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Some critics are claiming that Jackass, and especially
the latest entry in Jackass Forever, should be seen on par with Buster
Keaton and the classics of silent era comedy. Are they serious?
article here
Over at Hyperallergic, Juan Barquin makes the
case that the Jackass series deserves serious recognition as
documentary art.
He argues that the pranks of Johnny Knoxville, Jeff Tremaine
and company are a direct line from the slapstick of revered cinema comedians
Harold Lloyd, Buster Keaton, Laurel and Hardy and The Three Stooges.
What’s more, the creators are well aware of this legacy.
“Jackass Number Two (2006) closes with an elaborate
musical sequence that references everything from Keaton (with a direct
recreation of the house gag) to Busby Berkeley and Esther Williams dance
numbers,” Barquin contends.
Knoxville tells Hyperallergic, “When we’re in the
middle of making it, we’re not in the moment of reflection — we are in the
right now, because you have to be.”
That leads Barquin into a rhapsody: “The refreshing
simplicity of [the show’s] gaze, the efficiency with which it presents its
truly wild assortment of stunts — this is the true appeal,” he writes. “As
documentary, these films aren’t quite vérité — some scenes are obviously
staged. But even those segments have a bracing immediacy that lets the viewer
play along.
“Regardless of how much Steve-O or Wee Man may talk to the
camera, these are actual human beings risking their well-being for the sake of
laughs, and audiences are drawn to this realism, no matter how heightened and
performative it may be.”
Not only did Jackass take on the legacy of silent
cinema’s stuntmen, but it also presaged the onslaught of prank and joke videos
across social media, according to Barquin. The “DIY daredevils” that appear all
over YouTube, and TikTok have their archetype in Jackass.
“A great deal of what the crew does feels like something
anyone could replicate, from trying to light a fart on fire while underwater,
to aiming everything from a hockey puck to a baseball at somebody’s groin,”
Barquin says. “Anyone could pick up their cellphone and film their friends
engaging in such idiotic behavior, which lends the show and films a sense of
familiarity.”
Yet he is not an outlier in lending Jackass critical
appreciation. Mark Kermode, perhaps the UK’s most influential film critic,
also found something refreshingly honest about the new movie’s approach to
inflicting pain on camera. Kermode also pointed to the unusual degree of male
frontal nudity — repeated across the show’s history — as a rare instance of
equality when female nudity is usually foregrounded on screen. The penis is
also treated as an appendage for laughs.
That’s the point that The Guardian critic Peter
Bradshaw also makes in his favorable review of the film.
“In Jackass Forever, the penis is shown
repeatedly, explicitly and in a way that’s weirdly the opposite of macho. Its
vulnerability and absurdity is what comes across. It’s like an exotic, strange
creature…”
“This isn’t a Mensa convention!” says one player in the
film. “Is that disingenuous?” poses Bradshaw. “Isn’t there, in fact, some
advanced showbiz intelligence and surrealist savvy in the way Jackass is set up
and edited?”
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