Chasing Amy review

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What we have here is a love story. Okay, so most love stories keep off discussing fisting, skirt round the subject of sex-related injuries and ignore the fact that both parties may have done "it" with others before they met. But from a film-maker who once based a scene on the merits of hermaphroditic pornography, this leftfield approach to the subject isn't all that unexpected.

The relationship thang is Kevin Smith's forte. Clerks, for all its post-modern banter, was to do with Dante screwing things up with both his girlfriend and his ex, while Mallrats was a slacker vision of wooing true love. Chasing Amy is a logical follow-on. Though the characters are older, the joke-count lower and more time is spent on emotional issues than on the minutiae of comic book character motivation or the rules of the arcade game Skee Ball, it's still a Smith movie, heart and soul.

Smart, funny and (if you've ever had a girlfriend with a hefty track record, and known about it) often far too close to the bone to be at all comfortable. Chasing Amy represents a change in direction for Smith, with drama before gags. A chick flick for blokes.

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