Review: Mike Judge’s Beavis and Butt-Head “Hellhole/Take a Bow”
Overview
“Hellhole”
Beavis and Butt-Head fall into a sewer and think they have died and gone to hell.
Cutaways
Ariana Grande
“Take a Bow”
Butt-Head teaches Beavis a new game, which puts him in the hospital.
Cutaways
Mountain Dew Jug, Camino
Our Take
This week’s episode of Beavis and Butt-Head featured a fun thread that was featured throughout both episodes…religion. That’s right, we spend a lot of time discussing the philosophies of different belief systems juxtaposed in a 30-minute show with animation television’s two biggest idiots. On one hand, Beavis and Butt-Head look forward to parties in hell, as long as it’s together. In “Take a Bow”, Butt-Head imagines life without his best friend and we get to see a slightly softer side to the offspring of a Motley Crue roadie (probably).
Regardless, the complete package that is the two episodes is a belief system in heaven and hell, and given that both settings are fictional, this makes rife for exploration of what could possibly be there. Watching Butt-Head pray for the well-being of his pal is one of the most heartfelt things I’ve seen, even in the guise of lunacy, if that scene doesn’t tug on your heart strings, then I don’t know what to tell you.
"There are also other characters that come and go (also owned by the Warner Bros. Discovery conglomerate media company)."
Huh. Is that just referring to other characters from the show itself, or is this implying that the new season is going to have cameos from other WBD IPs