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7,4/10
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Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuComedian Tom Green's journey takes unexpected turns as he shifts from wild MTV stunts to confronting serious health challenges, ultimately finding peace away from Hollywood on his Canadian f... Alles lesenComedian Tom Green's journey takes unexpected turns as he shifts from wild MTV stunts to confronting serious health challenges, ultimately finding peace away from Hollywood on his Canadian farm.Comedian Tom Green's journey takes unexpected turns as he shifts from wild MTV stunts to confronting serious health challenges, ultimately finding peace away from Hollywood on his Canadian farm.
Boogie Bradley
- Self - Record Producer
- (as Benson 'Boogie' Bradley)
Darcy DeToni
- Self - Tom's Friend
- (as Darcy De Toni)
Pamela Anderson
- Self - Actress
- (Archivfilmmaterial)
Eric André
- Self - Actor and Comedian
- (Archivfilmmaterial)
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This documentary on Tom Green was so good. I started watching it as background noise, but found myself glued to the screen within the first fifteen minutes of the show. Tom takes us all the way to the very beginning of his career and gives you back all those feels you had when you watched The Tom Green Show as a teen. (Talk about some nostalgia!) I laughed out loud and I got choked up. I loved how he went through what happened with the show and why he is the way he is now - and it made me appreciate him even more. A must watch for anyone who loved Tom in the 90s and can relate to the process of growing up and going through life.
I'm not sure I would have heard about this documentary coming out if Tom hadn't appeared on Useless Farms playing Stan's piano, so thank you to Amanda and her chat for letting me know this happened!
As a loser kid without much going on, the Tom Green show changed my life. I remember seeing it on Canadian TV before it hit MTV and being so proud that Tom made it big. His show really started my interest in comedy and made bad days much better. I remember emailing Glenn after Tom gave out his email on the show, though Glenn rudely never responded, but I kept trying. Tom Green influenced so many artists and art forms that he was a true underappreciated gift. You almost forget without this documentary to remind you. Eminem absolutely wouldn't have been as famous without Tom Green. Being from Detroit, I'm not so proud of that part.
This documentary actually somehow made ME feel special for being allowed to grow up with this guy and be influenced by him. He helped shape the content I consume and how lucky am I that he could be such a creative genius. It's almost magical how naturally funny he is. I feel ashamed to say I've sort of forgotten about that time in my life and him as a result, but that's a mistake because he's definitely part of why I'm still alive. We're nothing without comedy and somehow Tom Green is one of few people to understand that and do something about it. I'm so jealous he gets to live on a beautiful farm now, even if it's in cold Canada. I have to go, I'm about to check out his stand up special now.
As a loser kid without much going on, the Tom Green show changed my life. I remember seeing it on Canadian TV before it hit MTV and being so proud that Tom made it big. His show really started my interest in comedy and made bad days much better. I remember emailing Glenn after Tom gave out his email on the show, though Glenn rudely never responded, but I kept trying. Tom Green influenced so many artists and art forms that he was a true underappreciated gift. You almost forget without this documentary to remind you. Eminem absolutely wouldn't have been as famous without Tom Green. Being from Detroit, I'm not so proud of that part.
This documentary actually somehow made ME feel special for being allowed to grow up with this guy and be influenced by him. He helped shape the content I consume and how lucky am I that he could be such a creative genius. It's almost magical how naturally funny he is. I feel ashamed to say I've sort of forgotten about that time in my life and him as a result, but that's a mistake because he's definitely part of why I'm still alive. We're nothing without comedy and somehow Tom Green is one of few people to understand that and do something about it. I'm so jealous he gets to live on a beautiful farm now, even if it's in cold Canada. I have to go, I'm about to check out his stand up special now.
Back when I was a teenager, my brother lived in Ontario, and I was out in Alberta. He'd send me VHS tapes of The Tom Green Show, and honestly, it felt like I was being let in on this weird, underground comedy scene before anyone else even knew it existed. At the time, there was nothing like it on TV-this completely absurd, off-the-wall humor that felt totally unfiltered and unpredictable. I'd invite my friends over, and we'd sit in my basement watching these tapes, laughing until we couldn't breathe. It felt like we were in on this incredible secret that nobody else around us knew about. Watching Tom Green push every boundary felt rebellious, chaotic, and honestly kind of genius. It's wild to think about now, knowing how much his style shaped comedy later on, but back then, it was like having a front-row seat to something revolutionary before anyone realized it.
