Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa (2013)
Director : Jeff Tremaine
Writers : Fax Bahr (story) , Spike Jonze (story), johnny knoxville(story,screenplay), Adam small
Stars : johnny knoxville , jackson nicoll, Zia Harris
Genre: comedy
Status : (released)Released date : 25 october 2013
Running Time : 91 minutus
Review
Attending “Jackass
Presents: Bad Grandpa,” Johnny Knoxville’s new prankfest, could
be life-changing. It may cause you never to use another vending machine, never
to enter another bingo parlor, never to put your child on one of those
coin-operated rides, never to eat in another diner.
Those things figure prominently in some of the movie’s more
spectacular gags, which often means “spectacularly raunchy.” The film sends Mr.
Knoxville’s character, the 86-year-old Irving Zisman, familiar from the
“Jackass” television show and earlier movies, on a cross-country trip with an
8-year-old grandson named Billy (Jackson Nicoll). Along the way, they stage
“Jackass”-style pranks and stunts, capturing the reactions of unsuspecting
civilians as earlier installments in the endless franchise did.
The weird-sounding
mix of scripted narrative and found footage works better than it seems it
might. The bits feature fewer life-threatening stunts than when this franchise
and Mr. Knoxville were young, and more sight
gags, many with a high gross-out factor. It’s hard to score big laughs with
hidden-camera material these days because there has been so much of it since
the “Jackass” TV show, but Mr. Knoxville and his young sidekick still land a
few jaw-droppers. Certainly the contestants at a kiddie beauty pageant they
visit near the film’s end will need therapy for years.
source
Some Funny Shot
Watch Jackass Presents: Bad Grandpa Youtube Trailor
Attending “Jackass
Presents: Bad Grandpa,” Johnny Knoxville’s new prankfest, could
be life-changing. It may cause you never to use another vending machine, never
to enter another bingo parlor, never to put your child on one of those
coin-operated rides, never to eat in another diner.
Those things figure prominently in some of the movie’s more
spectacular gags, which often means “spectacularly raunchy.” The film sends Mr.
Knoxville’s character, the 86-year-old Irving Zisman, familiar from the
“Jackass” television show and earlier movies, on a cross-country trip with an
8-year-old grandson named Billy (Jackson Nicoll). Along the way, they stage
“Jackass”-style pranks and stunts, capturing the reactions of unsuspecting
civilians as earlier installments in the endless franchise did.
The weird-sounding
mix of scripted narrative and found footage works better than it seems it
might. The bits feature fewer life-threatening stunts than when this franchise
and Mr. Knoxville were young, and more sight
gags, many with a high gross-out factor. It’s hard to score big laughs with
hidden-camera material these days because there has been so much of it since
the “Jackass” TV show, but Mr. Knoxville and his young sidekick still land a
few jaw-droppers. Certainly the contestants at a kiddie beauty pageant they
visit near the film’s end will need therapy for years.
source
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