For some crazy reason, I often get asked about the odd time I had a two-line part (TWO LINES, DAMMIT!) in a movie. That movie was 2001's Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back.
I was chummy with writer/director Kevin Smith, and Kevin often creates small roles for chums, so he offered me one and I jumped on it. I was also working for Wizard magazine at the time, so I turned the whole experience into a feature for said mag. Below, the text from that feature.
Upon reflection, the whole experience was a lot of fun, and I learned a LOT as well. I hope you have fun, and learn as well. Enjoy!
Wizard #120
TITLE:
I’M READY FOR MY CLOSE-UP, MR. SMITH
Sub: Free food! Kissing monkeys! Matt Damon! It’s all part
of the deal when you’re an extra in “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back”
by
Jim McLauchlin
Movies
are big business. But to Kevin Smith, they’re also a friendly business.
Take
a look at previous Smith written-and-directed flicks: “Clerks,” “Chasing Amy,”
“Dogma,” whatever. Childhood buddies such as Walter Flanagan and Bryan Johnson
always have bit parts. Even big names like Ben Affleck and Chris Rock keep
coming back to the well, ’cause they’ve become
Smith’s pals. The set of a Kevin Smith movie seems less a place of business,
and more a family reunion.
The
reunion this time is “Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back,” Smith’s fifth movie and
the last chapter in his “View Askewniverse” series of films. And this time
around, one of Smith’s chummy little buddies getting in on the gravy train
is…yours truly, Jim McLauchlin, boy journalist.
Smith
invited me to tackle a whopping two lines in his new flick. He musta figured
that was a workload even I could
handle. He might have also been thinking that such a ploy would get him four
pages in Wizard. But that’s neither
here nor there.
So
tag along. We’ll take you into the star trailers and behind the curtain to tear
the cover off the seedy, steamy business that is a big Hollywood production.
Cookies will be served. I promise.
TUESDAY,
FEBURARY 20
6:49
AM
I
show up the day before they’re going to shoot my scene. Yes, Matt Damon and Ben
Affleck will also be in it, but it’s my
scene, okay?
Today’s
action takes place in a former garage converted into an advertising studio. The
studio is the workplace of Holden McNeil (played by Affleck), the comic artist
from “Chasing Amy.” The walls are covered with framed “Holden” art, actually
drawn by X-Force’s Mike Allred. The
art usually hangs in Kevin Smith’s comic store in New Jersey, but Smith had it
shipped here for this scene.
6:53
AM
I
see Smith for the first time this morning, decked out in “Silent Bob”
regalia—long coat and all—and he greets me with a hearty handshake. Almost as
quickly, he apologizes that he can’t chat—some late-arriving props are so late,
they’re jeopardizing today’s shoot. “It’s a lot of
chicken-with-the-head-cut-off stuff,” Smith says. “Always is.”
7:01
AM
Okay,
Kevin takes a few seconds to introduce me to Ben Affleck. He’s tall. Like
6-foot-4 tall. We slug down coffee at the massive free food tent, and Affleck
pours through it like a college student. He says he’s filming two other movies
simultaneously, and will only be in L.A. for three days. He read his lines for
the first time on the plane ride in this morning. Still, he’s smiling, even
though he’s a little disappointed that they’ve run out of strawberry jam for
his bagel.
Whiny
little pretty-boy actor.
7:30
AM
Jason
Mewes (“Jay,” duh) and Affleck do a “walk through” of their first scene,
roughing out how they’re going to deliver the lines. Mewes has the lines
memorized, but Affleck reads from the script. Smith stands one foot away,
smoking a cigarette the entire time. This must be some sort of California
workplace violation. Where are the occupational safety and hazard police when
ya need ’em?
7:36
AM
Scene
one, take one. Despite the fact that he just learned the lines, Affleck
delivers. And Mewes is a machine. He
never misses a line. Some scenes are done in one take. Others, even though they
look perfect, are filmed several times so there are multiples to choose from in
editing. A simple Mewes saying, “C’mon, Silent Bob—We’re going to Hollywood”
takes three tries, with Mewes using a different tone of voice each time.
12:36
PM
As
we break for lunch, Kevin tells me why
I had to show up today: I’ve got to be fitted by Wardrobe. One of the
production assistants (let’s just call ’em “PAs”) hustles me around the corner
to the wardrobe trailer—a literal semi trailer they can haul to any location
with everyone’s costume, and a ton of
extra stuff. It’s a rummage sale on wheels.
