The Colorado Springs Gazette final

MOVIE REVIEW: ‘BEAVIS AND BUTT-HEAD DO THE UNIVERSE’ Iconic duo still rules

BY ADAM GRAHAM The Detroit News

Peanut butter and jelly, thunder and lighting, Beavis and Butt-head. Some pairings forever go together. Huh-huh, you said pairings. Aah yes, the moronic metalheads are back in their latest feature-length adventure, “Beavis and Butt-head Do the Universe,” streaming on Paramount+. The film is a surprisingly effective follow-up to 1996’s “Beavis and Butt-head Do America” and an extension of the original “Beavis and Butt-head” cartoon, a staple of 1990s MTV.

It’s 1998 and not much has changed for the crude cartoon teenagers, who are still wearing their Metallica and AC/DC shirts, respectively. They still chortle at their jokes, love nachos and are looking to score for the first time.

That quest to score leads them to the outer reaches of the universe, after a trip to Space Camp where they manipulate (huh-huh, you said manipulate) a piece of docking equipment to mimic intercourse, which leads to them being chosen for the space program.

In their heads, they think everything that unfolds is an elaborate prelude to sex with a female astronaut on the crew (voiced by Andrea Savage). It’s a credit to writers Mike Judge (who still voices the doofus pair) and Lew Morton and the universe they’ve built for the one-minded horndogs that this perfectly inane scenario is able to hold narrative water.

The two fart-knockers end up traveling through a black hole and are shot out into 2022, where they’re confronted with modern realities such as iphones and the concept of white privilege. They’re also visited by alternate universe versions of themselves, bald-headed and in flowing white robes, who inform them that no version of B&B throughout time and space has ever managed to score.

Throughout, Beavis and Butt-head are true to themselves, making fun of everything around them because they’re too stupid to know any better but always getting the last laugh. The film doesn’t try to change them for the times, but shows that what worked in the 1990s still works today. Huh-huh, that’s pretty cool.

Movie details: Rated TV-14; 86 minutes. Grade: B

ENTERTAINMENT

en-us

2022-07-01T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-07-01T07:00:00.0000000Z

https://daily.gazette.com/article/282385518208329

The Gazette, Colorado Springs