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Jackass: The Movie

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox film

| name = Jackass: The Movie

| image = Jackass poster.jpg

| alt = Six gleeful men ride in a massive shopping cart, while three other men hang off the sides. The title is written below, with the tagline "With stuff you'd never see on TV" stamped above.

| caption = Theatrical release poster

| director = Jeff Tremaine

| writer =

| based_on =

| producer =

| starring =

| cinematography = Dimitry Elyashkevich

| editing =

| music = Sam Spiegel

| production_companies =

| distributor =

| released =

| runtime = 85 minutes

| country = United States

| language = English

| budget = $5 million

| gross = $79.5 million

}}

'Jackass: The Movie' (stylized as 'jackass the movie)' is a 2002 American reality slapstick comedy film directed by Jeff Tremaine. It is a continuation of the MTV television series 'Jackass', which had completed its run. It was produced by Lynch Siderow Productions and Dickhouse Productions. The film features most of the original 'Jackass' cast, including leader Johnny Knoxville, Steve-O, Bam Margera, Ryan Dunn, Chris Pontius, Ehren McGhehey, Wee Man, Preston Lacy, and Dave England. MTV Films and Paramount Pictures released the film to theaters on October 25, 2002. It grossed over $79 million worldwide and received mixed reviews from critics. It was followed by a sequel, 'Jackass Number Two' (2006).

Synopsis



'Jackass: The Movie' is a compilation of stunts, skits, and pranks, intercut with on-set talking heads with its cast. The movie begins with the entire main cast riding a giant shopping cart downhill. At the bottom, the guys crash into a fruit stand which sends them flying into the fruit.

The most notable stunts and pranks include Johnny Knoxville getting flipped over in a golf cart, Steve-O snorting wasabi, Bam Margera pranking his mother April by planting a live alligator in her kitchen, Chris Pontius dancing in public while wearing nothing but a thong, Ryan Dunn fighting against a female kickboxing champion, Wee Man menacing around Japan in a giant traffic cone, Ehren McGhehey eating a snow cone made of his own urine, Preston Lacy sitting on a bench which is rigged to collapse in front of unsuspecting bystanders, and Dave England defecating in a display toilet at a hardware store after having an accident in a car where he proceeds to uncontrollably defecate in his pants.

The final stunt involves a toy car being inserted into a cast member's anus in order to get it shown in an x-ray. Steve-O was set to do the stunt, but after being told by his father that he would be disowned if he had done it, Ryan Dunn volunteers and ends up doing the stunt. The end result is successful, as it appears once the x-ray has been taken. The toy car is later seen being defecated out in the end credits. This is followed by Johnny Knoxville being launched into a lake via catapult, where comedian Rip Taylor announces that the film has ended.

Cast



The main cast from the TV show that returned for the movie.

Guest appearances:

Crew

Crew members who appear in this movie:

* Director and producer Jeff Tremaine

* Producer Spike Jonze

* Executive producer Trip Taylor

* Co-executive producer Michelle Klepper

* Co-producer and cinematographer Dimitry Elyashkevich

* Co-producer and photographer Sean Cliver

* Cameramen Lance Bangs, Rick Kosick, Greg "Guch" Iguchi, and Mark Rackley

* Photographer Ben "Benzo" Kaller

Production



After the success of the 'Jackass' TV series, Johnny Knoxville was approached by the producers to make it into a feature film. Initially, he rejected the idea as he did not understand the concept; thinking they will get Hollywood actors to portray the cast. He later agreed when both Jeff Tremaine and Spike Jonze explained it will be a "naughtier version" of the TV series.

Bits that were filmed, but got cut out of the theatrical and home media releases include Gene LeBell choking the cast out one by one, Ryan Dunn getting sprayed by bear mace in the face by Bam Margera, Wee Man skating while being dressed as a penis, Preston Lacy getting "fat fuck" trimmed in his hair by cinematographer Dimitry Elyashkevich with hair clippers, Dave England posing as a caricature sketch artist to draw inappropriate drawings, Steve-O pouring beer in his anus with a garden hose (which was later redone in 'Jackass Number Two'), Chris Pontius and Dave England putting a bicycle lock around a crew member's neck, and Ehren McGhehey, Ryan Dunn, Chris Pontius, and Mat Hoffman wakeboarding with BMXs attached to the wakeboards. Some of these deleted bits are briefly shown in the credits and/or the making of 'Jackass: The Movie'. Dave England uploaded the caricature sketch artist bit on his YouTube channel, but it got removed for violating the guidelines.

