The Clerks saga holds up as a great trilogy, but some of its movies are better than others. Across three decades, Kevin Smith made three Clerks movies. He started his filmmaking career with the indie original, released in 1994, then revisited the fan-favorite characters in 2006's Clerks II before concluding their story in 2022 with Clerks III. The heart of the trilogy is the endearing friendship shared by Dante Hicks and Randal Graves. The first two movies focus on their everyday antics at their jobs, while the final chapter is about their efforts to immortalize those antics on film.
Clerks established Kevin Smith’s filmmaking style, and the movie was met with universal praise. But its bigger-budget sequels have been met with mixed reviews. Clerks deals with the aimless youth of Dante and Randal in their 20s, Clerks II concerns midlife crises and the relentless march of adulthood as the duo approach 40, and Clerks III addresses mortality and forging a legacy after Randal faces a near-death experience. Fortunately, Smith never did the characters a disservice by putting them in a bad movie, though not all the sequels manage to live up to the original masterpiece.
3 Clerks III (2022)
The Ending Of The Clerks Journey
After years of delays, Kevin Smith's Clerks III finally wrapped up the saga in 2022. In the threequel, Randal suffers a heart attack (much like Smith did in real life) and emerges with a new lease on life. At Dante’s insistence, Randal starts working on turning their humdrum lives at the Quick Stop into a movie. Clerks III breaks away from the series’ day-in-the-life format to chart the time Randal takes to recover from his heart attack, write a screenplay, and shoot a feature film.
Dante actually died in the original Clerks ending, allowing Clerks III to come full circle.
Clerks III is a moving finale for the trilogy, but the death of Dante also broke fans’ hearts. Clerks III received more positive reviews than most of Smith’s later efforts, but the reception was still mixed, with a 62% Rotten Tomatoes score and a 6.3 IMDb rating. Shooting the first Clerks movie within the third Clerks movie was a wonderfully meta way to bring the trilogy full circle, but it took away from the relatable charm of the first two. Their appeal was reflecting everyday life; Clerks III lost that element.

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The filmmaking storyline also meant many callbacks to the previous movies and not much new material. The entire second act is spent recreating familiar scenes, so Randal can include them in his movie-within-a-movie. The final chapters of trilogies are particularly difficult to pull off, especially after a great sequel. Clerks III struggles to balance its tragic elements with its comedic elements.
Killing off Dante might have been an unexpectedly dark way to cap off the Clerks series.
The opening montage undoes the happy ending of Clerks II with the revelation that Dante’s soulmate and unborn child were both killed by a drunk driver. Dante’s character arc in Clerks III shows him failing to move on from Becky’s demise before ing her in death, and it makes for a decidedly bittersweet conclusion to the trilogy. Killing off Dante might have been an unexpectedly dark way to cap off the Clerks series, but at least Smith handles it beautifully.
2 Clerks II
The Middle-Aged Crisis Of The Clerks
Like the first movie, Clerks II revolves around a day in the lives of Dante and Randal. Since the Quick Stop has burned down, they’re working at Mooby’s, a fast food chain previously seen in Dogma and Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back. But they’re a decade older and contend with a boatload of new issues. They’re no longer the carefree youths they were in the original. Now, as they approach middle age, they have to figure out what they’re going to do with their lives.
Movie |
Release Date |
---|---|
Clerks |
October 19, 1994 |
Clerks II |
July 21, 2006 |
Clerks III |
September 13, 2022 |
Dante is engaged to the wrong woman and working for the right one; Randal is still the quotable Clerks slacker who refuses to grow up. Comedy sequels rarely live up to their predecessors, but Clerks II deftly recaptures the blend of everyday mundanity and life-affirming profundity that made the first movie endearing. The movie hits all the same beats: in the 11th hour, Randal delivers some tough love that inspires Dante to realize what he wants and get his life together. Brian O’Halloran and Jeff Anderson didn’t lose a shred of chemistry in the decade between movies.

