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Les Glandeurs

Original title: Mallrats
  • 1995
  • 16
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
133K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,566
693
Shannen Doherty, Claire Forlani, Kevin Smith, Jason Lee, Stan Lee, Jeremy London, Jason Mewes, Michael Rooker, Ethan Suplee, and Sven-Ole Thorsen in Les Glandeurs (1995)
Pre
Play trailer0:31
3 Videos
99+ Photos
FarceSatireComedyRomance

Both dumped by their girlfriends, two best friends seek refuge in the local mall.Both dumped by their girlfriends, two best friends seek refuge in the local mall.Both dumped by their girlfriends, two best friends seek refuge in the local mall.

  • Director
    • Kevin Smith
  • Writer
    • Kevin Smith
  • Stars
    • Shannen Doherty
    • Jeremy London
    • Jason Lee
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    133K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,566
    693
    • Director
      • Kevin Smith
    • Writer
      • Kevin Smith
    • Stars
      • Shannen Doherty
      • Jeremy London
      • Jason Lee
    • 477User reviews
    • 93Critic reviews
    • 41Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos3

    Mallrats
    Trailer 0:31
    Mallrats
    Jay and Silent Bob: Rebooted & Revealed
    Clip 2:58
    Jay and Silent Bob: Rebooted & Revealed
    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

    Photos166

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    Top cast49

    Edit
    Shannen Doherty
    Shannen Doherty
    • Rene
    Jeremy London
    Jeremy London
    • TS Quint
    Jason Lee
    Jason Lee
    • Brodie
    Claire Forlani
    Claire Forlani
    • Brandi
    Ben Affleck
    Ben Affleck
    • Shannon
    Joey Lauren Adams
    Joey Lauren Adams
    • Gwen
    Renée Humphrey
    Renée Humphrey
    • Tricia
    • (as Renee Humphrey)
    Jason Mewes
    Jason Mewes
    • Jay
    Ethan Suplee
    Ethan Suplee
    • Willam
    Stan Lee
    Stan Lee
    • Stan Lee
    Priscilla Barnes
    Priscilla Barnes
    • Ivannah
    Michael Rooker
    Michael Rooker
    • Svenning
    Carol Banker
    • Security Guard
    Steven Blackwell
    • Arresting Cop #2
    Kyle Boe
    Kyle Boe
    • Pull Toy Kid
    David Brinkley
    • TV Executive #1
    Walter Flanagan
    Walter Flanagan
    • Fan Boy
    Ethan Flower
    Ethan Flower
    • Guy Contestant #1
    • Director
      • Kevin Smith
    • Writer
      • Kevin Smith
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews477

    7.0132.6K
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    Featured reviews

    bob the moo

    Very funny if you live in Smith's world

    I guess that people can be split in two ways - those that like Kevin Smith's films and those that don't. From watching his films, he seems to like his characters to exist in his strange world where things are exaggerated and ridiculous characters do unrealistic things.

    That sums up Mallrats - it's the story of two friends who both lose their girlfriends and then spend the rest of the day hanging around in the local mall. Whilst hanging around they meet friends and get into scrapes as they strive to get their girlfriends back.

    I suppose if you looked at it coolly it's all a bit silly - fully of ridiculous situations and scrapes that are resolved in unbelievable ways. But then if you accept Smith's world of comic book style adventures and cartoon film making then this is great. Whereas his later Chasing Amy brings adult subjects into the comedy - this is pure cartoon comedy, although understand it's not dumb like slapstick - but crazy, clever humour with plenty of jokes occuring all around the main action.

    OK the overall plot is weak at best, but the story is more about the characters and the situations along the journey to the end of the film and here is where Smith wins. He has created crazy characters that are funny and often exaggerated versions of people or of people's reactions to situations (witness the magic-eye poster guy for an example of exaggerated humour).

    Lee is fantastic, this is the role he was made for - he reacts in an exaggerated way to everything and really hams it up. I suppose he's a comic-book reading loser but in this world he is funny and in control. He is loud and abusive to others and it's great! Jeremy London is a weak straight man and doesn't really convince.

    Jay & Silent Bob are good as always - although for most of the movie they exist in their own little subplot of taking on the mall police. Again their adventures are exaggerated for humour.

    If you hated Clerks and Smith's other movies then you'll hate this. However if this world is one that appeals to you then you'll love this movie's reckless abandonment of reality and enjoy the adventures involved in a trip to the mall.
    8ericjg623

    Fly, fatass, fly!

    This is Kevin Smith's first `real' movie, i.e., one made with a real budget, real actors, and backed by a real studio. It was also a commercial and critical flop, most reviewers seem to regard it as his worst movie. That is understandable, seeing as he set such high expectations with `Clerks', a work of pure genius that was made on a budget so low that Smith was forced to use black & white film. `Clerks' is one of my all time favorite films, a classic that will probably still be popular many years from now, and so, by comparison, `Mallrats' simply doesn't measure up. But so what? It's still a great comedy, with lots of moments that make you want to split a gut, and is, IMHO, better than at least 90% of the other teenage/young adult movies out there.

