A movie poster can tell you everything you need to know about what you’re in for — and the newly unveiled official poster for Jackass: Best and Last is no exception. It is chaotic, it is colorful, it is slightly painful to look at, and it communicates in roughly two seconds that the gang is back and still completely unconcerned with their own well-being.

The poster continues the visual tradition the franchise has maintained across its run: an ensemble shot packed with personality, signaling the group dynamic at the heart of what makes the Jackass universe tick. This has never been a one-man show. The art direction leans into the finale energy — the “Best and Last” title treatment is front and center, and there is no attempt to be subtle about the fact that this one is the send-off.
Franchise regulars Steve-O, Chris Pontius, Dave England, Wee Man, and Preston Lacy are all accounted for, alongside newer additions who have joined the crew in recent years. Together they form the kind of lineup that, in a different movie universe, would be the Avengers — except their superpower is specifically that they will do things you would absolutely not do under any circumstances.
The poster dropped alongside the official trailer, which Paramount first debuted at CinemaCon before releasing publicly. The two pieces of promotional material reinforce the same message: this is a victory lap wrapped in an injury waiver.
What makes the Jackass franchise’s promotional material consistently interesting is that it does not try to dress itself up. There are no sweeping cinematic backdrops, no artful lighting meant to suggest prestige. The aesthetic is deliberate: this is what it is, here are the people involved, and if you already know you’re in, great. If you need to be convinced, perhaps this franchise was never going to be for you.
The original Jackass MTV series launched in 2000, created by Johnny Knoxville, Jeff Tremaine, and Spike Jonze. It was built on a simple and powerful premise: round up a group of friends with high pain tolerances, a deep trust in one another, and absolutely no internal editor, point a camera at them, and see what happens. What happened turned out to be culturally significant. The franchise influenced an entire generation of internet video culture — you can draw a direct line from Jackass to virtually everything that followed in the online stunt and prank space.
The poster for Best and Last is a small artifact in that larger story. It marks the end of something that started when most streaming platforms did not exist, when viral video was distributed by DVD and word of mouth, and when the idea of a comedy franchise built around its cast voluntarily injuring themselves seemed like a novelty rather than a genre.

Jackass: Best and Last opens in theaters on June 26, 2026, distributed by Paramount. The film is produced in partnership with MTV Entertainment Studios and Gorilla Flicks, the production company founded by director Jeff Tremaine. It is the fifth and final film in the series.
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