12:49
PM
I
meet Annie Miller, set costumer. She tells me I’m fine from the waist down
(lots of women have told me that), but picks out a new shirt for me to wear
tomorrow. We make small talk, and shockingly discover that we worked at the
same Target store in Saint Paul, Minn. back in high school.
Small
world.
2:41
PM
I
take off. Smith tells me that things have been going well today. There are 18
“setups” to be done. Some will be on camera only 10 seconds, but all 18 have to
get done. The shooting day lasts ’til about 6 PM.
WEDNESDAY,
FEBURARY 21
6:45
AM
The
big day! Today’s shoot takes place on the CBS Studios lot, where the bulk of
the movie is filmed. A variety of TV shows are also filmed here, everything
from “Titus” to “Spin City” to “Will and Grace.” I put my car in Charlie
Sheen’s parking place for about 10 minutes. Just for fun.
6:55
AM
I
report to “base camp,” located on the North parking lot. This is where they’ve
parked the wardrobe trailer, makeup trailer, and all the private trailers for
the big-name talent. Passenger vans will haul everyone, about a dozen at a
time, to Stage 14, where today’s shooting will take place.
I
hop in line at the wardrobe trailer to pick up my shirt, with about 20 extras
ahead of me. The line moves slowly, so when I see Casey Mako, one of the
assistant directors I met yesterday, I wave “hello” at her. She comes running
over to me in a blind panic.
“What
the hell are you doing here?” she demands.
“Uh…waiting
to get my shirt,” I say sheepishly. “This is the wardrobe trailer, right?”
“Yeah,
but your shirt isn’t here.”
“Then
where is it?’
“It’s
in your trailer,” she says.
Oh.
6:59
AM
My
own trailer! Cool! I feel just like Mr. T or something!
Casey
leads me to my trailer (the farthest one away, of course, as everything in the
movie biz has its hierarchy), and I strut to the door. My name is spelled wrong,
but I’ll raise hell about that later.
The
trailer comes loaded with a comfy couch, TV, VCR, mini-fridge, and my own
bathroom and shower! There’s also a bouquet of flowers (what do they take me
for?), and an assortment of pastries and fruit juices. Sure enough, hanging in
the closet, is my trusty gray rugby shirt—The shirt I’ll use to
play…“Clapper/Loader!”
(The
clapper/loader, for those of you scoring at home, is the guy who claps the
slate with the scene number and take just before the action starts. He also
loads the film in the camera. Hence, “clapper/loader.”)
My
copy of the script is also there. We’re “shooting” a fictional movie in my
scene, and I get to call out, in the mighty clapper/loader manner, what’s going
on:
“Good Will Hunting 2: Hunting Season!”
“Scene
16, take five!”
Yes,
that’s two lines, not one. At least
as I count them.
7:10
AM
Casey
tells me to report to the makeup/hair trailer after I get changed. I do, and
thick googobs of brownish makeup stuff is applied to my mug. I’m told it keeps
my face from “shining.” Hair takes about 30 seconds, as I’m slowly going bald.
After
that: Photo time! Someone from the wardrobe department takes a Polaroid of my
body, followed by someone from makeup taking a Polaroid of my face. Just in
case they need to re-shoot the scene, they need an easy-to-find record of
exactly what I looked like.
7:25
AM
I
step outside the trailer, and Kevin is relaxing in his golf cart (which he uses
to tool around the studio) munching a breakfast burrito—eggs, cheese and bacon
in a foil-wrapped tortilla. It’s damn tasty! I remark how I sure would like
one, and ask him to point me to the food trailer. Kevin whips out a
walkie-talkie and says I don’t have to get it myself. “Somebody will bring you
one,” he says as he calls in the order. “Today, you’re talent.”
Kevin
also tells me that I shouldn’t use lame-ass terms like “food trailer.” On a
movie set, food is dispensed by “craft services.”
8:15
AM
I
tool over to Stage 14 with Kevin in the golf cart. Green Arrow #1 will hit in one week, and Kevin shows me a preview
copy DC has sent him. It’s a bit rainy, and as we splash through a puddle,
Kevin gets all geeky. “Don’t let it get wet! Here! Put it in this bag!” he
screams.
We
enter the stage, and I hungrily eye the craft services room. There is enough
food here to feed the Chinese army.
