Kevin Smith interview: Yoga Hosers, Arrow, Mallrats
Kevin Smith tells us how he wound up making Yoga Hosers, a movie about miniature Nazis made of sausage...
Among geeky film fans, Kevin Smith needs no introduction. Heās brought us such treats as Clerks, Mallrats, Chasing Amy and Dogma, and recently heās had a massive resurgence as a giant in the nerdy podcast world.
So far, two movies have come out of Smithās podcasting: first was Tusk, branching out from a SModcast episode about a Gumtree advert seeking someone willing to dress up as a walrus in exchange for lodgings. Justin Long starred in that one, with Smithās daughter Harley Quinn Smith featuring in the ing cast alongside her best friend Lily Rose Depp and her famous father Johnny Depp.
And now we have Yoga Hosers, a spinoff from Tusk in which Smith Jnr and Depp Jnrās Canadian convenience store clerks are caught up in a madcap mystery involving miniature Nazis made of bratwurst (aka Bratzis), which Kevin Smith himself portrays. Yoga Hosers also had its roots in a SModcast episode, which we touch upon in the following conversation.
Back in July 2016, I got the chance to talk with Smith about the film. Our chat took place the morning after a packed-out Yoga Hosers screening at the Prince Charles Cinema in London, which kept Smith up until 3am. He was in a very chipper mood, consideringā¦.
NB: since this interview took place, the Arrow and Mallrats info may not be up to date anymore. For one thing, Kevin Smithās recent Instagram post revealed that the Mallrats TV show pitches he told me about didnāt succeed in finding a home for the series.
So I was going through YouTube for āresearchā yesterdayā¦
Right, I do that too. I also go through porn channels for research as well.
[Laughs] ⦠and there was a Vanity Fair interview with Harley, where she said, like, ādad doesnāt really want me watching most of his filmsā ā
Thatās not⦠I mean, look, Iām all for it, in fact Iāve been begging her to watch the movies, but her mom, since she was young, always kind of told her āyou donāt want to watch dadās movies,ā and she was like āwhy?ā and she was like ābecause theyāll break your brain, because youāll be disgustedā¦ā
Like, she made me out to be a pornographer, so the kidās only seen Mallrats thus far. And Lily Rose [Depp], on the other hand, like, texts me periodically to be like, āI just watched Chasing Amy, thatās really great. I just watched Jay And Silent Bob Strike Back, thatās hysterical!ā
I keep telling Harley, Iām like, āLily Rose is beating you in what youāve watched of my repertoire,ā but no, Iād be all for her to watch everything. Thereās really no movie Iāve made that Iād keep from your kid. I canāt think of anything.
I mean we used to show her the movies when she was small, but she didnāt dig on them because theyāre talky. Theyāre not really for kids by any stretch of the imagination, so⦠Jay And Silent Bob Strike Back played well for her, thatās when I realised, it just a big dirty cartoon. Because you could turn the sound down and sheād still like visually be captivated, if anyoneās been visually captivated ever in the history of film by Jay And Silent Bob Strike Back, but a small baby might be able to.
I was trying to think of anything of yours that would be not for kids, all I could think of really was the donkey show in Clerks 2, but even then itās not like they really ā
Well that, at the end, but that oddly enough would be the thing sheād be most affected by, because sheās a big animal lover. So a) sheād be like āaww, there was a donkey there?ā and b) āWhy did you do that to that donkey?ā So yeah eventually, hopefully sheāll get around to all of them, but itās⦠you know⦠the way my movies get consumed seems to be like, very, in portions over the course of a long time.
Like Iām still meeting people and theyāre like āoh I just saw Clerks, that was neat.ā Iām like, oh my god that was 22 years ago. So, itās nice if it sticks around, Iāve been lucky enough to have like a long tale where people are still watching the old shit, so much so that I still fucking talk about the old shit, but you know, itās still, at the same time, itās comfortable to be able to have those conversations about like, what I did, and where I came from, and how long Iāve been doing that and stuff like that.
