JACKASS
Number
Two
With
Johnny
Knoxville,
Bam
Margera,
Steve-O,
Chris
Pontius,
Ryan
Dunn,
Wee
Man,
Preston
Lacy,
Dave
England,
Ehren
McGehehey
Directed
by Jeff
Tremaine
Older
but
definitely
not
wiser.
One
would
think
that
these
guys
have
run
out
of dumb
and
dangerous
ideas
–
oh no,
not
by a
long
shot.
The
entire
team
is back
to disgrace
the
screen,
and
even
with
the
multitude
of YouTube
style
imitations
eating
up bandwidth
in cyberspace,
you
always
need
to go
back
to the
source
for
the
real
thing.
Whether
they
shock
themselves
with
a WWII
phone,
get
in a
ball
playpen
with
an anaconda,
stand
blindfolded
in front
of an
angry
bull
or get
a beer
enema,
the
insanity
doesn’t
end.
Steve-O
shoves
a fishhook
through
his
cheek
and
gets
dangled
in shark
infested
waters
at the
end
of a
rod,
attaches
a leach
to his
eyeball
and
braves
the
fart
helmet.
Johnny
Knoxville
gets
shot
up in
the
air
over
a lake
holding
onto
a rocket,
stands
unprotected
in front
of a
riot
rubber
ball
bomb,
and
dresses
up as
an old
man
with
nuts
hanging
out
the
back
of his
tight
shorts,
and
who
lets
his
grandson
smoke
and
drink
giving
complainants
lip.
Bam
Margera
gets
a phallus
hot
branded
onto
his
butt
cheek,
torments
his
folks
(as
usual),
and
is forced
to tears
with
a real
cobra.
Chris
Pontius
has
his
member
dressed
up like
a mouse
and
shoved
into
a snake’s
cage,
drinks
horse
sperm,
and
does
his
Partyboy
act
in India
with
a full
traditional
Bollywood
ensemble.
Ryan
Dunn
gets
hit
in the
head
a lot
and
takes
many
shopping
cart
trips,
one
into
a garage
door
and
another
with
a compressed
air
rocket
strapped
to it.
Dave
England
and
Ehren
McGehehey
get
torn
up,
do the
fire
hose
rodeo,
pretend
to be
suicide
bombers
in a
taxi
on the
way
to the
airport,
and
gross
the
audience
(and
each
other)
out
with
excremental
activity.
Wee
Man
and
Preston
Lacy
gets
many
double
acts
like
the
double-ended
bungi
jump
and
the
indispensable
chases
down
the
road
in nappies,
or naked.
The
lunacy
comes
at you
with
no end
and
you’ll
hose
yourself
at the
madness.
They
close
the
show
with
a big
musical
production
number
combining
a bunch
of studio
set-pieces
punctuated
with
a crazy
stunt.
Again
loads
of behind
the
scenes
footage,
deleted
scenes,
additional
stunts
and
extra
outtakes
almost
make
up another
movie’s
worth
(plus
some
commentary
tracks).
As with
all
spectacular
train
wrecks,
you
just
can’t
look
away.
6
/ A
- Paul
Blom
1 2
3
4 5
6
A
- B
- C
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