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    Jackass: Best and Last (2026)

    The Jackass team returns one last time to exceed limits and break boundaries.

    Outrageously – and often gruesomely – entertaining.

    With a mixture of previously unseen footage from the early days and brand-new material, Jackass: Best and Last is exactly what its title promises: a celebration of a phenomenon that has somehow survived decades of bruises, broken bones, and complete disregard for common sense. And thank goodness it did.

    If you’re anything like me and usually enjoy going to the cinema on your own, this is the exception. Jackass is best experienced with friends, family, or anyone you can laugh uncontrollably with. Half the fun comes from hearing everyone else react with equal parts horror and hysterics. Because that’s what Jackass has always been. A shared experience.

    Having said that, Jackass is one of those franchises that you either love or loathe. There is very little middle ground. It represents a uniquely American brand of entertainment that could probably only have flourished in the United States, where pushing limits and testing the boundaries of absurdity somehow became an art form.

    And this final chapter embraces that identity wholeheartedly. The remarkable thing is not simply that the team is still willing to perform these ridiculous stunts, but that they continue doing so with the same enthusiasm despite the passing years. Age may have caught up with them physically, but their commitment to making audiences laugh remains completely intact. Every stunt, every failed attempt, and every painfully hilarious consequence is why this group became a cultural phenomenon in the first place.

    No, it isn’t sophisticated humour. No, it isn’t high art. But it never pretended to be. It simply set out to make people laugh through fearless commitment, outrageous ideas, and unwavering friendship. As farewell celebrations go, this is exactly the send-off the franchise deserved.

    The team may finally be stepping away, but the countless unforgettable moments they have created will continue to be replayed for generations. In that sense, they’ll never really leave. Even when all of us are gone.

    Thanks for reading!

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