Michael Scott
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Ahhh, the 90s, before South Park, and before Mike Judge’s hilarious King of the Hill. It was a time where “shock” TV was Beavis and Butthead, made up of two ridiculous Texas teens who giggle, set things on fire, and generally looked around to score. It was sort of a weird mix between Daria and South Park and pure Mike Judge. The show lasted an insane 8 seasons (at the time, only The Simpsons was going that strong) and I remember 14 year old me begging my older brother to let me go to the theater with them to watch this. You know, because the show was so crude (for the times) that my parents wouldn’t even let me watch it, let alone go see the movie.
Looking back without the rose colored glasses, Beavis and Butthead wasn’t exactly high class comedy. In fact, it wasn’t even that good. But it was still funny to 13-17 year olds (the target demographic according to Judge), and watching the movie really brought back ALLLLLL those childhood memories. Suprisingly the movie actually holds up rather well, as long as you roll with the fact that you’re giggling at people making butt, boob, and poop jokes the entire movie.
Beavis and Butthead (both played by Mike Judge) wake up to find that someone has stolen their precious TV, and the two really can’t survive without said TV. So they head off on a quest to find another TV, even if they have to steal it. After stumbling through stupid hijink after stupid hijink, the pair stumble into a motel room where they meet a drunk and bumbling Muddy Grimes (Bruce Willis) who thinks they’re the hitmen he hired to kill his wife. Offering the kids $10k to “do” his wife (you can already see where this is going), he sends the due off with their mission.
The first 10-15 minutes had me banging my head on the counter wondering why I ever enjoyed the stupid show to begin with. However, once the movie kicked off with Demi and Bruce Willis’s characters I started getting back into my 14 year old mentality and giggling along with it. The movie actually holds up better than I remember, and introduces us to the inspiration to Hank Hill, which would spin off into the MUCH better King of the Hill in a few years. Even though it was only a year or so before South Park would start, Beavis and Butthead Do America felt a bit rough and raw with the satire. Mike Judge has always played better to character humor rather than satire, and the show is best watched while as high as you possibly can get. That being said, I got more than a few giggles out of Beavis’s “The Great Cornholio!!” routine and remembering just how much the “burnt out loser goth/emo/punk/rocker” trope was active during the 90s.
Rating:
Rated PG-13 for continuous crude sex related humor and language, and for drug related scenes
Video:

Audio:

Extras:

• The Big Picture – A retrospective making-of segment that features the journey to the big screen including story, voice casting and more, including a look at the hallucination scene – drastically different from the animation in the rest of the film – and an extended version of the scene.
• We're Gonna Score! Scoring Beavis and Butt-Head Do America – Composer John Frizzell and Mike Judge detail the use of music in the film and how they came up with the perfect compositions to accompany the visuals of the big adventure
• The Smackdown – A montage of all the characters in the movie getting slapped or fighting
• MTV News "Celebrity Shorts" – With Jennifer Tilly, Snoop Dogg and MORE...
• Trailers
• TV Spots
Final Score:

Beavis and Butthead Do America is not really going to bring in a new audience. In fact, it’s probably going to alienate most everyone who DIDN’T grow up with the acquired taste of a show. It was originally a show for teenage burnouts about teenage burnouts, and reveled in a complete lack of sophistication. As a teen in the 90s this was spot on my generation and the new Blu-ray is a revelation to those of us who grew up with that old DVD. The show may not look amazing due to the rough and crude animation, but the Blu-ray is head and shoulders better than what we had, although rather light on the extras. Definitely a movie for the fans.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Mike Judge, Bruce Willis, Demi Moore, Cloris Leachman
Directed by: Mike Judge
Written by: Mike Judge, Joe Stillman, Brian Mulroney
Aspect Ratio: 1.85.1 AVC
Audio: English: DTS-HD MA 5.1, French DD 2.0
Subtitles: English SDH, French
Studio: Paramount
Rated: PG-13
Runtime: 81 Minutes
Blu-ray Release Date: December 7th, 2021
Recommendation: For the Fans