Jackass: Best and Last
The final Jackass release adds new footage and highlights from the franchise’s biggest stunts, serving as a send-off for the cast and crew.
- Johnny Knoxville reunites the cast for "Jackass: Best and Last," a compilation featuring scenes from more than 20 years of wincing stunts for what must be the final hurrah.
- Brad Pitt makes an appearance alongside Knoxville, Ehren McGhehey, and Dave England, who oversees a human marionette show in the compilation.
- Steve-O receives a prostate exam from a robot in a scene from "Jackass: Best and Last," while one cast member gets an overload of lip filler and several others take colonoscopy prep.
- Sean Cliver, Paramount Pictures critic, notes the film does not explain why Bam Margera is missing, and the tribute to the late Ryan Dunn remains minimal at best.
- It was a good run, but as "Jackass: Best and Last" reminds us, all good things come to an end, capturing why audiences marveled at the group two decades ago.
37 Articles
37 Articles
Review: The end is near for ‘Jackass’
"It was a good run, but as 'Best and Last' reminds us, all good things come to an end," Bruce Miller writes in his review.
‘Jackass: Best and Last’ Review: Pain, Chaos, and a Wild Farewell
Synopsis: Follows the Jackass crew as they perform their final series of dangerous stunts and pranks, marking the end of the franchise. Director: Jeff Tremaine Stars: Johnny Knoxville, Steve-O, Chris Pontius Back in 2000, a little MTV series called Jackass debuted with a premise so unbelievably simple that nobody could have predicted the cultural phenomenon
Jackass: Best and Last
Jackass. That phenomenon. The first episode was shown on MTV in 2000. The series itself ran for thirty episodes, and since then there have been a number of films and TV specials. I remember there being quite a bit of talk about Jackass when I was at secondary school and sixth form, but I wasn't interested. I took the time to watch the films as an adult instead. That perhaps says a lot about my level of immaturity. If, against all odds, you've ne…
Jackass, that phenomenon. The first episode was broadcast on MTV in 2000. The series featured thirty episodes and, since then, there have been several films and television specials. I remember that there was a lot of talk about Jackass when I was in high school and high school, but I wasn’t interested in it. Instead, I took the time to watch movies already as an adult. Maybe that says a lot about my level of immaturity. If, against all odds, you…
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