But there, you know, honestly, thereās about zero I can think of, in my body of work⦠Iām trying to think, if thereās anything where Iād go āoh man, donāt look at that or donāt listen to thatā, nah⦠even last night during the Q&A, you know, I still did like my same material, kinda, in front of her. There was a lot of dick references and sex references, but, you know, sheās 17, sheās not⦠sheās a 17 year old that came of age in the internet.
Like I was born in a more civilised time, before you could just say anything you wanted to somebody, and now she was raised in the trenches, so, you know, itās just a different experience for her altogether. Like even when it comes to people attacking the movie, sheās just like, āitās so weird, this person didnāt like the movieā as opposed to like āIām devastated this person didnāt like the movie!ā
Sheās used to such a variety of opinions and most of coming anomalously from the internet, about anything in the world, that like, mild dissatisfaction or distate for her is like āthatās weirdā as opposed to like āoh my god, weāre ruined.ā
So I listened to the SModcast episode Yoga Hoser on my train in today. And I was a bit surprised: itās not like Tusk when itās the exact same story.
Yeah, it wasn���t like the Tusk podcast, I just like took the title, and that was about it.
Was it ever gonna be the story of the guy with ancient artefact thing?
No, I think that wouldāve gotten me sued, you know? Like, at the end of the day, Tusk was a movie that came from a guy in Brighton, England had written an ad on Gumtree.uk about like this room for rent in exchange for dres like a walrus. And that birthed the movie. There were parts of the movie taken right from that posting. So Chris Parkinson, the guy that created the posting, like it was easy to be like ācome on over here, and be a producer on the movie.ā He was a producer on Tusk, because without him that movie doesnāt exist.
But Simon Metski, I think his name was, was the dude in Edmonton. Like, the notion that this yoga performer, yoga enthusiastic Canadian, thatā¦. clearly our Justin Long character [in Yoga Hosers] is a nod to that, but I think if we just did that dudeās story, man, it might have been a tough thing. I think that dude probably couldāve come after us, and been like āhey, fucking, thatās me!ā or something like that.
So instead we just kind of took the inspiration of a Canadian yogi and ran with that.
And when did that get rolled in with the idea to have a full film with Harley and with Lilly Rose?
I think when⦠I didnāt know that the Colleens were yoga enthusiasts. When we made Tusk, that wasnāt a part of that brief scene they were in. So, originally I think I was gonna call the film like Canadian Girl Clerks. No, Girl Clerks Of The Canadian Wilderness. That was the original title. I was gonna set most of the movie, like it started at the convenience store and then they were about to go to summer camp, and at summer camp we were gonna do a Jason type of thing. Like Friday The 13th. Like a slasher movie.
So, it came down to logistics I think. I think it was just like, if itās set outdoors then Iāve got to wait until summer to shoot it, and Iāve got to find a camp and stuff. And at that point like you start at the convenience store, like, isnāt that the more interesting device? Like thatās their world, right? Like why be like āthis is their world! And then we take them to another world altogether, where they go to camp!ā
So itās like, we may hold on to the camp thing, let me just work with these girls who work at the store and like, whatās their life like? And so, I ed, of course, Yoga Hoser is one of my favourite episodes of SModcast that we ever did, just by virtue of the fact that like, Scottās pull of that name just destroyed me and makes me laugh.
So I was like I could totally use, in the spirit of Tusk, I could totally use Yoga Hosers as a title for the flick, and then make the girls yoga enthusiasts. But what if they werenāt, like, good at it? What if they had a bad yoga teacher that taught them offensive yoga, or something like that? So it kinda shaped that way, where Tusk was shaped completely by the podcast. You can hear the whole movie in that podcast. Yoga Hosers was like a different sort of Frankenstein monster.
And where did the Bratzis (the tiny bratwurst monsters of the movie) come from, and how did you end up being them?
