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IMDbPro

Jackass 3D

  • 2010
  • 16
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
70K
YOUR RATING
Jackass 3D (2010)
The Jackass crew returns, and this time, the stunts come at you in 3D.
Play trailer1:33
12 Videos
99+ Photos
ActionComedyDocumentary

Johnny Knoxville and company return for the third installment of their TV show spin-off, where dangerous stunts and explicit public displays rule.Johnny Knoxville and company return for the third installment of their TV show spin-off, where dangerous stunts and explicit public displays rule.Johnny Knoxville and company return for the third installment of their TV show spin-off, where dangerous stunts and explicit public displays rule.

  • Director
    • Jeff Tremaine
  • Writers
    • Jeff Tremaine
    • Johnny Knoxville
    • Bam Margera
  • Stars
    • Johnny Knoxville
    • Steve-O
    • Bam Margera
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    70K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jeff Tremaine
    • Writers
      • Jeff Tremaine
      • Johnny Knoxville
      • Bam Margera
    • Stars
      • Johnny Knoxville
      • Steve-O
      • Bam Margera
    • 100User reviews
    • 158Critic reviews
    • 56Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 4 nominations total

    Videos12

    Jackass 3D: Trailer #1
    Trailer 1:33
    Jackass 3D: Trailer #1
    'Jackass Forever' Cast Answer Our Burning Questions
    Clip 3:53
    'Jackass Forever' Cast Answer Our Burning Questions
    'Jackass Forever' Cast Answer Our Burning Questions
    Clip 3:53
    'Jackass Forever' Cast Answer Our Burning Questions
    "Master Blaster"
    Clip 0:32
    "Master Blaster"
    Jackass 3-D: "Duck Hunting"
    Clip 0:27
    Jackass 3-D: "Duck Hunting"
    "High Five"
    Clip 0:40
    "High Five"
    Jackass 3D: Master Blaster
    Clip 0:32
    Jackass 3D: Master Blaster

    Photos108

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    + 102
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    Top cast81

    Edit
    Johnny Knoxville
    Johnny Knoxville
    • Self…
    Steve-O
    Steve-O
    • Self
    Bam Margera
    Bam Margera
    • Self
    Ryan Dunn
    Ryan Dunn
    • Self
    Jason 'Wee Man' Acuña
    Jason 'Wee Man' Acuña
    • Self
    • (as Jason "Wee Man" Acuna)
    Preston Lacy
    Preston Lacy
    • Self
    Chris Pontius
    Chris Pontius
    • Self
    Ehren McGhehey
    Ehren McGhehey
    • Self
    • (as "Danger Ehren" McGhehey)
    Dave England
    Dave England
    • Self
    Loomis Fall
    Loomis Fall
    • Self
    Tony Hawk
    Tony Hawk
    • Self
    Eric Koston
    • Self
    April Margera
    April Margera
    • Self
    Phil Margera
    Phil Margera
    • Self
    Spike Jonze
    Spike Jonze
    • Self…
    Trip Taylor
    • Self
    Rick Kosick
    Rick Kosick
    • Self
    Dimitry Elyashkevich
    Dimitry Elyashkevich
    • Self
    • Director
      • Jeff Tremaine
    • Writers
      • Jeff Tremaine
      • Johnny Knoxville
      • Bam Margera
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews100

    7.070K
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    Featured reviews

    7bowmanblue

    What are you expecting?

    I find it hard to imaging that there are many people who stumble across a film called 'Jackass 3D,' not knowing what 'Jackass' is all about. Then they put the film on, watch it to the end and thus hate every moment of it and are disgusted by what they just watched.

    However, in case you're thinking that 'Jackass' is merely a mildly offensive term for someone who is a 'little bit silly,' then you really need to swat up on your pop culture. I believe it started out on a cable channel as one of those ridiculously over-the-top late night shows that gains a cult following for all the wrong reasons. Basically, the premise is a bunch of men hurt each other. No, this is not 'scripted' in the traditional sense. It's literally a bunch of guys coming up with weird and imaginative ways to hurt and humiliate each other (and sometimes unsuspecting members of the public or their family).

    If you're therefore thinking of something vaguely clever or surreal (ala 'Triggerhappy TV') then you're wildly off course. There is nothing clever about 'Jackass' and there never will be. It's pure 'shock TV' and, if that's your thing, then you'll have a blast with this film.

    Naturally, there's no story. It's just one wacky clip after the next of guys doing painful and disgusting 'stunts' (or 'pranks,' depending on who you ask). Again, if you like that sort of thing then you'll enjoy the film.

    If you're in two minds about whether to watch this (or any of the 'Jackass' films or TV) then I'm sure you can find many a clip on the internet. Watch it then decide if it's for you. Trust me... it'll save you an hour and a half of watching grown men pull each other's teeth out with sports cars and sitting in a port-a-loo (full of human 'you-know-what') and then getting jettisoned high into the air, making the *ahem* 'brown stuff' go all over the man entombed within. Yes, that actually happens.

