES!

    This movie completely and perfectly describes the details of over the counter life as a clerk! It is one of the funniest movies i have ever seen.Kevin Smith is a very talented and insightful director with a great since of humor.The movie does look very cheesy and low budget, but a little movie trivia, Kevin Smith sold his comic book collection to fund this movie. Then after the movie became a hit he bought his comic books back! I currently work for blockbuster video and life is exactly like this movie! Thanks to this movie some of us are thinking about holding a hockey game on the roof of the store when we quit!I recommend this movie to every person who works as a clerk in a convenience store, or in a video store. This movie for those who don't work in mediocre place such as this will explain to you why we are the way we are!
    Michael_Elliott

    Still Holds Up

    Clerks (1994)

    **** (out of 4)

    Kevin Smith's cult classic about a two store clerks (Brian O'Halloran, Jeff Anderson) who have nothing to do except be bored and deal the cards life gives them. It's hard to believe this film is now fourteen-years-old as it seems just like yesterday when it made a splash on the indie circuit. This was my first time watching this in at least six or seven years and it hasn't lost any of its magic. I still think Smith hit on something truly great in the fact that he manages to take this type of job and show all the hassles and frustration that comes with it. I believe it was Roger Ebert's review that mentioned movies never deal with jobs unless the job is that of a cop, robber or something like that yet here we get to see the life of a clerk who is stuck at a job he hates and surrounded by people that can't really add too much to his life. The real key here of course is Smith's screenplay, which I'd call downright brilliant. To have 90-minutes of nothing but dialogue speaks a lot for his screenplay as it remains so constantly entertaining with the majority of the jokes working. The politically incorrect nature of the humor from the "37" to various other sexual things is downright hilarious and that includes the surprise in the bathroom. The performances in the film have taken a lot of unfair heat in my opinion because while they aren't perfect I do think they fit the roles just fine and mixed with the B&W it makes the film seem all the more like a documentary.
    9baumer

    An honest and humorous film

    If you have seen American Pie and think of it as being honest and real about sex and the way kids talk, then Clerks is right up your alley. I don't think a movie has pleasantly shocked me more than this one has. And make no mistake about it, this is one of the funniest movies I've ever seen.

    By now we've all heard the story of how Kevin Smith somehow scrounged up $27000 to piece this rag tag film together. It was at a film festival and some film executive saw it and offered him a generous amount of money. They fixed it up and before you know it we have the best indie film ever made. Kevin Smith is now a recognizable name in Hollywood and that alone should make you want to see this film.

    Dante and Randal are best friends. They work at a small convenience store and a crappy little video store respectively. As a matter a fact, the video store is so inept that Randall actually goes to one of the bigger video stores in town to rent his movies. Anyway, Dante is obsessed with his ex-girlfriend that cheated on him and he has a present girlfriend that is wonderful to him. That is the basic premise for the movie. And that is all you need to know about the plot. Because what the film is really about is how these characters really talk to each other. It is a bunch of clever anecdotes pieced together hilariously to form a movie. But some of the scenes are just so damn funny that Clerks stays with you for a long long time.

    Take for instance a scene where Dante and his girlfriend are discussing the various responsibilities of a man and a woman in sex. Each has an obvious gender biased view of the act but listen to how honest it is written, it gives meaning and much hilarity to the scene. From here, the two end up discussing how many people the other has slept with. And we all know that is an absolute no no in relationships. Because no matter how many or how little the number is, it is too much. But that would be too easy for Smith to end it at that. No, he takes it a step further. From here Veronica ( the girlfriend ) explains that she has only slept with X amount of guys but she has gone down on 36 others. Dante is mortified. How can she do that? And she explains that when she "does it" it means more than when she goes down and that is supposed to make him feel better. It of course doesn't and the pay off in the scene is brilliant as Veronica is walking back to her car. And that is just one of the scenes that makes the film work. There are dozens of other scenes similar in nature that are so humourous yet painfully honest that you laugh but when the giggles subside, you realize that it is so true.

    The obvious strength of this film is the writing. But beyond that, Smith establishes himself as a director that can get a performance out of his actors. Almost every major character in here is so well done that you think they had 20 attempts to get it perfect instead of the 3 or 4 that the budget would allow. Dante is well played by O'Halloran but it is Anderson as Randle that I think steels the picture. He is so honest and natural in every scene that he is in that it actually bothers me that he has not established himself in the game. Is it because no one wants to give him a role or is it that he has no interest in movies? I don't know, I just wish he was around again because he is electric.