Originally, they were gonna be called Hitleāuns [like Hitler little āuns]. One foot tall clones of Hitler. Just looked like him, and they were little, and Jason Mewes was going to play them. I said to Mewes, āIāve got a role and if you play this role people are gonna stop saying thereās Jay from Clerks.ā He says āwhat is it?ā I say āyou play Hitlāuns.ā He says āWhatās that?ā I say āone foot tall clones of Adolf Hitler.ā And he goes āwhoās that?ā And I said āCome on.ā And he goes āum⦠Call Of Duty, the bad guy?ā [Laughs] Iām like, āIs that how you history?ā
So, originally it was going to be him, and instead we got closer to production and I kinda like fell out of love with the idea of just making them little Hitlers. Like, thatās gonna offend somebody. Somebodyās gonna be laughing and somebodyās gonna be like āwhat the fuck, dude, Hitlerās a real thingā and even if youāre killing him over and over again in miniature, itās still fucking like⦠itās gonna take somebody out of the movie. Somebodyās always been affected by the Holocaust and maybe weāre getting to the point when thereās almost nobody left but, you know, thereās always going to be somebody whoās like āoh man, Hitler aināt funny.ā
So Iām like, well, I donāt want anybody⦠this is a goofy fucking kids movie, I donāt want anybody to be sat there and be like taken out of it⦠for that reason. Thereās so many reasons to be taken out of this fucking movie, and I didnāt want them to be like āHitler?!ā So I guess I got kinda cold feet about just making it Hitler. I felt it should be something.
Like, Tusk was a rubber Canadian monster, and I knew we had the [spoiler redacted] at the end, which technically wasnāt even a [spoiler redacted] at that point, like, it was that⦠at first it was a giant map of Canada, created out of body parts, and then I was like, āyour third act is about a map? Thatās fucking stupid.ā And so, then it became [lots of spoilers redacted].
But, so, Iām like, maybe it shouldnāt be Hitlāuns, it should be something rubber, since weāre doing these prosthetics, Bob Kurtzman, the guy that created Tusk is already on the movie. So I bring Bob into the conversation, like āBob, the Hitlāuns thing isnāt working for me right now, I feel like we should do something to them. Shouldnāt we like put some rubber on them? Make them effects so its not just Jason with a Hitler moustache wearing a fucking flag suit?ā
And he goes āwhat are you thinking?ā and Iām like āI think of I think of like the Black Forest, so maybe they could be like woodland creatures, with their faces literally made of tree bark or something? Iāve seen that in movies and that looks cool.ā
And Kurtzman goes, āwell, when I think of I think of bratwurst,ā and I was like āoh my god thatās even better dude. Do me a favour, send me a rendering of Jason Mewes as a Nazi bratwurst.ā And he goes āgive me two minutes.ā
Two minutes later he texted me a fucking drawing, a rendering of Jason Mewes dressed like a hotdog, with a Nazi armband on raising his arm in the salute, and Iām like, āthatās what it is, dude, thatās what weāll fucking doā. So he gets to work on creating an outfit, so you know, basically we didnāt have to slather Jason in prosthetics. We had to scan him in a computer. And thatās when we then realised Jason had a problem being in prosthetics. And I knew that from like ten years ago, when we both did dummies for Jay And Silent Bob Strike Back that sit in the big Bluntmobile.
Like we stood for the prosthetics process, they like dump it on you, you stick straws up your nose so you could breath, it hardens, they pull it off you, man, theyāre classic mask-making. Um, I did it, it was fine. Jason went to do it, but like two minutes into the process he clawed all the make up off his face. Heās very claustrophobic, going like āI donāt like that.ā
And he didnāt want to sit for that again, and we didnāt think about it, and he was scanned into the computer instead. And Bob Kurtzman designed this entire fucking elaborate suit ā full body ā of Jason as a sausage, including this mini fucking sausage cock. It was beautiful body suit. Looked like āletās all go to the lobbyā, like a giant anthropomorphic hotdog, thatās what he looked like.
He hadnāt put it on until we were going to shoot, and when he put on the headpiece, like, and Bob started gluing it down to his face, Jason started freaking out and pulling it off. And I was like āoh my god we had this problem ten years agoā, and heās got some deep claustrophobia issues going back to a real wrecked childhood.
