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- A day in the lives of two convenience clerks named Dante and Randal as they annoy customers, discuss movies, and play hockey on the store roof.
- Dante, Elias, and Jay and Silent Bob are enlisted by Randal after a heart attack to make a movie about the convenience store that started it all.
- A voyeuristic hotel clerk becomes the subject of a murder investigation.
- A calamity at Dante and Randal's shops sends them looking for new horizons - but they ultimately settle at the fast food empire Mooby's.
- The continuing adventures of clerks Dante and Randal, who try to make the best of their menial labor, with no help from Jay and Silent Bob.
- Another day in the life of Dante and Randal, from Kevin Smith's indie film.
- The true story of how convenience store clerk Kevin Smith made his grainy $27,000 film Clerks (1994) with maxed-out credit cards and the people who aided him in his indie crusade.
- A documentary on the career and life of filmmaker and raconteur Kevin Smith.
- A poor but honest clerk, burdened by his family's dependence on him, sells state secrets to a traitorous businessman in exchange for wealth.
- Dante and Randall attend Julie Dwyer's wake in this animated representation of a scene never before shot for the movie Clerks. (1994)
- Recently paroled, Frédéric, mid-20s, works nights at an upscale hotel in the breathtaking Pyrenees mountains. One night, he spots the hotel owner, Jacques Couvreur, and his son concealing a damaged vehicle.
- Two men disappear at the same time, one of them commits suicide with dynamite. The police try to figure out who it was and what happened to the other.
- Based on the eponymous poem by Spencer Reece, The Clerk's Tale is a psychological portrait of a gay man trapped in the monotonous routine of life at a high-end menswear store. For Spencer, every day is a sequence of mundane tasks and empty exchanges. He fits a customer, straightens a display, takes his usual break at his usual time. But all the while the presence of an aging gay colleague eats away at him. Watching this older man, with his affects and almost grotesque habits, Spencer becomes keenly aware of the future that awaits him.
- A middle-aged clerk seeking a way out of his mundane everyday existence inexplicably disappears on a weekend evening.
- A feature-length documentary about the making of Kevin Smith's Clerks (1994) and the commercial success that followed.
- The grocery clerk's sympathies are aroused by the sight of hard-working Mrs. Brown, whose shiftless husband sits around and smokes, and spends his time at the saloon. The clerk wins Mrs. Brown's gratitude by doing the washing for her, and taking care of the chores around the house. Brown saunters out to the woods and comes upon three conspirators, who accuse him of being a spy and decide to kill him. Brown is tied to a tree stump, a charge of dynamite is placed under him, a fuse attached and lit, and Brown is saying his prayers when his little son finds him. The boy rushes home with the news, and the clerk does all in his power to prevent the rescue party reaching Brown in time. In his frantic struggles Brown frees himself and makes his escape just as the explosion takes place and the rescuers arrive. All believe him dead, and the grocery clerk immediately proposes to Mrs. Brown and she accepts him. They lose no time in getting a minister and the ceremony is about to proceed when Brown, who has gone to the village saloon to steady his shattered nerves, is informed that his wife is marrying the grocery clerk. He dashes to the scene and prevents the wedding, chases the clerk away and takes his unwilling spouse home to work again.
- Behind the scenes of Kevin Smith's sequel to Clerks.
- A woman being fitted for shoes exposes her ankle to the shoe clerk, who is intrigued. He kisses her, but her chaperone hits him with her umbrella.
- Bruce is a 30 something game store clerk that spends his days waging an epic war on the retail front, battling against the forces of evil such as Becky the assistant manager at the adjoining video store (who not so secretly hates him for rejecting her romantic advances), an onslaught of snot nose bratty kids, grouchy soccer moms and all around rude patrons with his own personal brand of 'Customer Service'. Aided in his efforts by his constant companion (and best friend) Drapehs, a mysterious young masked avenger, and the famous Mexican masked wrestler 'El Farto', Bruce soon finds out that GameMasters, his job and comfort zone of the past five years, will be closed down and turned into a porn section by the new, indifferent owners. In the midst of sudden change and adventure, Bruce manages to save a friend, get saved by a friend, win a Guitar Hero tournament, conquer the aforementioned overzealous Rent-A-Cop, and at long last, get the girl. Taking the advice of a wise, sage like old friend, he realizes that life is indeed what you make of it. Game Over: The Secret Life of Game Store Clerks..... Sometimes selling video games is more fun than playing them.
