Friday, February 20, 2026

‘Nirvana the Band the Show the Movie’ is a rare treat

Sadly, Newtown cinema sold out for last show tomorrow about Ontario comedians


Recommended by O and M so must be bloody great hit


Best Chekov’s gun moment in cinema history


‘Nirvana the Band the Show the Movie’ bound to be a festival hit

Nirvana the Band the Show the Movie 🎥 🍿 Sydney  

“I’m a libertarian.” You’re free to do whatever, but I don’t think this is a good idea.


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Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie Review: An Ambitious Comedic ...


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 ‘Nirvana the Band the Show the Movie’ is a rare treat


NIRVANNA THE BAND THE SHOW THE MOVIE

SYNOPSIS From Matt Johnson (BlackBerry, Operation Avalanche) and Jay McCarrol's cult comedy series comes an adventure 17 years in the making.

When their plan to book a show at The Rivoli goes horribly wrong, Matt and Jay accidentally travel back to the year 2008. 

 
For the uninitiated, Matt Johnson and Jay McCarrol’s Nirvanna The Band The Show was a cult web series where its two creators portrayed hyperactive, hap-witted versions of themselves as a musical duo desperately failing to book a gig at the storied Toronto venue The Rivoli. 

Their hilarious misadventures continued a decade later across two seasons of a Spike Jonze–produced television series, and both iterations brilliantly blended Matt and Jay’s fictional exploits with hysterically incredible real-world public interactions. Every episode overflowing with irreverent pop-culture references and nebulous copyright violations, but always culminated in a sweet-hearted expression of friendship and creative perseverance. 

 
Now the duo has returned, in a critically acclaimed, award-winning major motion picture that harmonizes with the series but stands alone. When Matt presses Jay to partake in their most death-defying publicity stunt yet, it goes spectacularly sideways, and the fallout inspires Jay to strike out on his own. 


But thanks to Matt’s inadvertent intervention with a short-lived Canadian novelty beverage, the boys find themselves travelling through time where they risk compromising their very own origin story. 

 Utilizing meticulous visual effects, costuming, and the judicious integration of archival footage, Johnson and his collaborators have crafted a satirically sobering and riotously funny cultural mirror that reflects just how much (and how little) things have changed, all the while celebrating the infectious joy of living for your dreams… with a little help from your friends.

Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie may not win over many or even any new fans, but devotees of the TV show, and even diehards from the single-n Nirvana web days will relish having their favorite gentle idiots back and hearing the same joke on a bigger stage. Sure, Matt’s a little paunchier (as one time-traveling variant of Jay cruelly notes), and Jay’s a little greyer, but Matt’s hat’s the same, they’re still being followed around by two guys with cameras for no reason, the affable friendliness of the people of Toronto is still as much a character as always, and the Rivoli is still there. Most importantly, Johnson and McCarrol’s weird mix of JackassPortlandia, and Letterkenny is undented, and their willingness to skirt the rules of copyright to make a reference work is still intact. Yes, even after all these years, the joke’s still funny.