So I was like āI canāt make you do this, dude, youāre a wreck.ā Like Iād never seen him like that before in my life, it was like someone had a gun to his head, because he was like āI canāt do it, it feels fucked up!ā And Iām like āthis aināt you, this is some shit happened to you as a kid, you canāt get over something like that.ā But, at the end of the day, itād be cruel for me to be like āyou have to wear this sausage costume and pretend to be a Naziā and shit.
I was like, āitās just Yoga Hosers dude, this aināt worth it. So donāt do it, man.ā And he was terrified that heād get in trouble, that heād backed out, because weād lost a whole day of shooting the green screen stuff. And Iām like ādonāt worry about itā and boom, Jason was no longer the Bratzis.
And I went out to Haley first, Haley Joel Osment, because his characterās kind of connected to the Bratzis in the movie. And I called him up and Iām like āhey man, Jason aināt gonna play the Bratzis anymore. Do you wanna play the Bratzis?ā And he goes āfuck yes, Iāll do that.ā I go āyouāre very enthusiasticā and heās like āare you kidding me? If I play the Bratzis people will finally stop saying āthere goes the little boy from The Sixth Sense.ā
And then he didnāt wind up doing it because he had played a Canadian Nazi in the movie, and we were shooting the scene out in Los Angeles that was doubling for old Quebec. And while we were shooting the sequence, this giant fucking board behind him says āThe Final Solutionā or what the fuck and a cartoon equation for how to kill Jews using beavers and stuff. And heās got a big Nazi symbol on his arm, and heās doing the salute and shit.
But we didnāt realise there were people with telephoto lenses deep behind us, paparazzis just popping off shots, and those shots went up on the internet the next day and all the headlines were like āwhat happened to the little boy from The Sixth Sense?ā Because there he is dressed like a Nazi and saluting, so his agent was like, āheās not doing anymore Nazi shit for you.ā
So I go, āyou know what? Itās probably for the best.ā And then Iām like, who am I gonna go to? And I realise my job on the day, directing the person playing the Bratzis, would be to scream through a thick layer of rubber⦠soā¦. just do it yourself, like, at the end of the day, you know what each character moment has to be and whatnot. And Iām the editor, so I know everything I need, so itās like, āyou just throw on the suit and do it.ā And Bob had to modify it a bit as it was made for a much thinner dude. And I wound up just wearing the head instead of the entire body. Um, so boom, suddenly I was the Bratzis. I didnāt intend to be in the movie at all. But it was fun at the end of the day, like, āoh I get to wind up in the flick as well.ā
Like, Johnny [Depp] got to act with his daughter and stuff, and so technically I got to act with my daughter as well, even though we were never really in the same frame.
Before I get rushed out ā is anything happening with the idea to do Onomatopoeia [the DC supervillain that Smith created] for Arrow season 5?
Oh my god, I would love that so much. Iāve not heard from anybody over there, even though Iāve talked about it in the press quite a bit and stuff. Um, but not from team Arrow. I know Iām going back to The Flash, first week of September, to direct episode 7 of season 3. Still havenāt heard anything back from Arrow. You know, I wish, it would be amazing because I would love to write and direct Onomatopoeia in the show. Um, but I know theyāre doing ā what is it? ā Wild Dog this year, as well as Vigilante, so maybe theyāre just like āwe donāt need youā, or whatever. But, at the moment, anyone over there raises a flag, Iām like āplease, let me in!ā Thatād be fun as fuck.
I you were saying once you didnāt think Onomatopeia could work in live action. What changed your mind on that?
Yeah, Iāve figured out a way to do it that is kinda bad-ass. And also connects to comics more or less. So instead of just doing the actual sound ā which to me, in the real world, would be like the dude from Police Academy making noises with his mouth ā heāll just have little cards. Business cards that have typewritten words of whatever the fuck. So instead of him saying āblamā, youād find this card on your desk and turn around and āblamā, heād shoot you and stuff like that. Which I think is a little more chilly, you know, for doing it in live action.