    This sequel in the 'Jackass' franchise is 3D. I didn't watch it in the cinema using glasses, only at home on the telly, so I can't really tell how much the 3D adds to the effect. Either way, it's pretty disgusting. But, at the end of the day, I'm almost ashamed to admit that I enjoyed this film (and the previous two). No, I don't watch them often, but, if I'm in the mood for something so low brow that I can almost feel the IQ points diminishing as the runtime progresses, then this is it.
    7ruink

    Hilarious, awesome, and surprisingly heartfelt.

    Jackass 3D has intentionally done something I did not expect it to do. It purposely tugs at your heart if you have been watching the show since it's original inception in 2000. Seeing these guys at their age now and how well their chemistry is evoked on the screen makes you long for the early 2000's so this crew can always be around.

    The purpose to see this film is to be grossed out of your mind right? Well rest assured you will laugh hard and be extremely grossed out. The film flows with a great pace just as the predecessors did.

    As I said before, if you are a huge fan of the show, like I am, the closing credits of the film unexpectedly tugs at your emotions. It really is nostalgic to see this cast at their current age. Though they are all still in good physical shape, you can't help but wonder how much longer their bodies can handle the abuse.

    Heres to more good times.
    7colinrgeorge

    A Goal on an Empty Net

    How does one review "Jackass 3D"? The tertiary installment in MTV's prank and stunt franchise is basically immune to criticism because you get exactly what you pay for. Love it or hate it, "Jackass 3D" accomplishes just about everything it sets out to; in effect, Johnny Knoxville scores a goal on an empty net.

    I am the anomaly, but I'd wager next to no one is 'on the fence' about whether or not they should see this film. They either contributed to the massive $50 million opening weekend box office cume, or they immediately dismissed it. In my case, however, having never seen the "Jackass" films wasn't a conscious snub. Believe it or not, there just always seemed to be something better to watch.

    But mine's not a high horse. I sought out and watched "Jackass" and "Jackass: Number Two" the week prior to my first theater experience with the series, and I'm glad I did. After all, I grew up on "America's Funniest Home Videos" and throughout high school religiously followed the English hidden camera show "Trigger Happy TV." "Jackass" is not as clever as the latter, but by measure of unbridled chutzpah, Knoxville and Co. are the reigning kings.

    Like a Victorian freak show or museum of oddities, the often self-destructive experiments of the "Jackass" crew are the guilty pleasures of our generation. There's something almost gladiatorial about watching the elaborate dangers these brave idiots subject themselves to. Man vs. bull, man vs. mule, man vs. man—our fascination with competition, spectacle, and injury is nothing new.

    "Jackass 3D" being my first chance to observe others' response to these shenanigans, I was most amazed by the two-pronged reaction the audience had to the physical trauma the performers sustained. A given stunt would be executed, typically resulting in its participant doubling over in pain. The crowd laughed, as they'd been cued to. The film would then play back the moment in slow motion and suddenly everyone would groan or sharply inhale. Though we paid to laugh at people injuring themselves, what's more interesting is our ability to empathize with the depiction of human pain. That the "Jackass" films achieve both is not an insignificant feat.

    This isn't the definitive "Jackass" experience, however. Having watched all three films in the span of a single week, I did discern a distinct arc that left me somewhat letdown with Knoxville's most recent effort. "Jackass: Number Two" improved upon the original with a more polished, professional look, and more elaborate and inventive stunts. It gave the genuine impression that the crew was pushing its boundaries and trumping itself wherever possible. That same sense of pioneering is largely missing from "Jackass 3D." The glasses- gimmick seems to supplant genuine innovation in their routine, and on the whole it feels slapdash in comparison to the conceptual genius of its prequel.

    But what survives in "Jackass 3D," and what ultimately endeared me to the franchise is its creativity. Where it won me over was not in the painful payoff of each trick, but rather in the setup. The use of the camera to disorient, spotlight, and surprise is what really makes the series sing, and the trilogy is full of epiphanic moments of hilarity. "Jackass" has and always will be a potpourri of comedic elements, not all of which directly appeal to my specific sensibilities, but the variety is essential and the whole is somehow more than the sum of its parts.

    I only wish "Jackass 3D" had more of the entrepreneurial spirit that so distinguished the second film. It may not be ambitious, but hey, a goal made on an empty net still counts.
    7sebaweirdo

    *Sick Corona Riff*

    Jackass 3D is at the time of me writing this, the last movie made by the Jackass crew, the group of Morons who charmed the world by doing painful, gross and stupid stunts to entertain an audience. Jackass the movie is a long episode of the show, Jackass number 2 raises expectations by being a bit more wacky and toony and including the best Climax and opening of the series, but 3D is not only the funniest, but also the one that really pushes the limits of stupidity, chaos and grosseness, this is Jackass at their most Ridiculous...and i kinda liked it.

    I didn't watched Jackass itself until 2 years ago, where i fell in love with how creatively and insane some of their stuff were, it's not high quality entertainment, but there is something oddly charming about this group of morons, and 3D pushes those morons into their most painful stuff yet.