The original plan for the "Butt X-Ray" was for someone to insert a cellphone up their anus and then getting a call, but it later got changed to a toy car. A scene that was planned but never got filmed due to financial reasons was for Chris Pontius to be dressed up as the devil and going to a Pentecostal church where they handle live snakes.

"Failed ending"

The original ending for the film was supposed to be a Rube Goldberg-type contraption, with each of the cast members performing a stunt that either has something to do with what they did on the show (for example, the first stunt would have Preston Lacy as "The Human Wrecking Ball", knocking him into a Port-A-Potty), or simply for a sight gag (such as Ehren McGhehey being knocked over in the Port-A-Potty and landing on a bed of toilet paper rolls), ending with Johnny being launched off the catapult next to Rip Taylor.

However, as the entire contraption didn't work together the way they wanted it to, the producers of the film decided to try filming an alternate ending, which is how they came to film the "Son of Jackass" skit. The "Son of Jackass" skit (according to the beginning, set in the year 2063) starts almost immediately after Knoxville and Taylor return to the edge of the lake, as Taylor whispers the suggestion into Knoxville's ear, and involves all of the performers in "old man" costumes running around in exploding buildings and sheds, with only Steve-O surviving to proclaim "Yeah, dude." In the cast commentary, it is said that this is ironic as Steve-O is the least likely to even reach old age. Some bits of the failed ending were incorporated into the end credits montage, like Dave England dressed in a penis costume and Wee Man going down the giant Plinko contraption.

Home media



The film was released on DVD on March 25, 2003. The DVD includes 27 minutes of additional footage, outtakes and MTV's "Making of Jackass: The Movie. An unrated version of the film was released in 2006, with a runtime of 87 minutes.

Reception



Box office

The film had a budget of $5 million and was the number one film at the United States box office when it opened, grossing $22.8 million, revenue from 2,509 theaters, for an average of $9,073 per venue. The film fell to fourth place in its second weekend and dropped 44 percent to $12.7 million, expanding to 2,530 theaters and averaging $5,032 per theater. The ten day gross was $42.1 million. The film went on to gross $64.3 million in the United States alone, of which the opening weekend made up 35.43 percent of its final gross. It made $15.2 million in other countries, bringing the worldwide gross to $79.5 million.

Critical response



Rotten Tomatoes reports 49% of critics gave the film positive reviews based on 96 reviews, with an average rating of 5/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "There's a good chance you'll be laughing hysterically at one stunt, but getting grossed out by the next one in this big screen version of the controversial MTV show." On Metacritic, the film has an average score of 42 out of 100 based on 14 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews." Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale.

Talking on 'Ebert & Roeper', Richard Roeper called it the "feel-sick movie of the year" and said the film is "a disgusting, repulsive, grotesque spectacle, but it's also hilarious and provocative. God help me, thumbs up." Roger Ebert gave the film a low rating, but only barely, explaining his rating comes "somewhere between a thumbs down and a sort of 'waving over' recommendation". 'The Austin Chronicle's Kimberly Jones gave the film 3 stars and said it is the "feature-length rendering of jackass the MTV show, meaning no plot, no script, just wall-to-wall idiocy." Jones said "It's silly, often stomach-churning, but also awfully addictive, inspiring the same kind of vicarious adrenaline rush as 'Fight Club', with its 'I bleed, therefore I am'; he-man mentality." Jones also remarked, "Consisting of a steady clip of barely minutes-long gags...this piece of outr performance art defies typical movie conventions..." 'Chicago Tribune' film reporter Mark Caro gave the film 1 star out of 4 and called it "willful idiocy for idiocy's sake." Caro also said "there's one stunt that I bet none of these moronic daredevils would tackle: trying to say something intelligent about 'Jackass: The Movie.'"

'Deseret Morning News's Jeff Vice gave the film 1 stars and said the 80-minute run time was too much. Vice described the film as "possibly the most irresponsible picture ever released by a major film studio." Writing for 'Entertainment Weekly', Owen Gleiberman gave the film a "B" and said the film "provokes a suspense halfway between comedy and horror. I'm not sure if I enjoyed myself, exactly, but I could hardly wait to see what I'd be appalled by next." Gleiberman also said "In the movie version of the show that might just as well have been called 'America's Funniest Frat-House Hazing Rituals', the boys engage in infantile 'Candid Camera' grossouts..." 'Film Journal International's Ethan Alter, who admitted to having never seen an episode of the TV show, said "it would be easy for me to hold 'Jackass: The Movie' up as a leading example of the decline of Western civilization." Alter said he was disturbed by "the film's, and by extension the audience's, cavalier attitude towards pain."