8:25
AM
Kevin
introduces me to Matt Damon. He’s short. Like 5-foot-8 short. But he’s
resplendent in a brown T-shirt, a la Will Hunting. We do a walk-through of the
scene in a prefect replica of the bar from “Good Will Hunting.” Tim Bird, the
first assistant director, tells me the most important thing I have to do is run
off camera after I deliver my lines and go stand in the corner.
Damn
pretty-boy Damon wants to steal my face time.
8:39
AM
Gotta
get the method to be a method actor, right? They introduce me to the real clapper/loader, who shows me how to
clap the slate. “I do it like this, one handed,” he says, demonstrating. After
I try it a couple times, he offers some sage advice: “You’d better use two hands.”
9:38
AM
There’s
a lot of “hurry up and wait” on a movie set. I watch as some Jay and Bob solo
scenes are shot. Funny note: Right before the camera rolls on each scene, Smith
and Mewes face each other and groom each other’s hair so it looks just right.
They look kinda like monkeys picking nits. But it works.
10:10
AM
Property
Mistress Lisa De Alva keeps the all-important props in a locked chest, just so
nothing gets lost. I steal a peek when she cracks it open. Also kept under lock
and key? 18 packs of smokes, and a jumbo-sized container of “Tums.” Really.
10:49
AM
Kevin’s
wife Jennifer Smith, who plays “Missy” in the flick but has no scenes today,
swings by. Kevin greets her with a kiss, and they actually hold hands as they
go to craft services. A 5-minute break is called.
10:50
AM
EVERYONE
smokes! I swear, everyone—Smith, Damon, Affleck, the dolly grips, the gaffers,
the best boys. Geez, it’s like a Marlboro ad in here.
10:54
AM
Another
walk-through for a new scene. Matt Damon is only in for two days, and he and
Affleck can’t stop playing around. When Damon adds a few lines to the script,
Affleck yells out in mock anger: “Nice acting, Matt, really nice acting! Just
go ahead and throw your own lines in there. Don’t be shy. Gotta get more lines
than me, huh? Where’s my damn agent?”
11:55
AM
More
cronies arrive: Mark Steven Johnson, the writer and director of the upcoming
“Daredevil” movie, swings by. Kevin has a bit part for him in a couple days.
Kevin introduces me to Mark, and I remark that my only prior experience with
movie-making was swearing at the guys blocking traffic when they filmed
“Grumpier Old Men” three blocks from my old house in Saint Paul. Mark says that
he directed “Grumpier Old Men,” and he occasionally had to put up with idiots
swearing at them during the movie. He also says that he thought my voice sounded familiar.
Small world.
1:31
PM
We’re
rollin’! Damon and Affleck are mowing through their scenes and still having the time of their life.
They can’t take anything seriously,
and add tons of ad-libbed dialogue to the performance. The “Lion face! RRAGH!
Lemon face! Whooo!” (Trust me—You’ll love
it when you see the movie) is all improvised. It’s not in the script—It’s just
two friends having fun. I stand in the background and wonder if there’s an
Oscar for “Best Supporting Clapper/Loader.”
After each take, we all run back to “video village.” Each
scene is videotaped simultaneously as it’s filmed for immediate playback, and
about a dozen director’s chairs are set up around the small TV monitor to watch
the replay. The monitor even has thick black strips of tape on at the top and
bottom for that “letterbox” format.
Everyone cracks up at lion face/lemon face.
Smith makes a snap judgment, squinting tears of laughter from the corners of
his eyes. “It’s in,” he says, barely able to talk through the laughter. “That’s
funny s---. That’s the good stuff.”
2:05
PM
Matt
Damon approaches me while I’m sipping some java on a 5-minute break. “Hey, man.
Where’d you score the coffee?” he asks.
“It’s
over there,” I say, pointing a finger toward a door, “in craft services.”
He
seems impressed by my deft use of the trade term.
3:29
PM
Showtime! We finally get to the part where I say my lines.
Stupid as it sounds, I’m nervous as hell. What if I screw up? Will it ruin the
scene? Will it cost a million dollars if they have to do another take? I run up
to my mark on the floor and proudly proclaim, “Good Will Hunting 2: Hunting
Season! Scene five, take 16!”
3:29 PM and 10 seconds
Tim Bird yells, “Cut!” The script supervisor gently but
firmly reminds me it’s supposed to be “Scene 16, take five!”
Oh.
