• Latest
  • Trending
Jackass Best and Last Review

Jackass: Best and Last Review: Knoxville’s Last Hit Hurts Differently

A Royal Setting Review (2)

A Royal Setting Review: The Crown Jewels Lose Their Shine

BTS: The Return Review

BTS: The Return Review: Seven Artists, One Difficult Room

Saudades Eternas Review

Saudades Eternas Review: Sueli’s Home Against the Street

Kinsfolk Review

Kinsfolk Review: A Walking Sim With Feeling and Friction

Billy Idol Should Be Dead Review

Billy Idol Should Be Dead Review: Billy Idol Tells the Damage Himself

Pretty Ugly: The Story of the Lunachicks Review

Pretty Ugly: The Story of the Lunachicks Review: Punk History Gets Its Teeth Back

The Love Hypothesis

Lili Reinhart and Tom Bateman’s The Love Hypothesis Gets Its First Trailer — And a Delightful Star Wars Twist

7 hours ago
download 3 2

Elon Musk Streams Armie Hammer’s German-Banned Citizen Vigilante on X — Critics Pan It, Audiences Cheer

7 hours ago
The Young & The Restless

Young and the Restless Head Writer Josh Griffith Steps Down After Seven Years

7 hours ago
Benito Skinner

Benito Skinner Will Play Two Characters in Overcompensating Season 2 and Promises “Something Sinister”

7 hours ago
Kristen Wiig

“Unreleasable” or Just Unfinished? The Battle Over Jonah Hill’s Shelved Comedy

7 hours ago
Elle

Elle Cast Pays Tribute to Van Der Beek Ahead of His Final Onscreen Role

7 hours ago
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Sunday, June 28, 2026
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    The Love Hypothesis

    Lili Reinhart and Tom Bateman’s The Love Hypothesis Gets Its First Trailer — And a Delightful Star Wars Twist

    download 3 2

    Elon Musk Streams Armie Hammer’s German-Banned Citizen Vigilante on X — Critics Pan It, Audiences Cheer

    The Young & The Restless

    Young and the Restless Head Writer Josh Griffith Steps Down After Seven Years

    Benito Skinner

    Benito Skinner Will Play Two Characters in Overcompensating Season 2 and Promises “Something Sinister”

    Kristen Wiig

    “Unreleasable” or Just Unfinished? The Battle Over Jonah Hill’s Shelved Comedy

    Elle

    Elle Cast Pays Tribute to Van Der Beek Ahead of His Final Onscreen Role

    Christopher Nolan

    Nolan Told Coogler It “Wasn’t Crazy” to Shoot Sinners in IMAX — Then It Made History

    Lee Cronin’s The Mummy

    Horror Fans Get a Fourth of July Treat as ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’ Hits HBO Max

    Novak Djokovic

    Jason Hehir’s Djokovic Documentary ‘The Wolf in Winter’ Gets August 20 Premiere Date on Prime Video

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    A Royal Setting Review (2)

    A Royal Setting Review: The Crown Jewels Lose Their Shine

    BTS: The Return Review

    BTS: The Return Review: Seven Artists, One Difficult Room

    Saudades Eternas Review

    Saudades Eternas Review: Sueli’s Home Against the Street

    Billy Idol Should Be Dead Review

    Billy Idol Should Be Dead Review: Billy Idol Tells the Damage Himself

    Pretty Ugly: The Story of the Lunachicks Review

    Pretty Ugly: The Story of the Lunachicks Review: Punk History Gets Its Teeth Back