    Jay and Silent Bob are funny as well and Bob provides the film with one of the funnier moments as he dances out of nowhere and then he shocks us with his only line of the film. And what he says may as well be Socrates talking and not a simple street hood. It really works.

    I love Clerks. It is such a fun movie and if you haven't seen this gem, check it out. Like it for the funny film that it is, but love it for whats behind it.

    This film has heart. And Smith is an inspiration to anyone that wants to do what he did. After all, he proves that nothing is impossible. He is living proof of that.
    10MaxBorg89

    A witty, hilariously profane cult picture

    Clerks is one of those movies everyone knows everything about even before they've seen it. The most fascinating aspect is probably the back-story: Kevin Smith sold his comic-book collection to finance it, shot it in the convenience store where he was working at the time, and cast his school friends in the various roles (two of them wound up playing three or four characters each). The film became a huge hit at Sundance, and is now widely (and justly) considered one of the best independent movies of all time.

    The plot is quite easy to sum up: nothing happens. It's just a "regular" day in the lives of a few people working in or outside a Quick Stop convenience store. The fun starts immediately, as Dante Hicks (Brian O'Halloran) is asked to replace a sick colleague. This upsets him a lot, since it's supposed to be his day off ("You know what the worst part is? I'm not even supposed to BE here today!"). So now he has to serve a bunch of rather annoying or excessively weird people, with occasional help from his friend Randal Graves (Jeff Anderson), who "works" in the video store next to Quick Stop. Together, they discuss things like hermaphroditic porn or, Tarantino-style, which Star Wars sequel is better (Jedi or Empire?), and also try to find ways of not working, or at least make the day less boring (as Randal puts it:"This job would be great if it wasn't for the f**king customers"). Between these discussions, they also interact with Dante's present girlfriend Veronica (whose sex life causes heated debates) and ex Caitlin, who's apparently engaged to some Asian design major. And let's not forget Jay (Jason Mewes) and Silent Bob (Smith himself), two drug dealers consistently located outside the store.

    Smith uses these characters to reference his favorite movies (the previously mentioned Star Wars, as well as Jaws and Indiana Jones) and talk about any subject in the filthiest way imaginable. Some incredibly outrageous stuff is mentioned ("jizz moppers", necrophilia, "snowballing"), but unlike John Waters, he never shows the events discussed by Dante, Randal et al. Everything occurs, or has occurred, off-screen, so all we get to do is have a good laugh, because no matter how crude it gets (the film is rated R for "Extensive Use Of Extremely Explicit Sex-Related Dialogue"), Smith's writing remains genuinely funny. Randal, in particular, steals every scene with his existential musings ("I'm a firm believer in the philosophy of a ruling class. Especially since I rule.") or very politically incorrect antics (the top? Reading a list of pornographic flicks in front of a mother and her baby).

    If you haven't seen it yet, do it, and fast: Clerks fully deserves its cult status. It has priceless dialogue, wisecracking characters and loads of swearing. What else can you ask for?

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Kevin Smith originally cast himself as Randal, which is why Randal gets some of the best lines.
    • Goofs
      Jay's costume is different in nearly every scene in the movie because the jacket he wore on the first day of shooting was his girlfriend's and he had a hard time borrowing it for the entire length of the shooting.
    • Quotes

      Silent Bob: [His only line] You know, there's a million fine looking women in the world, dude. But they don't all bring you lasagna at work. Most of 'em just cheat on you.

    • Crazy credits
      Jay (Jason Mewes) is heard at the end of the credits, chanting "Noinch, noinch, noinch, shmokin' weed, shmokin' weed, doin' coke, drinkin' beers...".
    • Alternate versions
      In the original theatrical and early home video versions, the scene where the mom comes in with her kid to rent "Happy Scrappy Hero Pups" had a different child voice dubbed in saying "happy scrappy". However, starting with the 10th anniversary Clerks X DVD, the audio for the girl's line of dialogue was replaced with the girl's actual voice, rather than the dubbed version in the earlier releases.
    • Connections
      Edited into Clerks: Deleted Scenes (1999)
    • Soundtracks
      Clerks
      Written by Steve Smyth (as S. Smyth) and S. Angley

      Performed by Love Among Freaks

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 9, 1994 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Clerks, detrás del mostrador
    • Filming locations
      • Quick Stop Groceries - 58 Leonard Avenue, Leonardo, New Jersey, USA
    • Production company
      • View Askew Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $27,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $3,151,130
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $31,665
      • Oct 23, 1994
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,152,360
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 32 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
      • Mono(original Sundance cut)

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