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![]() In between, the health and safety of the nation has been threatened, and B&B have used the retired couple's camper and several other locations for their most inventive and ambitious pastimes, which are masturbating and passing gas. Through a series of adventures unnecessary to describe, B&B eventually end up in the Oval Office (and there is a cameo for President Clinton). The plot of the movie involves a deadly biological weapon that comes into the possession of B&B during a trip on which they encounter normal Americans, including a retired couple touring the west in their camper. For practical purposes, however, B&B are one personality, split into two so that they will have somebody to talk to. I am sure students of the TV series can describe subtle differences in their personalities, just as there are said to be viewers who can identify the individual Ninja Turtles. And one has a more-or-less permanent damp patch in his crotch. It is, of course, possible to tell them apart: As on the MTV series that spawned them, one wears a Metallica T-shirt, and the other wears an AC/DC T-shirt. I said I wasn't sure if Beavis or Butt-Head deconstructed the TV theft. Eventually the clues are correctly deciphered: The set is not there because it has been stolen! This sequence is brilliant in the way it illustrates the mental capabilities of B&B, who between them have the I.Q. Then the movie repeats this series of shots a second time, and then a third time, and then the series is broken up into closeups, for closer study. Beavis (or Butt-Head I forget) tries to reconstruct the crime, and the movie shows a series of shots: (1) broken window, (2) missing TV, (3) footprints leading from window to where TV was, (4) footprints leading out the open door. As this fact sinks in, they grow restless and disturbed. This becomes apparent to B&B after a time, because they realize that they are looking at the place where the TV should be, and it is not there. (The movie shows an album of old photos of B&B growing up we see them as infants, toddlers, children, teenagers, etc.-always on the couch, watching TV).Įarly in Mike Judge's “Beavis and Butt-Head Do America,” there is a funny sequence in which their television is stolen. They would be as happy in prison, assuming the set was working. As long as the TV is on and they are supplied with food and drink, B&B see no need to move. It consists of sitting side by side on a sofa, watching television, which they dimly perceive as containing images of food, drink, mayhem and large breasts.
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