    The story (as with most comedies) is pretty basic. It's about a day in the life of two slackers who both get dumped by their girlfriends that morning. They then spend the rest of the day hanging around the mall (in an ironic touch, the mall in question, while supposedly set in New Jersey, is actually about five miles from where I live, in the Minneapolis suburb Eden Prairie) trying to figure out how to win back their girls. Along the way they encounter Kevin Smith's trademark ensemble of oddball characters, most notably Jay & Silent Bob who give what I think are their funniest movie performances. Kevin Smith continues themes established in `Clerks' (and repeated in his following movies) namely, homages to Star Wars, Jaws, and hockey and throws in some new ones, most notably, comics and video games. As in `Clerks', nothing much really happens, the two, as the tagline puts it, aren't at the mall to work or to shop, they're just there. Well, not entirely. Amid their random meanderings and encounters with other Kevin Smith favorites like Ben Affleck and Joey Lauren Adams there is an actual plot, namely, one of the guys is scheming to wreck a TV game show to be broadcast live at the mall later that day and he enlists Jay and Silent Bob to do the dirty deed. Why? Well, it's too complicated to explain in a brief review, but the payoff is hilarious. Whatever else one thinks of this movie, it has to be about the best send up of game shows ever as the dynamic duo infiltrate a Dating Game rip-off and turn the whole thing into a circus. The final 20 minutes or so of this movie is simply some of the funniest stuff you'll see anywhere.

    What about the rest? Mostly it's pretty good, although Kevin Smith's penchant for pushing the envelope means he sometimes goes too far when it comes to matters of taste, most notably scenes like the infamous `chocolate pretzel' and a former `Three's Company' star playing a topless fortune teller, not to mention the 15 year old girl who's doing a `science project' that involves having sex with multiple men of varying ages. Also, Smith seems to have some sort of fixation on homosexuality that keeps coming up (pardon the pun) in his movies. Is he simply using gay jokes as a means of getting a cheap laugh or is this his way of working out some personal `issues'? I don't know and, further, I don't care because I think there are better, more creative ways to get a laugh. But, these complaints aside, this movie is still funny as hell, and, as with `Clerks', Smith proves he has a good ear for tunes to accompany the film, especially in the title sequence which features all the characters drawn comic book style. Very original, and it works perfectly. One final comment: I personally think the best way to watch his movies is to view them in order; this, for example, gives us the same basic slacker attitude and mentality of `Clerks', only in color and with a much bigger budget. He then went for the `quality' flick with `Chasing Amy' followed by the `issues' flick in `Dogma', finally returning to pure comedy in `Jay & Silent Bob Strike Back'. For one, the movies are all related, and each new one refers to his previous ones. Many of the jokes only make sense if you understand the context. And also, someone who saw the much more dramatic and polished `Chasing Amy' first and this film later might tend to dismiss it as sophomoric trash, not realizing that Smith got his start doing pure comedy, not romantic drama. In sum, this is a film in the tradition of `Airplane!' or `Scary Movie' in that it's all about going to any length to get a laugh, and, for the most part, it succeeds splendidly.

    8/10

    PS. As with all his other movies, Kevin Smith goes to considerable length to please his fans with his DVD's. They are all chock full of extra features, deleted scenes and the like, and his commentaries are some of the best in the movie business. Smith obviously knows he has a highly loyal fan base, and he returns that loyalty in spades.
    7gavin6942

    My Ultimate in Pubescent Guilty Pleasures

    After being dumped by their girlfriends, T.S. Quint(Jeremy London) and Brodie Bruce (Jason Lee) go to the mall to keep their minds off the situation. Soon, however, thoughts turn to getting their ladies back and the dynamic duo will have to fight mall security, a fashionable male (Ben Affleck) and a game show producer (Michael Rooker) in order to succeed.

    Writing a fair review of "Mallrats" is one of the hardest things for me to do, and it is no surprise that I have not done so in all the years I have been writing reviews. The film came out when I was fourteen, and I went to see it with my cousin at the local mall after a rousing bus trip. We had seen the ambiguous advertisements in the back of comic books for months and just knew this was something we had to see. Once in the theater, we were practically alone -- there were only three other people, including a younger woman and her grandmother, both of whom walked out early on.

    For whatever reason, I identified with this film. I had not yet seen "Clerks" and I did not have the background in film to really understand all the references to "Jaws" or "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" or "Apocalypse Now". But the potty humor mixed with the intelligent dialogue (even about scatological topics) hit home with me, and even now -- seventeen years later -- it remains my favorite film, despite my knowing full well it is not critically wonderful and often sexually crude.

    I have given the film a high rating because I simply cannot get enough of it. I have the trading cards that were sold at the time, I have visited the Eden Prairie Center where the movie was filmed (it is in Minnesota, not New jersey, strangely enough). But, I want to stress this: my high rating does not by any means indicate this is a critically beautiful film. Read the reviews of the professionals at the time (Ebert, Maltin, and others) and you will see that it was more or less expected to bomb (although I think in hindsight many more people found the film to their liking).