- Michelle is the night auditor of the Sleepytime Inn, where she handles irate guests with insane complaints, incompetent coworkers, stingy bosses, and physically exhausting adventures.
- Alternate ending from 'Clerks'.
- Big Ben has the largest store in the town of New Ralgia. His chief clerk is in love with the post mistress. The three of them get involved in a series of mishaps with their customers and with the town ladies' man, whose advances conceal a more sinister purpose.
- Zhenya Skorokhodov is your average clerk. A graduate of the financial academy, he works as an accounts manager for a bank. The only bright spot in his dull life is his hopeless love for his beautiful colleague Vika. One day, while trying to impress her, Zhenya amuses his colleagues by devising an ideal scheme to rob their own bank. The next day, someone robs the bank. And Zhenya is suspect number one. Zhenya risks his life to investigate and discovers that Vika is not who she says she is.
- Deleted scenes from 'Clerks'.
- Dabbling with the world of fantasy and reality, 'Clerk' is a shocking tale of a middle class average man, Biplab caught in the journey of self discovery in a peculiar and twisted way. His world is painted with striking shades of imagination and gloomy streaks of outdated labor politics and mundane everyday existence. It is brought alive on screen vividly. 'Clerk' is a collective work of award winning and widely recognized faces of Bengali cinema in India.
- Russ, a young store clerk feeling pressure from his mom, boss and society decides its time to get motivated, but is it the right way...
- "Great Hit. Two delinquent clerks are seated in a broker's office engaged in a game of cards. The boss suddenly appears walking through the corridor. The cards are thrown down in great haste and when the employer enters the office the clerks are apparently busily engaged in their work. The boss looks over the mail and then sits down behind an adjacent screen to enjoy the morning paper. A lady suddenly enters the office and upon inquiring for the broker, is shown behind the screen by one of the clerks. He immediately calls the attention of the stenographer and they post themselves upon the chairs and engage in looking over the top of the screen. One of the chairs is suddenly tipped over by the office boy and the clerks and screen fall upon the unsuspecting broker. He immediately becomes wrathful, throws off his coat and proceeds to clear out of the office. One of the clerks becomes frightened and jumps through the window into the corridor; the other is unceremoniously fired through the door. This is an extremely humorous picture."
- TV Mini Series
- Obliged to work in a grocery store, Dave Downey makes the best of it, and the best is not at all bad considering the youth, beauty, and charm of Constance, the grocer's daughter, the lady behind the counter. The old man, however, is the rock against which the bark of true love almost wrecks itself. Poor Dave is caught in the act and promptly "fired," with neatness and dispatch. James Fixer, an old friend, proves a friend indeed. Dave shall have the girl, father or no father; he goes into the grocery store, makes a few purchases, then accuses the proprietor of stealing his wallet. The police are called in and the grocer is locked up. Enter Dave. Like a true hero, he tells the captain that he, and not the old man, is the thief. Jubilantly the grocer returns to commune with butter and eggs, etc., while Dave is placed in a cell. Mr. Fixer is delighted at his clever scheme. Now for the climax. He goes to the grocer, to whom he apologizes, saying he had made a mistake and that the wallet was in his possession. The old man is deeply touched at Dave's sacrifice, and the pair forthwith gain the young man's release. To show his appreciation, the grocer gladly consents to his daughter's marriage to Dave.
- A documentary on the career and life of filmmaker and raconteur Kevin Smith.
- A question-and-answer session featuring the director, producer, and stars of the indie comedy hit "Clerks".
