Mike Judge Movies
A former engineer, Mike Judge achieved animation renown for his dead-on idiot savant satire of American suburban teen culture in the MTV phenomenon Beavis and Butt-Head.Born in Ecuador and raised in Albuquerque, NM, Judge got a degree in physics at U.C. San Diego. Relocating to Texas, Judge worked as an engineer and also tried to forge a career as a musician, but found that animation was his preferred calling. After a Dallas animation festival, Judge's 1991 short Office Space was picked up by Comedy Central. His 1992 short Frog Baseball, featuring two sadistic teen cretins voiced by Judge, subsequently led to a 1993 MTV animated series revolving around the heavy metal-loving adolescents Beavis and Butthead.
Anchored by the pair's witty critiques of music videos ("this blows, huh-huh-huh"), Beavis and Butt-Head attracted devout fans with its astutely low-brow take on the teen boy culture of raging hormones, loud music, fast food, and pyromania. Despite fierce criticism of its overt idiocy and a 1993 scandal involving its influence on a fire-setting viewer, Beavis and Butt-Head ran for several years, spawning lucrative merchandising and Judge's first big-screen feature, Beavis and Butt-Head Do America (1996). Judge branched out into network TV in 1997 with Fox's popular, Emmy-nominated animated comedy series King of the Hill, featuring executive producer Judge as the voice of laconic Texas propane salesman and family man Hank Hill.
Bringing his sweetly jaundiced view of American suburbia to live-action film, Judge expanded his early short into the full-length feature Office Space (1999). Humorously chronicling the myriad forms of office cubicle and chain-restaurant hell, with visually clever detours into the suburban white male affection for gangsta rap, Office Space wickedly celebrated one man's revolt against 1990s corporate culture and became a small hit.
Despite his initial success with live action, Judge became somewhat dormant as a writer-director of feature films in the years following Office Space's initial release. Over the next decade, Judge continued his work with small-screen animation via King of the Hill, and made vocal contributions to the outrageously tasteless yet intelligent blockbuster South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut (1999). He nonetheless remained conspicuously absent from megaplexes for almost a decade, which made Office Space cultists increasingly impatient for a follow-up to that earlier hit. It eventually arrived in the form of 2006's Idiocracy -- a satirical sci-fi comedy produced for Fox Searchlight that Judge scripted along with Etan Cohen, whom he had previously worked with on Beavis and Butt-Head and King of the Hill. In the film, the U.S. military recruits the "most average man in the Army" (Luke Wilson) to take part in a secret experiment in which he will be cryogenically frozen for one year. He wakes up 500 years later to find out that he was forgotten about when the base closed; now in the year 2505, he discovers that he is the most intelligent person on Earth, as society has been dumbed down to the point where a former porn star/wrestler is the President of the Unites States.
In summer 2009, Judge released his next live-action feature film, Extract, starring Jason Bateman as the owner of a flavor-extract manufacturing company who struggles with his factory workers and dreams of selling off his business -- a reversal of the dynamic and setting of his previous workplace comedy Office Space, wherein cubicle drones dream of rebellion against their insufferable boss and corporate overlords. Extract also featured Mila Kunis, Ben Affleck, Gene Simmons, Kristen Wiig, among others. Shortly thereafter, Judge wrapped up his long-running King of the Hill series after completing its 13th season. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide
After reaching a production peak with 50 episodes during its fifth season on MTV, Beavis and Butt-Head relaxed a bit for season six, which offered a scant 20 episodes. Beavis' sugar-induced alter ego Cornholio returns in the season opener, a Halloween "special." Later on, Beavis and Butt-head try to determine the cause of "morning wood" (if you have to ask, it isn't worth it!); a school history assignment proves beyond doubt that our heroes are the undefeated champs in the short-attention-span sweepstakes; and in a more whimsical moment, the boys try to "score" with a vice cop disguised as a hooker. The Christmas spirit is honored mid-season with a one-hour episode offering two fantasies, "Huh-Huh-Humbug" and "It's a Miserable Life," based on guess which holiday classics. For the rest of the season, it's business as usual -- Beavis and Butt-head assume the identities of Gerondo and the Pleasure Machine to make videos "guaranteed" to impress the chicks, they form their own two-man street gang and grow their own nachos, they accidentally end up as key speakers at a PTA meeting, and they get "drunk" on some "near beer." ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mike Judge

- 1996
- PG13
