āJackassā: Why This Time Really Is the End
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Director Jeff Tremaine knows people will point out that āJackass: Best and Lastā is not the first time Johnny Knoxville and crew have publicly announced this is the last āJackassā movie.
āEvery movie weāve made has been the last one in our mind,ā said Tremaine while a guest on this weekās Filmmaker Toolkit Podcast. āBut this is the first time I really know itās done. Like, now Iām admitting it, that itās done. And part of it is Knoxville canāt do the same stuff.ā
In the previous film, āJackass Forever,ā Knoxville got drilled by a bull that sent him out on a stretcher. In the film, cameras capture him coming out of the hospital with a broken wrist and in good spirits, but later it was revealed that the long-term damage was more severe.
āHe got a traumatic brain injury on that, and it became apparent we canāt hit him in the head anymore,ā said Tremaine. āWe can kick him in the dick and punch his body, but itās risky to get him another concussion.ā
āJackass: Best and Lastā digs into the franchiseās archives and shows behind-the-scenes footage of what happened ahead of the fateful bull hit that semi-retired Knoxville, including the fact that he had done a previous take in which he took a significant hit from a smaller bull that didnāt lead to a dramatic fall or laugh that would be needed to make the final cut.
āIt sucks because he broke two ribs on that first hit; that bull hit him hard,ā said Tremaine. āThe worst-case scenario to me is always something is gnarlier than it looks, and that was it. It was a gnarly hit that didnāt look dramatic enough to make the movie.ā
In āBest and Last,ā we watch Tremaine and Knoxville watching a playback of the first bull hit on an iPad, with Knoxville asking the director if they needed to do another take.
āYouāre looking at two guys who both know we donāt have it. He needed me to tell him, āWe have to do it again,ā and Iām reluctant to say that because Iām not the one standing out there putting my life on the line,ā said Tremaine, who reflected on the irony of the situation, which heās faced multiple times before. āThe funny thing about āJackassā is if you set up a motorcycle jump and he makes the jump, well, they have to do it again. It has to fail. Itās designed to fail. The failure is what weāre after. But how can we make that spectacular without killing him.ā
Tremaine, noting he is turning 60 this year, said, ā I just donāt want to keep doing it forever.ā Adding he believes the craziest aspect of having to end the series on their own terms is that it has lasted this long.
āItās crazy that weāre here talking about āJackass,āā said Tremaine. āIf you wouldāve watched that TV show the first time it aired, youād think, āOh, this is going to burn bright and fast, itās not made to last. It is not a marathon for this group. The fact that we survived 26 years is ridiculous.ā
The franchise added new and younger supporting cast members to the 2022ās āJackass Forever,ā leading to speculation that it could continue without the core original crew, but Tremaine also threw cold water on that idea.
āWe could get new people to come in, and there are gnarly people out there, for sure. But I would need to find a new gnarly me, too,ā said Tremaine. āā Jackassā is the guys. It feels like a bigger idea, but really itās magic because of the guys in it. It would be hard for me to just find that new magic.ā
The last shot in the last āJackassā film is a behind-the-scenes shot of Tremaine and Knoxville in a motel room after a day of filming the first film āJackass: The Movie.ā The two are reflecting on the āchaoticā events of that dayās shoot, admitting they were scared by how out of hand things got. Knoxville smiles and says he loved it, but Tremaine is clearly traumatized ā a side rarely shown, as the director is often seen as the merry prankster pushing the envelope with the cast.
āThat was the night he had just flipped the golf cart [in 2002 āJackass: The Movieā], and I thought he died,ā said Tremaine, who you can hear panicking in the movie rushing to Knoxville in the clip above. āFrom my angle, that golf cart swallowed him up and broke his neck. I thought he might even have been decapitated by it from where I was sitting, because the golf cart blocked my view of it. It was bad, and then he popped up. I was shook the whole night.ā
Tremaine continued, talking about the behind-the-scenes motel clip between him and Knoxville, and why he used it as the last shot in the last film: āItās so funny because I had no recollection of a camera being on. It was just one of our producers was fishing through footage and saw that, and I really thought, āMan, that sums up so much of Johnny and Iās relationship.āā
To hear Tremaineās full interview, subscribe to the Filmmaker Toolkit podcast on Apple, Spotify, or your favorite podcast platform.
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