    Scarborn Review

    Scarborn Review: Revolution by Candlelight

    Ultras Review

    Ultras Review: Inside the Beautiful Game’s Wildest Choir

    It Takes a Village Review

    It Takes a Village Review: Polish Comfort Comedy Gets Lost in the Fields

    Sugar Beach Review

    Sugar Beach Review: Grief Comes in with the Tide

  • Game Reviews
    Kinsfolk Review

    Kinsfolk Review: A Walking Sim With Feeling and Friction

    Beastro Review

    Beastro Review: Cooking Up a Clever Deckbuilder

    Thank You For Your Application Review

    Thank You For Your Application Review: Corporate Hell Has a Red Folder

    Dead or Alive 6: Last Round Review

    Dead or Alive 6: Last Round Review: Team Ninja’s Final Pass Feels Half-Ready

    Star Fox Review

    Star Fox Review: The Arwing Still Knows the Route

    Direction Quad Review

    Direction Quad Review: Diagonal Movement Meets Arcade Friction

    R-Type Tactics I • II Cosmos Review

    R-Type Tactics I • II Cosmos Review: Wave Cannons Become Chess Problems

    Deer & Boy Review

    Deer & Boy Review: Small Systems, Big Feeling

    Dark Scrolls Review

    Dark Scrolls Review: Retro Chaos With Slippery Boots

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    The Love Hypothesis

    Lili Reinhart and Tom Bateman’s The Love Hypothesis Gets Its First Trailer — And a Delightful Star Wars Twist

    download 3 2

    Elon Musk Streams Armie Hammer’s German-Banned Citizen Vigilante on X — Critics Pan It, Audiences Cheer

    The Young & The Restless

    Young and the Restless Head Writer Josh Griffith Steps Down After Seven Years

    Benito Skinner

    Benito Skinner Will Play Two Characters in Overcompensating Season 2 and Promises “Something Sinister”

    Kristen Wiig

    “Unreleasable” or Just Unfinished? The Battle Over Jonah Hill’s Shelved Comedy

    Elle

    Elle Cast Pays Tribute to Van Der Beek Ahead of His Final Onscreen Role

    Christopher Nolan

    Nolan Told Coogler It “Wasn’t Crazy” to Shoot Sinners in IMAX — Then It Made History

    Lee Cronin’s The Mummy

    Horror Fans Get a Fourth of July Treat as ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’ Hits HBO Max

    Novak Djokovic

    Jason Hehir’s Djokovic Documentary ‘The Wolf in Winter’ Gets August 20 Premiere Date on Prime Video

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    A Royal Setting Review (2)

    A Royal Setting Review: The Crown Jewels Lose Their Shine

    BTS: The Return Review

    BTS: The Return Review: Seven Artists, One Difficult Room

    Saudades Eternas Review

    Saudades Eternas Review: Sueli’s Home Against the Street

    Billy Idol Should Be Dead Review

    Billy Idol Should Be Dead Review: Billy Idol Tells the Damage Himself

    Pretty Ugly: The Story of the Lunachicks Review

    Pretty Ugly: The Story of the Lunachicks Review: Punk History Gets Its Teeth Back

    Scarborn Review

    Scarborn Review: Revolution by Candlelight

    Ultras Review

    Ultras Review: Inside the Beautiful Game’s Wildest Choir

    It Takes a Village Review

    It Takes a Village Review: Polish Comfort Comedy Gets Lost in the Fields

    Sugar Beach Review

    Sugar Beach Review: Grief Comes in with the Tide

  • Game Reviews
    Kinsfolk Review

    Kinsfolk Review: A Walking Sim With Feeling and Friction

    Beastro Review

    Beastro Review: Cooking Up a Clever Deckbuilder

    Thank You For Your Application Review

    Thank You For Your Application Review: Corporate Hell Has a Red Folder

    Dead or Alive 6: Last Round Review

    Dead or Alive 6: Last Round Review: Team Ninja’s Final Pass Feels Half-Ready

    Star Fox Review

    Star Fox Review: The Arwing Still Knows the Route

    Direction Quad Review

    Direction Quad Review: Diagonal Movement Meets Arcade Friction

    R-Type Tactics I • II Cosmos Review

    R-Type Tactics I • II Cosmos Review: Wave Cannons Become Chess Problems

    Deer & Boy Review

    Deer & Boy Review: Small Systems, Big Feeling

    Dark Scrolls Review

    Dark Scrolls Review: Retro Chaos With Slippery Boots

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Jackass Best and Last Review

Another Self Season 3 Review: Ayvalık’s Final Therapy Session

Warner Bros. Denies Jonah Hill Comedy 'Cut Off' Is Unreleasable, Promises New Release Date

Home Entertainment Movies

Jackass: Best and Last Review: Knoxville’s Last Hit Hurts Differently

Naser Nahandian by Naser Nahandian
2 days ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 7 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on TelegramSummarize with ChatGPTSummarize with Perplexity

The body remembers what the franchise pretends to forget. Every fall, every electric shock, every blast of fecal absurdity in Jackass: Best and Last arrives with an echo from 25 years of men treating pain as a shared language. Earlier Jackass films made injury feel elastic, a cartoon law applied to human skin. This one knows the skin has aged. The joke still lands, then limps.