What's remarkable is how far ahead of his time he was. Today, prank culture and shock comedy are everywhere, from YouTube influencers to viral TikTok skits. But in the '90s, Tom Green was doing it without the wide reach of the internet etc... He was putting himself out there in front of live audiences, critics, and a world that wasn't quite ready for his brand of chaos.
I think his ideas and work was absorbed and repackaged by the American entertainment machine. Tom Green's innovations were adopted and amplified by American creators, often without the recognition he deserved. The rise of "Jackass," for example, took the absurdist, risk-taking humor Green pioneered and mainstreamed it, but with little acknowledgment of where that DNA came from. It's a familiar pattern: Canadian talent and creativity often serve as the wellspring for ideas that Americans make their own, leaving the original creators overlooked or erased from the narrative.
Overall it's a sweet little documentary, and worth watching.
What's remarkable is how far ahead of his time he was. Today, prank culture and shock comedy are everywhere, from YouTube influencers to viral TikTok skits. But in the '90s, Tom Green was doing it without the wide reach of the internet etc... He was putting himself out there in front of live audiences, critics, and a world that wasn't quite ready for his brand of chaos.
I think his ideas and work was absorbed and repackaged by the American entertainment machine. Tom Green's innovations were adopted and amplified by American creators, often without the recognition he deserved. The rise of "Jackass," for example, took the absurdist, risk-taking humor Green pioneered and mainstreamed it, but with little acknowledgment of where that DNA came from. It's a familiar pattern: Canadian talent and creativity often serve as the wellspring for ideas that Americans make their own, leaving the original creators overlooked or erased from the narrative.
Overall it's a sweet little documentary, and worth watching.
The Tom Green Show Documentary isn't just nostalgia. It's a quiet revelation.
Through home videos, candid interviews, and Green's own narration, the film peels back the layers of a man best known for 90s cringe.
What emerges is a portrait of an artist who turned absurdity into a vision and walked away to let the world catch up.
There's warmth in the way Green reflects, decades later. Archival clips take on new depth when framed by his current life. At his breathtakingly beautiful cabin. Reflecting with his parents.
The film argues, gently but persuasively, that beneath the intentional stupidity hides a sharp comic genius. One that shaped everything from Jackass to modern Late Night Shows to TikTok prank culture.
What sticks isn't the absurde clips. Though some still made laugh. It's the storytelling. In quieter moments. Being at Letterman. Getting older. Cancer survival. Burnout. He reveals a vulnerability that reframes his legacy. You're left marveling not at how wild he once was. But how human he's always been.
Through home videos, candid interviews, and Green's own narration, the film peels back the layers of a man best known for 90s cringe.
What emerges is a portrait of an artist who turned absurdity into a vision and walked away to let the world catch up.
There's warmth in the way Green reflects, decades later. Archival clips take on new depth when framed by his current life. At his breathtakingly beautiful cabin. Reflecting with his parents.
The film argues, gently but persuasively, that beneath the intentional stupidity hides a sharp comic genius. One that shaped everything from Jackass to modern Late Night Shows to TikTok prank culture.
What sticks isn't the absurde clips. Though some still made laugh. It's the storytelling. In quieter moments. Being at Letterman. Getting older. Cancer survival. Burnout. He reveals a vulnerability that reframes his legacy. You're left marveling not at how wild he once was. But how human he's always been.
Years and years ago when he jumped onto the scene I found him to be funny but too silly for my liking. I watched other movies and followed different comedians. But I found the house swap from the big city to the ranch intriguing.
I am SO happy I gave it a chance. His parents are endearing and he is a level headed really good dude who has a good story that I didn't know, but I do now, needed to be told.
I don't want to give anything away. Just watch it. He is living his best life now. Something we should all aspire to.
If you would have told my younger self I would one day tear up at the end of a Tom Green production I would have called you crazy.
I am SO happy I gave it a chance. His parents are endearing and he is a level headed really good dude who has a good story that I didn't know, but I do now, needed to be told.
I don't want to give anything away. Just watch it. He is living his best life now. Something we should all aspire to.
If you would have told my younger self I would one day tear up at the end of a Tom Green production I would have called you crazy.
Wusstest du schon
- VerbindungenReferenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 978: A Simple Plan (2025)
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- 1 Std. 37 Min.(97 min)
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