On a comic book page, those big word balloons with a tiny word in it were so fucking sweet. It looks beautifully graphic, like, at the same time it creates an image of like āthis is weirdā. But I donāt know if audibly making noises would ever work in the real world, so I think those cards would be bad-ass, man. So [you read] āslitā, and youāre like āslit?ā, and then all of a sudden you turn around he cuts your fucking throat and dude just cocks his head Michael Myers style and watches you go down. So yeah, Iāve obviously thought about it a little bit, but it would be cool to do. Hopefully, hopefully they tap me.
Yeah, I really hope so ā
And even if they donāt, maybe I could do it on Flash, or Legends Of Tomorrow, or now Supergirl as well. Thereās a couple of shows there!
So what is it next, are you trying to find a place the Mallrats TV show now?
Right now, the deal with Universal is locked. So we go out right after [San Diego] Comic-Con, and pitch to all the networks and streaming networks as well, to find a home. So, I feel pretty good about it. Universal, they have a pretty good track record at placing shows and whatnot. So it seems like weāve just now moved massively closer to it being a reality. Err, and once pitch week happens, itās quick, man. Like we did pitch week for Buckaroo Banzai [a TV version of the 1984 film, which Smith was helming at the time], we walked away with three suitors. And MGM and WMA, my agency, are figuring out where theyāre going to go at this point, which one they want to go with. So that happened very fast. Hopefully Mallrats will come together equally as fast.
Within a month weāll know what our future is going to be, which is amazing, because, for the last year and change itās been like Sisyphus, man, pushing a boulder up a hill. But the moment it became like a series, suddenly everything worked so much easier. Thatās kinda sweet.
And also for me, the storyteller, it gives me more time to like tell that goofy story. You know, I would have had ninety minutes to tell that story, now you get like maybe ten half-hour episodes. Itās like five hours to tell the fucking same story, so I get to really flesh out the characters and make a fuck tonne of jokes and stuff. Um, and kind of bring them in gradually over the course of the show. So I look forward to it. A different kind of storytelling.
It feels like working on a Mallrats comic book, an on-going series. I never would have imagined that this fucking movie that nobody saw when it came out, nobody liked, could sustain a life this long and wind up as a series. But Iām gonna think of it as like ā because if I think of it in big , like āitās a TV showā, itās kind of a little overwhelming ā but if I think of it in , like, think of it like a comic book series⦠youāve always wanted to do a Mallrats comic book series, this is the way to do it. It just happens that youāre getting to use live actors at the end of the day.
So, it should be fun, for me at least. And thatās kind of been the leitmotif of my career lately, which is like āmake it fun for meā, usually at the expense of the audience. But this one will feel less like, you know, Tusk and Yoga Hosers. Yoga Hosers and Tusk are just like batshit stupid movies. Mallrats the series wonāt be that. Itāll be kinda like Mallrats but stretched longer.
And I was kinda looking back to try and figure out where Mallrats came from. Because it wasnāt like, I didnāt really find my own voice ā I didnāt feel like ā until Chasing Amy. Like Clerks was me trying to do Richard Linklater. Clerks was me trying to make Slacker. And Mallrats was me trying to make a John Hughes movie. So now itās like, you know, thinking about making Mallrats a series, thatās where my head goes most often, itās like, āoh my god, Hughes is what fed you.ā
So Iāve been going back and rewatching the entire John Hughes canon voraciously, because before you head out and try and create your thing, itās always great to vibe like a fucking really sumptuous creative meal of somebody elseās self-expression, that like rocks your world in a big bad way. And those are the building blocks of what I became today. So I feel like the Mallrats series is going to be insanely John Hughes-like, just a little dirtier, because Iām not as sophisticated as John Hughes was. But thatās what fed Mallrats the movie, and thatās whatās gonna feed the series as well.
And Harleyās going to be in that one as well?
Harleyās going to play Brodie Bruceās daughter, Banner Bruce. Yeah, I like that. It makes me smile.
Kevin Smith, thank you very much!
Yoga Hosers is out now on demand in the UK.