- Shortly before Hall Pycroft is due to start work for a prestigious London firm, a man named Arthur Pinner offers him a better paid position in another city. Hall Pycroft agrees to go to Birmingham to work for Arthur Pinner's brother Henry. When Hall Pycroft discovers that Arthur and Henry Pinner are the same person, he seeks help from the brilliant consulting detective Sherlock Holmes.
- In order to stop a bully from robbing the gas station he works in, Connor assumes the role of a superhero known as 'The Iron Clerk'
- An adaptation of the Russian author Anton Checkoff's short story about fragile clerk who accidentally finds himself in a strange confrontation with a VIP.
- An old bookkeeper loses his life-long position through a change in management of the firm for which he has worked. The son of the owner is made manager. He is an up-to-date chap with little respect for old people. He proceeds to clean the establishment of all its "fossils." He starts with the ancient janitor and ends with old Woodcroft, the trusted clerk. Old Woodcroft has especially provoked the young manager by always referring to a notebook when working the combination on the vault door. Young Morton finally takes the notebook away from the clerk, and tears up the leaf on which is registered the combination, telling the old man that a businessman of modern training can remember such trifles in his head after one glance at the numbers. Woodcroft is terribly depressed by his discharge. He broods until he is obsessed with the idea that he will shoot himself at exactly one o'clock. In the meantime the elder Morton, while arranging the final details of turning the business over to his son, has gone into the vault with some papers. The new janitor, eager to show his prowess, polishes the vault door with a rag and during the process closes the door and accidentally throws the lock. The elder Morton is imprisoned. The son cannot remember the combination, despite his boast. He rashes to get old Woodcroft. The latter is interrupted just before the clock strikes his hour of doom, and the old man manages to remember the vault combination in time to save Morton.
- A front desk clerk teaches a new trainee the job and wields his power to serve and protect the guests of his great hotel.
- Blake and Kyle break down Clerks one minute at a time, Clerks II two minutes at a time and break down other aspects of the View Askeniverse.
- "Apocalypse Now" meets "Clerks" in this story of a man who is sent in to close a video store and terminate the command of its rogue manager.
- Employed at the glove counter of a big department store, Jones is engaged in trying on a pair of gloves on the withered hands of a lady of uncertain age, when suddenly there stops at his counter a blooming rose of beauty, the sight of whom takes away the breath of poor susceptible Jones. He immediately drops his customer's hand and rushes over to see what the beauty wants. Taking her hand in his to judge the size, Jones cannot resist the temptation of imprinting a kiss on its smooth, white surface, for which impertinence he immediately receives a slap in his face, which almost takes him off his feet. The floor walker is called and dismisses the audacious clerk on the spot. The latter calls to see the customer whom he has offended, and tries to explain to her that it was her beauty that made him lose his head for the moment. (For Jones is a sly fox and knows how to get around the gentler sex.) The woman, however, seems very indignant and, showing him her husband's portrait, orders him out of the house. But Jones continues to plead in his own behalf, when just at that moment the woman's husband, a dignified looking lawyer, comes in, and she quickly hides Jones in the wood chest. As luck would have it, he is scarcely in the box when somebody dumps a whole load of wood on him and almost kills him. The woman fortunately has now induced her husband to go upstairs and take a nap, but he does not sleep long, and again she is compelled to hide Jones as he bursts in on them. This time she pushes him in the bathroom, where he accidentally touches the tap which turns on the needle bath and poor Jones gets a ducking. The woman is at her wits' end as her husband expresses his intention to take a shower; so, pretending to he suddenly seized with hysterics, she sends him flying for the salts and thus gives Jones a chance to escape. This is Jones' unlucky day, however. He jumps out of the window and into the one of the adjoining house, where he finds something to drink, and is soon hopelessly intoxicated and is arrested as a burglar. As fate would have it, the husband of the woman who has caused all his misfortune tries his case and pleads so hard for his client that Jones is acquitted. This being the first case the young lawyer has won, he invites the happy Jones to his house and introduces him to his wife, and they all have a great old time.