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Thursday 10 October 2024

The 4:30 Movie (2024)


Kevin Smith's most personal film to date. Set in 1986, a teenage cinephile asks the cute girl out to the 4:30pm showing of an R-rated movie. In the meantime, he and his two buddies spend the day at the theater, hopping from screen to screen, while trying to avoid the high-strung manager. It's the kind of film that will make you smile if you're familiar with the time period and the films being represented, although it's a bit too cutesy with all of its references and numerous winks to the camera. It's one of those movies I wanted to like more than I did, but it ultimately fell short of expectations. I enjoyed it more than Clerks 3, that's all I'll say.

2½ movies snuck into out of 5

2 comments:

  1. After the MOTU debacle, lying about being a fan of the franchise in the first place, and saying he was a messenger of god and therefore can do no wrong, because he survived the heart attack, I was done with him. I was already over his movies, prior to all that, but I still enjoyed listening to him talk about stuff, because I'm a passion vampire like Persephone. Yes, remind me what it's like to like new things...

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  2. I'm planning on nutting the rest of his filmography eventually, but ever since he survived the attack, became a vegan and lost all that weight, his output has lost a lot of its appeal for me. Though one could argue some of that happened around the time of Cop Out (appropriately titled enough), but I still enjoyed some of his weirder offerings. For me, his initial View Askewniverse (1994-2001) remains untouchable and captures a part of my youth.

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“Where we’re going, we don’t need ________”
A) Mom’s permission. B) Roads. C) Pants.