Jeff Tremaine’s farewell is shaped like a living wake, part new stunt film, part documentary, part memory dump from a group that has spent a quarter century turning humiliation into affection. Johnny Knoxville, Steve-O, Chris Pontius, Preston Lacy, Dave England, Jason “Wee Man” Acuña, and Ehren “Danger Ehren” McGhehey return with the newer Jackass Forever cast around them, including Sean “Poopies” McInerney, Zach Holmes, Jasper Dolphin, and Rachel Wolfson. The title promises finality. The film keeps testing how final a goodbye can feel when everyone is still laughing through the damage.

The Archive Bleeds

Tremaine opens the film by digging beneath the franchise’s own origin myth: Knoxville in 1998, still close to Philip John Clapp, shooting himself in the chest while wearing a bulletproof vest and padding himself with adult magazines. It is a stupid image, naturally. It is also the entire grammar of Jackass in miniature. Risk, performance, fear, and a boyish need to see if the body can become evidence.

The film’s best archival passages understand that old footage does not gain power simply because viewers have seen it before. It gains power when time changes the wound. Knoxville’s unaired escaped-convict bit, where he enters a hardware store in handcuffs asking for a hacksaw, now plays like a rough sketch for the franchise’s public-space chaos. The Brad Pitt abduction prank has the strange innocence of early celebrity mischief, a moment when a movie star could turn his own kidnapping into street theater outside a hot dog stand.

Steve-O’s porta-potty launch, the “Poo Cocktail Supreme,” still has a sickly grandeur. The slow-motion rise and fall of a sewage-filled capsule is disgusting, yes, but the film frames it as a landmark in escalation, a monument built from waste and bad judgment. Ryan Dunn’s toy-car X-ray bit carries a quieter ache. The film refuses funeral softness; it remembers him through the exact kind of idiocy he gave to the group. That feels honest.

Bam Margera’s restored presence in archival footage has a similar sting. His absence from the present is never turned into a grand statement, yet seeing him again inside old chaos gives the farewell a missing limb. The film knows what cannot be repaired, so it lets memory stand near the fracture.

Also Read

  • Best Christmas Movies
    30 Best Christmas Movies to Watch This Holiday Season
  • best 2025 games
    Gazettely's 30 Best Video Games of 2025
  • Best 2025 Movies
    Gazettely's 30 Best Movies of 2025
  • best sci fi movies
    30 Best Sci Fi Movies Ever: Gazettely's Ultimate…
  • Alice and Steve Review
    Alice and Steve Review: Six Episodes of Escalating Madness
  • 30 Best Drama Movies
    30 Best Drama Movies to Watch Before You Die

Middle Age as Body Horror

The new material is smaller than the old legend around it. That reduction is visible in the sets, in the scale, in Knoxville’s role. He is no longer the man stepping first into impact. After the bull injury from Jackass Forever, he has become a pale-haired master of ceremonies, a smiling architect of pain who often stands at the edge of the frame while other bodies take the hit. There is mischief in that shift, and a sadness too. The ringleader survives by moving away from the center.

Steve-O gives the film its most committed new suffering. The robot rectal exam, performed with chunky peanut butter as lubricant, is exactly as graceful as that description suggests. It works because Tremaine lets the setup breathe long enough for dread to curdle into laughter. The joke is primitive. The timing is precise.

The colonoscopy-prep Twister stunt is the film’s clearest vision of aging through the Jackass lens. These men are no longer merely tempting broken bones. They are facing the medical rituals of middle age and converting them into communal collapse. The sight of bodies twisting on the mat after drinking laxatives would be unbearable if it were not staged with such ritualistic devotion. It is vile. It is also, somehow, about time.