    The best way to describe this movie is as a live action 90's cartoon, chaotic, loud, colorful, gross and violent. The highlights for me are the more ingenious stunts that include 3 or the whole crew, like the Jet, Electric Avenue and the Ram Jam. But it does contain probably the smallest and probably one of my favorite stunts, the snake river redemption, not for the Stunt itself, but the interactions between the group and Wee Man on a leprechaun outfit.

    This movie is ridicolous, gross, if you don't have a taste for those kind of movies, you are gonna hate it. But if you enjoy a good laugh, even for how gross it can be, watch it, it's a good movie! Disgusting but Good!
    kindigth

    Jackass 3D

    In 1928, Charlie Chaplin wowed audiences by appearing on screen with a real, live lion for his celebrated film The Circus. A lion! Real! On screen! Audiences were mesmerized by this fascinating new art of cinema, an art made all the more engaging for the fact that the plastics of its image had roots in reality; that somewhere else in space and time, Chaplin had actually stood next to this lion and the reality of this image was now available to them for their own viewing pleasure.

    For a contemporary equivalent, I give you Steve-O launched through the stratosphere in a PortaPotty full of dog poop. In 3D.

    Jackass 3D appeals to cinema's time-honored capacity for ontological testament, and makes an equally compelling case for the camera's potency as an empathy machine: We see the setup of a stunt, we endure its execution, and we then either clutch our balls or puke in our mouths, depending on what the stunt entails. Cinema is reality, and their pain is ours.

    Jackass isn't simply effective in the art of its performers, however, as there is a genius to the framing and editing of each segment as well. Many of the film's laughs are built in to its premises, and the crew smartly eschews over-explanation. We see a tee ball, we see the path this ball is on track to take, and we see Steve-O's nuts--as an intelligent and discerning audience, it is left to us to piece together the narrative before it unfolds, resulting in our increased engagement and a far greater potential for humor upon realization. And we then hang in that moment of anticipation, until the situation's potential energy is quickly and cathartically rendered kinetic.

    Jackass 3D is notable as well for its use of stereoscopic 3D cinematography. In one scene, Johnny Knoxville fires a projectile toward the screen in slow motion to great effect: shallow depth of field slowly reveals this item to be a dildo, and 3D reveals the dildo to be humorously close to your face. Elsewhere, stereoscopy is employed in the service of some truly excellent model work; the scene's genuine beauty makes its ultimate subversion all the more effective.

    Needless to say, Jackass 3D will not appeal to everyone. But as the film so effectively marries the ontology of outrageous stupidity to so many facets of cinematic expression, it's definitely worth seeing if you think you can stomach it. TK 10/17/10

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Johnny Knoxville had one of his teeth knocked out by a flying dildo.
    • Goofs
      In the final 'explosive' scene, before the plunger is pushed, the corner of the room that Bam Margera is sitting in is relatively empty. However, when the Johnny Knoxville orders everyone to put on their goggles and proceeds to push the plunger, a bookcase appears in the corner.
    • Quotes

      Steve-O: [about to get hit in the crotch in Tee Ball] I'm Steve-O... Oh fuck! Why do I have to be Steve-O?

    • Alternate versions
      There's an unrated version of Jackass 3 released on DVD and Blu-Ray.
      • It has an extended version of the "Super Mighty Glue" scene were Dunn has his ass glued to Phil's back, then Bam glues his hand to Dunn's face.
      • An extended version of "Will The Farter" were Bam smokes a cigarette that was in Will's butt, throws up and see's something in a cup and throws up again.
      • Another extended scene, during the "Duck Hunting" scene, Parks Bonifay has to act as a target as well.
      • There's also an additional scene, in another part of the Rocky bit, Rick Kosick gets smacked in the head.
      • There's another extended scene, during the "Lamborghini Tooth Pull", Pontius brushes his teeth with an electric toothbrush and says: "If you wanna walk the walk you gotta talk the talk. Or no one will take you serious.".
      • During the ending credits, there's alternative footage. The theatrical version shows Dunn sitting on Phil's back while Bam glues his hand to Dunn's face. Because this has already been shown in the Unrated, this version shows a conclusion to Ehren's tooth removal.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Rotten Tomatoes Show: Scott Pilgrim vs. the World/Eat Pray Love/The Expendables (2010)
    • Soundtracks
      Corona
      (Jackass Opera Mix)

      Written by D. Boon

      Produced and Performed by Sam Spiegel (as Squeak E. Clean)

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    FAQ

    • How long is Jackass 3D?
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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 3, 2010 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Âne: Le film 3
    • Filming locations
      • Santa Clarita, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Dickhouse Productions
      • Film Roman Productions
      • MTV Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $20,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $117,229,692
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $50,353,641
      • Oct 17, 2010
    • Gross worldwide
      • $171,685,887
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 34 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
      • Dolby Surround 7.1
      • DTS
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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