    Are there flaws? You bet. Watch Jeremy London, for example. A horrible, horrible actor. Even with these odd, scripted conversations he comes off as forced, and if you watch him while another actor is speaking, you can see him physically preparing himself to speak his lines. He cannot become the character of T.S. Quint, he can only be Jeremy London. Shannon Doherty, likewise, just does not seem to hack it... she is a better actress than many, but this film just did not work for her. She comes off as a reject from "Empire Records", and some lines she delivers make it seem she is not familiar with the subject matter.

    Despite the flaws, I am still praising this film. Watch "Clerks" first (even though this one takes place first in chronological order). If you like "Clerks", try this one. Then try "Chasing Amy". All three are great. Personally, I think Kevin Smith's films went downhill after that (although "Red State" is redeeming). He may disagree and I know many of the fans do. But if you do not mind intelligent potty humor, "Mallrats" is for you.
    Adriane

    Oh please everybody, this movie is great!

    To everybody who did not like this movie: You are not obviously Kevin Smith fans. I am, and everyone one of the NJ3 are great. This one is just different. Shannen Doherty is surprisingly cool in this one, and Jason Lee is hysterical. Jay and Silent Bob are hysterical as usual, and everyone else is great. Watch if you are a Smith fan, just keep an open mind.
    Chrysanthepop

    Wacky Comedy in a Shopping Mall

    'Mallrats' but is the kind of film you either like or don't like which is pretty much the case with any Kevin Smith movie. I liked it. I enjoyed all the dirty street humour, the awkwardness, the characters and the concept.

    It's full of slapstick comedies, comic book 'adventure' and some witty (and dirty) dialogues. Even though many of the situations are unrealistic, it's hilarious.

    'Mallrats' is about two friends who both lose their girlfriends. The two friends spend the rest of the day in the mall discussing things and what to do about them. In the mall they meet some friends, enemies, and weirdos. Though the plot isn't what would be referred to as a work of 'genius', it's more the characters and the funny situations that will stick to mind.

    The only sequence I didn't like was the toilet humour bit, about making the hand stink. That sort of brought down the film a little. The film was already on the right track with its funny characters and funny situations. There was no need for toilet humour.

    London and Lee play the two friends. London is okay while Lee is very good. He pretty much steals every scene. Doherty and Forlani are adequate. Lauren Adams is brilliant in a brief role and Affleck is good as the evil Salesman. Mewes and Smith are alright (though some may feel that they go a little over the top).

    So all in all, you'll meet some very weird (and not-so-weird) characters and exaggerated situations but I think you'll at least have some good laughs. It's one of the better comedies from a country that has made dozens of blockbuster garbage like 'American Pie'.

    Related interests

    Leslie Nielsen, Robert Hays, Julie Hagerty, and Lorna Patterson in Y a-t-il un pilote dans l'avion ? (1980)
    Farce
    Peter Sellers in Dr. Folamour ou : comment j'ai appris à ne plus m'en faire et à aimer la bombe (1964)
    Satire
    Will Ferrell in Présentateur vedette: La légende de Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      (at around 10 mins) Brodie's comic book collection seen in the movie was director Kevin Smith's collection at the time (which has grown considerably since). The collection is what Smith was able to purchase back after selling his original collection to finance production of Clerks : Les Employés modèles (1994).
    • Goofs
      When Brodie and TS first arrive at the mall, the license plates on the cars state New Jersey, then the remainder show Minnesota.
    • Quotes

      Stan Lee: You know, I think you ought to get him some help. He seems to be really hung up on super heroes' sex organs.

    • Crazy credits
      End credits finish with: Jay and Silent Bob will return in "Chasing Amy"
    • Alternate versions
      There is also a 10th Anniversary Extended Edition, running 2hours and 2 minutes.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Get Shorty/Now and Then/Mallrats (1995)
    • Soundtracks
      Web in Front
      Written & Performed by Archers of Loaf

      Courtesy of Alias Records, Inc.

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    FAQ21

    • How long is Mallrats?Powered by Alexa
    • Is the game show contestant Gil Hicks related to Quick Stop clerk Dante Hicks (both played by Brian O'Halloran)?
    • What ever happened to the 5 disc 10th Anniversary Edition DVD?
    • What are the differences between the Theatrical Version and the Extended Version?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 20, 1995 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • View Askew's "Mallrats" page
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Jóvenes modernos
    • Filming locations
      • Eden Prairie Center Mall - 8251 Flying Cloud Drive, Eden Prairie, Minnesota, USA
    • Production companies
      • Gramercy Pictures (I)
      • Alphaville Films
      • View Askew Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $8,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,122,561
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,153,838
      • Oct 22, 1995
    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,122,561
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • DTS-Stereo
      • DTS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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