“The Escape Room From Hell” gives Knoxville one of his sharper late-period roles: not victim, but designer. The room becomes a little theater of fear, electricity, and forced choice, with Ehren again serving as one of the franchise’s great sacrificial figures. Sean “Poopies” McInerney comes closest to inheriting the old appetite for punishment, taking grotesque lip injections and genital shocks with alarming commitment. Zach Holmes’ body, especially his rear end, becomes a recurring instrument of disgust. Jasper Dolphin’s ram sequence has blunt physical force. Rachel Wolfson, sadly, is left too often at the edge, a frustrating retreat after her stronger arrival in Jackass Forever.

The Jamiroquai-inspired opening sequence lacks the deranged spectacle of earlier movie intros, especially the Jackass Forever Godzilla set piece. It feels thin, almost polite by franchise standards. A strange word for this crew, but there it is.

Laughter With Gray Hair

The emotional force of Best and Last rests in the contrast between young footage and present bodies. Gray hair, slower speech, old scars, loose skin, tattoos that have aged with their owners. The film keeps placing the past beside the present until the franchise looks less like a prank machine and closer to a record of what time does when it is invited to keep hitting.

Knoxville tears up on set, and the moment lands because Jackass has never been clean about feeling. These men do not express affection through speeches. They express it by laughing beside a friend who has been electrocuted, vomiting behind the camera, or placing a hand on a shoulder after a stunt goes wrong. Their tenderness has always arrived wearing filth.

The return to the bull footage gives the film its strongest argument for stopping. We see the first take, judged insufficient. Then comes the second, the one that ends with Knoxville badly hurt. The logic is terrifying because it is so simple: the body offers a warning, the camera asks for a better version. Pontius cracks a joke after the injury, softer than usual, and that slight change in tone says plenty. Laughter arrives, but it arrives wounded.

That is the dark beauty of the franchise at its best. The stupidity is real. The love is real too. Neither cancels the other.

The Animal Problem

The film’s ugliest ethical problem remains its use of animals. The ram repeatedly butting Jasper, the bull footage, and the snake-based fear setups all point to a comic instinct that has not aged well. Human performers consent to pain, embarrassment, and lifelong damage. Animals do not join the joke. They react from fear, agitation, or confusion, and the laughter changes temperature when the target is no longer fully willing.

Jackass Best and Last Review

This matters because Jackass has never needed animals to be riotous. A robot, a laxative game of Twister, a terrible escape room, a porta-potty launched toward the sky: the human cast offers enough ruin. The franchise is at its purest when everyone inside the stunt has agreed to be ridiculous. When an animal is forced into the bit, the old anarchic joy hardens into something meaner.

Repetition also wears the film down. Pontius’ naked antics, the endless genital trauma, the fecal fixation, and the underwear-heavy Zach Holmes material still produce laughs, but expectation dulls the edge. Shock becomes rhythm. Rhythm becomes habit. Habit is dangerous for a franchise built on the illusion that anything might happen next.

The Door Half Closed

The title may be lying. Brands rarely die with dignity, and the younger cast could carry some altered form of this machinery forward. Yet Best and Last feels final for the version of Jackass that matters most: the one held together by Knoxville’s grin, Steve-O’s deranged discipline, Pontius’ sunny indecency, Ehren’s doomed patience, Tremaine’s blunt staging, and the group’s talent for turning pain into a private weather system.

The film is not one of the strongest entries. Too much of it leans on memory. Too many new stunts feel boxed in by age, caution, or limited imagination. Still, its weakness becomes part of its meaning. These bodies cannot do what they once did. The laughter knows it. The camera knows it. Knoxville’s face, wet with farewell before the next stupid idea begins, knows it most of all.

Jackass: Best and Last is gross, uneven, ethically bruised, and strangely tender. The body finally says what the franchise spent 25 years trying to shout down: enough. Then someone laughs, and for one last second, enough has to wait.

Jackass: Best and Last is a reality slapstick comedy film that premiered theatrically in the United States on June 26, 2026. Directed by Jeff Tremaine and produced alongside franchise stalwarts Spike Jonze and Johnny Knoxville, this fifth and final main installment serves as a hilarious, chaotic farewell to the iconic stunt crew. The film features a wild combination of brand-new, death-defying stunts alongside never-before-seen footage and a retrospective look at the team’s greatest, most painful hits spanning over 25 years. Audiences can catch this raucous celebration of camaraderie and foolishness playing exclusively in theaters nationwide.