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Their pitch-perfect on-screen dynamic ensures that Clerks II is just as touching and heartfelt an ode to friendship as its forerunner. It earned a decent 63% score on Rotten Tomatoes and 7.3 on IMDb. Unlike the original, which was produced independently on a shoestring budget, Smith had studio money for the sequel. He made Clerks II much more cinematic, with better production value, a ton of View Askewniverse cameos, and more elaborate staging.
When Dante realizes he loves Becky, there’s a large-scale dance number. Smith fully uses the switch from black-and-white to color with the vibrant purples and yellows of Mooby’s corporate brand. Clerks II’s perfect ending would’ve been a satisfying ending for the saga, too: Dante and Randal finally take charge of their destiny, fix up the Quick Stop, and start running it for themselves.
1 Clerks
The One That Started It All
Kevin Smith has never topped the original comedy classic that launched his career. With a score of 90%, Clerks is still Smith’s best-reviewed movie on Rotten Tomatoes, and it has an impressive IMDb rating of 7.7. Like many '90s movies, Clerks has a distinct grunge vibe. It starts off with a mundane premise and spins it into a profound narrative. Dante is called into work on his day off.
Clerks has the perfect style for its substance.
He ends up reconnecting with his ex, breaking up with his girlfriend, incurring a massive fine, unwittingly sending a customer to his death, desecrating the corpse at a funeral, and ruthlessly fighting Randal in the aisles of the Quick Stop. Clerks has the perfect style for its substance. The minimalist filmmaking – dialogue-driven scenes shot in black-and-white, mostly in stationary long takes – pairs brilliantly with the minimalist narrative of two worker bees counting down the hours of their shift.
The story of Clerks is presented as a series of vignettes, giving it a loose hangout feel without wasting a single scene. From the Death Star casualties discussion to the Chewlie’s gum representative’s anti-smoking tirade and Randal listing off obscene X-rated titles in front of a mother and child, Clerks is full of memorable gags that never get old on repeat viewings.

10 Funniest Quotes From Clerks
Clerks was the film that put Kevin Smith on the map, and it showed the world the kind of quippy back and forth dialogue that would define his work.
Smith made Clerks when he had the most to say before he achieved Hollywood success. It was when he was a budding young artist leading Dante’s life. Dante’s recurring one-liner defines the movie – “I’m not even supposed to be here today!” – but Randal’s brutally honest rebuttal carries the true message of Clerks. When Dante spouts that line one too many times, Randal finally calls him out and tells him he has nobody to blame but himself for the way his life has turned out. This monologue ends a hilariously cynical movie on a surprisingly uplifting and optimistic note.
The Future Of The Clerks Franchise
There seems to be nowhere left to go in the Clerks franchise. The entire series was based on Dante Hicks and Randal Graves' friendship and relationship. Even with the ending of Clerks III showing Randal continuing with a new buddy in Elias Grover, making a movie with them as the new leads would be sorely missing the heart and soul Brian O'Halloran brought to the franchise as Dante. It just isn't Clerks without Dante in the mix.
However, there is a chance that the Clerks world could continue in other forms. While not making a Clerks IV, there could always be a chance for Randal to show up in future Kevin Smith movies, considering that most of the View Askewniverse is connected. Jay and Silent Bob are always around, and they could easily drop in on Randal just like they do with characters like Brodie, Holden, and others floating throughout the film's universe. The Clerks storyline has ended, but life in Kevin Smith's world never really fades away.

Clerks
- Created by
- Kevin Smith
- First Film
- Clerks
- Latest Film
- Clerks 3
- First Episode Air Date
- May 31, 2000
- Cast
- Brian O'Halloran, Jeff Anderson, Jason Mewes, Rosario Dawson, Marilyn Ghigliotti, Trevor Fehrman, Jennifer Schwalbach
- First TV Show
- Clerks: The Animated Series
The Clerks franchise is a series of films, comics, and animated projects created by Kevin Smith. It began with the 1994 indie hit Clerks, which follows Dante Hicks and his friend Randal Graves as they work mundane jobs at a convenience store and video rental shop. Known for its witty dialogue, irreverent humor, and philosophical musings about life, the franchise became a cult favorite, spawning sequels, an animated series, and spin-offs. Clerks is part of the larger View Askewniverse, where characters like Jay and Silent Bob often make appearances across Smith's other works.