3:30
PM
We
do three more takes. I nail ’em all. I only screwed up the one—honest. Damon
pats me on the back. “Good goin’ man,” he says. “If you were a couple inches
taller, you could take Ben’s place.” Affleck is noticeably out of earshot.
4:27
PM
I’ve
still gotta be in the background of another scene. And this is 10 times as
scary as saying two stupid lines.
Ben
Affleck has to fire a shotgun…pointed just where I have to be standing. Movies
being movies, things have to look as real as possible, so this is a real, FULLY
FUNCTIONAL, double-barreled shotgun. Lisa De Alva runs in before each take and
opens the gun, shining a flashlight down both barrels to show everyone that
it’s not loaded. She’s very dutiful, and they’re all damn careful. Still, I’m
sure they were this careful on “The Crow,” too, and look what unfortunately
happened there.
We
go through four takes. I’m sweating bullets each time. Hey, you try staring
down two barrels of a shotgun. Makes me wish I could been “Man on Barstool #2”
instead of “Clapper/Loader.”
5:15
PM
I’m
done with the big stuff. The crew was amazing. Any time I wasn’t sure where to
stand or when to spout my lines, someone was there to help. At any time, it
felt like there were three people employed to do nothing more than make me feel
good. I’m told repeatedly after the day is done, “You were great!” They even
sound like they mean it.
Aw,
shucks.
THURSDAY,
FEBURARY 22
7:53
AM
Movie
extras are smart. Smarter than me. They come with massive-ass backpacks,
overflowing with bottled water, magazines, and occasional hardcover books. Why?
Well,
Day Two of “Good Will Hunting 2” is what’s called “coverage.” Ever see that
background crap that establishes a scene for five seconds before the main
actors start talking? That’s coverage. So all we peon extras have to set the
scene and establish that yes, this is a bar…about a billion times. We walk back
and forth. We pretend we’re talking. Fake waitresses carry fake drinks.
“Coverage” is shot 53 different ways from four different angles. Only certain
extras are needed at certain times, so the rest pull up some floor space out of
the way, sit down and catch up on their reading. It’s a lot like jury duty, or
waiting at the DMV. Only with unlimited free food.
I
crash out on an unused film dolly and take an hour-long nap. No one notices.
Literally.
9:02
AM
I
wander over to craft services and munch on a chocolate cookie filled with
coconut. It’s soooo good, I stuff two
more in my pocket to take home. No one seems to notice.
10:19
AM
Yes,
Virginia, even the big stars have to hang around for coverage. Jason Mewes and
Ben Affleck make the most of it: They spend most the time hitting and
play-wrestling with each other. They seem to be having a pretty good time of
it.
10:53
AM
Walk
back and forth…have a fake, lip-synched conversation…walk back and forth…
11:29
AM
I
step out to take a leak. Like I said, a lot of TV shows are filmed at this
studio. I turn down a hall and find a bathroom labeled “Two Guys and a Girl.”
It does not live up to its billing.
1:33
PM
Walk
back and forth…have a fake, lip-synched conversation…walk back and forth…
3:17
PM
I
spy a Polaroid someone took of Mewes while he was napping on a cushion. One of
his hands is lying right in his crotch. The caption someone’s wrote in? “Jason
finds inner piece.” It is to laugh.
5:22
PM
Harley
Quinn Smith, Kevin’s 2-year-old daughter, swings by. Actually, she’s carried by
Kevin’s personal assistant (and mother-in-law!) Gail Stanley. Harley’s trying
to gnaw on a bagel that looks about three sizes too big for her. Kevin’s eyes
light up when he sees her, and we all take five minutes. Smith really seems to
enjoy this fatherhood thing.
6:11
PM
Walk
back and forth…have a fake, lip-synched conversation…walk back and forth…
6:44
PM
That’s
a wrap! My duties done, they send me to the base camp office trailer where I
have to sign about 112 standard releases allowing them to use my image in
everything from theater trailers to movie posters in Paraguay to drink cups at
Burger King if it ever gets to that. One of the PAs hands me a plain manila
folder, and upon opening it, I realize…they gave me Ben Affleck’s folder.
I
start poring over the paperwork and just before I get to the part where I find
out how much Big Ben got paid…another PA yanks it away from me. “I think this
is the wrong folder,” she says sweetly. “Here’s yours.”
Curses!
Foiled again! At least she doesn’t know about the two cookies in my pocket.