'LA Weekly' critic Paul Malcolm listed 'Jackass: The Movie' as one of the 10 best films of 2002 and also called it the most underrated film of the year. 'Film Threat's Pete Vonder Haar said the results of "essentially transplanting the show to the big screen" are "incredibly funny and often too disgusting for words."

'The Miami Herald's Rene Rodriguez gave the film 2 stars out of 4 and said "Johnny Knoxville and his merry band of anarchists ran around performing the sort of suicidal stunts parental warnings were invented for" and "the gang also likes to train their sights on the unsuspecting public, 'Candid Camera' style." 'New York Post' film critic Lou Lumenick said "[this] plotless collection of moronic stunts is by far the worst movie of the year." Reviewing the film for 'The New York Times', A.O. Scott said it "is essentially an extended episode of the popular 'Jackass' MTV series" and that "some of the undertakings, amateurishly recorded on video, are like demented science experiments." Scott said "'Jackass the Movie' is like a documentary version of 'Fight Club', shorn of social insight, intellectual pretension and cinematic interest".

'The Village Voice's Ed Halter said "their feature debut plays like a longer episode of the show" and said "it's funny, as the old saying goes, because it's true." Halter wrote "the structure is ruthlessly efficient: no plot, no characters, no sets, and no downtimejust one sight-gag right after another." Scott Foundas of 'Variety' referred to 'Jackass: The Movie' as the first reality film when reviewing 'The Real Cancun' in April 2003.

In a film critic roundup of 2002 films in 'The Village Voice', film critic Armond White said "Best Documentary: Jackass, far and away." Ed Halter of 'The Village Voice' wrote, "MTV would surely love to claim 'Jackass' as a mutant by-product of its 'Real World' franchise, but its roots lie elsewhere", saying "their self-destructive brand of docu-comedy emerged as a bizarrely elaborate version of a skateboard-video mainstay: slam sections..." Jennie Punter of 'The Globe and Mail' said the film "belongs in the too-hot-for-TV direct-to-video/DVD category".

Soundtrack



The soundtrack was released on October 25, 2002, by American Recordings. The soundtrack features songs that were featured in the movie, and various audio clips from the movie.

Sequels



'Jackass: The Movie' was filmed with a modest budget of approximately $5 million, but earned more than $22 million during its opening weekend, effectively managing to secure the top spot at the box office for its debut and immediately making back its budget at least 4 times over. It eventually grossed more than $64 million in North America alone.

Initially meant as the "grand finale" for the series as several cast members, most notably Bam Margera and Steve-O, focused on new shows outside the 'Jackass' brand, the crew ultimately decided to reunite for another film as Steve-O in particular realized part of the reason he did 'Jackass'-style stunts on his programs was because of how much he enjoyed working with the crew.

On September 22, 2006, Paramount Pictures released 'Jackass Number Two'. A feature titled 'Jackass 2.5' was compiled from outtakes shot during the making of the second film and released direct-to-DVD on December 26, 2007.

In December 2009, Paramount Pictures and MTV Films issued a press release that a second sequel titled 'Jackass 3D' would be made. It was released on October 15, 2010. The movie was filmed in 3D starting in January 2010. 'Jackass 3.5' was compiled from outtakes shot during the making of the third film. The film was released in weekly installments on Joost from April 1 through June 13, 2011. The entire film was then released direct-to-DVD on June 14, 2011.

In July 2013, a spin-off movie titled 'Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa' was announced. It was released on October 25, 2013, exactly 11 years after 'Jackass: The Movie' came out. Unlike the other 'Jackass' movies, this one has a story and features just Johnny Knoxville dressed as his grandpa character, Irving Zisman. A separate movie titled 'Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa.5' was made out of unused footage, outtakes, and interviews with the cast and crew members during the making of 'Bad Grandpa'. This film premiered on MTV on June 15, 2014.

In December 2019, a third sequel, 'Jackass Forever', was announced and scheduled to be released on March 5, 2021, but was eventually delayed for July 2, 2021, and again to September 3, 2021. In April 2021 the movie was delayed again to October 22, 2021. In September 2021, the movie was delayed once more to February 4, 2022. 'Jackass 4.5' is compiled of outtakes shot during the filming of the fourth movie and was released on Netflix on May 20, 2022.

Legacy



Japanese game developer Goichi Suda (aka 'SUDA 51') is a fan of 'Jackass: The Movie'. The main character of the 2007 'No More Heroes' video game, Travis Touchdown, was inspired by Johnny Knoxville.

References




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