DIRECTOR Kevin Smith
PRODUCER Scott Mosier
SCREENPLAY Kevin Smith
PRINCIPAL CAST Ben Affleck, Joey Adams, Jason Lee, Dwight Ewell, Jason Mewes
CHASING AMY is the third and final installment in writer- director Kevin
Smith's New Jersey trilogy, following the cult classic CLERKS and Mallrats.
Lifelong best friends Holden McNeil (Ben Affleck) and Banky Edwards (Jason
Lee) are enjoying success as the creators of a cult hit comic book. When
they meet fellow comic artist Alyssa Jones (Joey Adams), Holden's desire
for the beautiful charmer is immediate. Alyssa, however, has set her romantic
sights on other women, but decides, nevertheless, to pursue a friendship
with Holden. This presents Holden with a dilemma: feeling the way he does,
can he merely be friends? Banky, who knows him best, doesn't think so and
would rather have Holden to himself.
As the friendship deepens, so do Holden's affections for Alyssa. And curiously,
quite effortlessly, so do Alyssa's for him. With their friendship struggling
to define itself, Banky grows more and more frustrated at the notion of
losing his best friend to emotional adulthood. Through Alyssa's love for
Holden, she becomes purified of her kinky past while said past gives rise
to Holdens desire for sexual experimentation of his own. It's all quite
improbable but you find yourself buying it nevertheless. In the end everyone
is alone-- which may be the most lifelike thing about the film.
This film has plenty going against it.: at its heart is the classic male
desire/mis perception that lesbians just need the right man to come along
to set them straight; Alyssa's promiscuous sexual experiences with men bothering
Holden more than her orgies with women; and the characters saying implausably
esoteric things at times that sound more like witty scripting than real
characters. But the movie has irresistable charms, not the least of which
is Joey Laurel Adams... a diamond in the rough. Joey's star will shine deservedly
bright. Her smile is unquestionably and delightfully infectious, and i'll
be surprised if the entire world won't recognize her voice before long.
The scene in a club where she graphically and very humourously describes
her past deviant sexual episodes is worth the price of admission.
--AHB