Baltimore Sun

You’ve already seen funniest parts for free

- By Roger Moore

Strip the danger out of “Borat” and the injuries out of “Jackass,” and you’ve got a bead on “Bad Grandpa,” a fitfully funny, semi-scripted “Jackass” outing built around elaboratel­y staged pranks played on the unsuspecti­ng.

Johnny Knoxville dons old-age makeup and becomes Irving Zisman, whom we meet at his wife’s doctor’s office: “I thought she’d die.” Innocent bystanders give him a look.

At the funeral, a hired black church choir freaks out — a bit — at Irving’s tasteless eulogy and the mayhem with his crackhead daughter (Georgina Cates) that dumps the casket over in front of everybody.

A running gag in the movie: black people’s nervousnes­s around a corpse. Another running gag: Irving’s racially tinged wisecracks to Hispanic store clerks, black cashiers and strip club fans and a fetch-

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Opens: ing Asian woman his 8year-old “grandson” (Jackson Nicoll) befriends somewhere around Nashville.

The daughter dumped the kid on Grandpa. After a very public Internet cafe rant via Skype with the kid’s no-good pothead dad (complete with bong hits) to rattle the patrons, we’re off on a bad grandparen­ting trek from Nebraska to North Carolina, complete with flatulence gags, sagging body parts, bad driving and a demonstrat­ion of extreme shopliftin­g.

There are explosive laughs in these stunts — grandpa sucker-punched by an air bag, hurled through a store window by a cheap kids’ ride set up out front. Most of this stuff you’ve seen in the very funny TV ads.

And the kid (Nicoll was in “Fun Size”) is flat-out hilarious, a natural “Jackass” in training.

The scripted interludes aren’t funny at all. The gags are more embarrassi­ng than anything else. Take away that element of danger, that this irate restaurant or store owner may go off on Knoxville or that biker gang will flatten him, and “Bad Grandpa” loses some of that “Borat” appeal. Limit the stunts to a few rubberized genital gags and you lose a lot of that “Oh-no-they- “Jackass appeal.

But a male stripper revue that goes terribly wrong and a couple of tumbles involving transporti­ng Granny’s corpse (portrayed by Spike Jonze) raise a funny eyebrow. And there’s big finish.

As “Jackass” japes go, though, “Bad Grandpa” was better in concept and in its short, punchy TV commercial­s than it is as a feature.

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