Where to Watch Jackass: Best and Last (2026) Online

Unfortunately, we couldn't find any streaming offers.
Source: JustWatch

Full Credits

  • Title: Jackass: Best and Last

  • Distributor: Paramount Pictures

  • Release date: June 26, 2026

  • Rating: R

  • Running time: 92 minutes

  • Director: Jeff Tremaine

  • Writers: Jason “Wee Man” Acuña, Tory Belleci, J.P. Blackmon

  • Producers and Executive Producers: Jeff Tremaine, Spike Jonze, Johnny Knoxville

  • Cast: Johnny Knoxville, Steve-O, Chris Pontius, Jason “Wee Man” Acuña, Dave England, Danger Ehren, Preston Lacy, Rachel Wolfson, Jasper Dolphin, Sean “Poopies” McInerney, Zach Holmes

  • Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Dimitry Elyashkevich

  • Editors: Erkan Özekan

  • Composer: Toygar Işıklı

The Review

Jackass: Best and Last

7 Score

Jackass: Best and Last is a farewell built from bruises, waste, old footage, and strange tenderness. Its new stunts feel smaller, and the animal material still leaves an ethical bruise the laughter cannot cover. Yet the film finds real feeling in aging bodies remembering what they survived together. Knoxville’s tears, Steve-O’s punishment, Dunn’s ghostly presence in old clips, and the bull footage turn stupidity into a record of time passing through flesh.

PROS

  • Genuine farewell feeling
  • Strong archival context
  • Knoxville’s visible emotion
  • Steve-O and Poopies commit fully
  • Ryan Dunn footage lands quietly

CONS

  • New stunts feel smaller
  • Clip-show padding
  • Animal stunts remain troubling
  • Rachel Wolfson underused
  • Gross-out repetition dulls impact

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: Chris PontiusComedyDanger EhrenDave EnglandDocumentaryFeaturedJackass: Best and LastJason "Wee Man" AcuñaJeff TremaineJohnny KnoxvilleParamount PicturesSteve-OTop Pick
Previous Post

Another Self Season 3 Review: Ayvalık’s Final Therapy Session

Next Post

Warner Bros. Denies Jonah Hill Comedy ‘Cut Off’ Is Unreleasable, Promises New Release Date

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Connect with
Login
I allow to create an account
When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings. We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.
DisagreeAgree
Notify of
guest
Connect with
I allow to create an account
When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings. We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.
DisagreeAgree
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Is This Seat Taken? Review

    Is This Seat Taken? Review: A Satisfying Mental Workout

    1124 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Citizen Vigilante Review: Uwe Boll Mistakes Vengeance for Justice

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Trust Review: Squandered Potential and an Incoherent Plot

    6 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Rogue Trooper Review: Duncan Jones Finds Pulp Life on Nu Earth

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Polygamist Review: Betrayal Burns Bright in Netflix’s 22-Episode Drama

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Harry Wild Season 5 Review: Jane Seymour Gets a New Pathologist and a New Pulse

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Love Heist Review: A Hallmark Caper Dressed for the Gala

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

40 Dates and 40 Nights Review
Movies

40 Dates and 40 Nights Review: A Rom-Com Bet With Modest Returns

1 day ago
Little Brother Review
Movies

Little Brother Review: The Chaos Is Funnier Than the Heart

1 day ago
Jackass Best and Last Review
Movies

Jackass: Best and Last Review: Knoxville’s Last Hit Hurts Differently

2 days ago
A Woman of Substance Review
TV Shows

A Woman of Substance Review: Emma Harte Builds an Empire from a Bruise

2 days ago
Life, Larry, and the Pursuit of Unhappiness Review
TV Shows

Life, Larry, and the Pursuit of Unhappiness Review: Larry David Haunts the American Experiment

3 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Which of Alfred Hitchcock's 1960s thrillers is your all-time favorite?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2026 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

wpDiscuz
0
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
| Reply