

The saga begins with Beavis and Butt-Head getting sentenced to space camp by a juvenile court judge in the year 1998, sending them on a disastrous Space Shuttle trip where they get left in dead space, before traveling through a black hole and re-emerging in the year 2022. The epic adventure finds the two traveling through space and time. 7 stars out of 10: very, very good.For the first time in 10 years, Beavis and Butt-Head are officially back onscreen together in Beavis and Butt-Head Do the Universe, arriving on Paramount+ on Thursday (June 23). But not without a couple of sniggers along the way, of course. Overall this is a fun, feelgood comedy which doesn't require all your brainpower to enjoy to the fullest, though an extra watch or two might throw up a few sight gags or subplot references that you missed the first time around for whatever reason(!) The plot seems somehow relevant too, considering that it also deals with an issue that has been a headline grabber in post-9/11 society. This is right up there with the finer moments of South Park for such an achievement, and can easily be considered Beavis and Butt-Head's crowning moment of funny and/or awesome. Certainly there are plenty of gross-out movies, some of them also animated (as a side note the animation here is a nice balance between the original show and something more polished) but there are few that can take simple toilet humour and dress it up so well, making it more than just a guilty pleasure to enjoy after a few beers and/or a joint. In my opinion as a would-be critic, we need more films like these. This lands them right in the thick of it, and the unassuming pair make their way through. Wandering around town ever more desperate, they somehow manage to usurp the television thieves, but not in the way you might expect.

Not smart enough to put the pieces of the puzzle together to catch the thieves in the act, they try and steal one from their school. It all starts inauspiciously enough - the hard rock obsessed teenagers awake one day, still on their couch, to find their beloved television is missing. Previous characters make a return and are given some development where relevant to the plot.

Since he cannot change the simplistic, constantly sniggering leads he has done the most logical thing he could by surrounding them with a plethora of multi-faceted characters tied together with a conspiracy plot that takes them into other locations where their simple-but-effective double-entendre humour can flourish. But why should it? Mike Judge has managed to fill out the 75 or so minutes well without making it drag, and he's done it with style. If you didn't like the main duo to begin with then this will do nothing to convince you otherwise. These are some of the movie's finer qualities. "Beavis and Butthead Do America" is filled with vulgar humour, sadistic or otherwise bizarre characters and a convoluted plot insane enough to make no sense.