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This is a full-length cartoon movie featuring the dim-witted obnoxious loser teens, Beavis and Butt-head. They are obsessed with sex, TV, heavy-metal rock 'n roll, sex, coolness and sex, in that order. The trouble begins when the couch-potato duo's beloved television disappears (they assume it was stolen). In the course of trying to get another TV, they get involved in a major arms-smuggling scheme and are chased all over the U.S. by mobsters and lawmen alike. In one of the movie's highlights, Butt-head tries to get Chelsea Clinton to go to bed with him. Apparently he believes that since they both wear braces, she will naturally want to have sex with him. ~ Clarke Fountain, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mike Judge, Cloris Leachman, (more)
Season five of Beavis and Butt-head yielded no fewer than 50 new adventures for America's favorite dimwits, beginning with "Held Back," wherein our academically challenged heroes are demoted all the way back to kindergarten. Later, Beavis and Butt-head achieve astonishing success as telemarketers, rescue their gang-banger buddy Todd from murderous rivals, head to a plastic surgeon in hopes of getting "wiener transplants," become case studies for the leader of "Decency in Media" (a savage takeoff of the professional do-gooders who'd made it their life's work to get Beavis and Butt-head banished from the airwaves), and even try their hand at cartoon animation. And did we mention the episode in which Beavis thinks he's pregnant...or the one where the boys spike a milk carton with Spanish Fly...or when they try to spice up their jobs at Burger World by cooking some curly fries in motor oil...? ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mike Judge
Much to the delight of its many fans and the dismay of its many detractors, Beavis and Butt-Head managed to survive for a fourth MTV season, this one yielding 32 episodes. The games begin with the opener "Wall of Youth," in which the knuckle-dragging Beavis and Butt-head at last meet their intellectual equal when they befriend a sock puppet. Later on, they have trouble urinating in the episode of the same name -- or is this more information than we really need? In other adventures, Beavis and Butt-head face the deadly scourge of rabies and incompetent doctors, encourage a suicidal embezzler to jump off a high building, drive gym teacher Buzzcut to distraction with their body odor, try to mount their own late night TV show just like "that Letter-dude," establish a personal phone-sex exchange, chortle their way through a gory '50s driver's-ed movie, and fail not once but twice to score with the sexy Lolita and Tanqueray. Undoubtedly many a clean-up-TV fanatic was encouraged by the episode "The Final Judgment of Beavis," in which Butt-head apparently kills Beavis, who then has a heated "No way -- way" exchange with St. Peter at the pearly gates. But no, both boys were still alive and kicking for the rest of the season, which includes a confrontation with a Rush Limbaugh-like radio host (voiced by Gilbert Gottfried) and an easily offended etiquette expert (voiced by David Spade). And in a pivotal moment, Beavis undergoes his first transformation into "The Great Cornholio" when he overdoses on sugar. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mike Judge
- 1993
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For many years the most popular and most controversial of MTV's original cartoon series, Mike Judge's Beavis and Butt-Head began life as "Frog Baseball," a brief 1992 vignette seen on the network's animation anthology Liquid Television. The title characters were a pair of acne-ridden, moronic preteens. Beavis was the blond one with the glassy-eyed stare and the Metallica T-shirt, while Butt-head had dark hair, crooked teeth with braces, and wore an AC/DC shirt. Forever insulting each other and everyone else with such loving epithets as "you suck" and "look at his butt," Beavis and Butt-head were best known for their unison dirty giggle, which went something like "Huhhuh-huh-huh-huhuh-huhuh" and which was heard whenever someone uttered a word with even the slightest sexual connection. Sometimes Beavis and Butt-head were making their teachers' lives miserable at school, sometimes they were wreaking havoc while on the job at the local Burger World, but most of the time they sat on a ratty couch in a dingy basement, watching music videos on a television that flickered.
In its earliest seasons, the cartoon portion of Beavis and Butt-Head served principally as a wraparound for these videos, with Beavis and Butt-head making lewd and inane comments throughout the songs. Slated to debut on March 8, 1993, the half-hour series was test run for four episodes, but production problems delayed the "official" premiere until May 17 of that year. Almost immediately, Beavis and Butt-Head was under fire from the "clean-up TV" brigades, who regarded the show as obscene or worthless or both. Things became even more heated when a five-year-old boy set fire to his trailer home, purportedly after seeing a Beavis and Butt-Head installment in which our heroes chortled, "Fire is cool...huh huh..." Though MTV refused to buckle under pressure to drop the show (pointing out that each episode began with a tongue-in-cheek disclaimer that clearly labeled the show as adults-only fare), the network did agree to move it to a later hour. Ultimately, viewers and critics came to realize that creator Mike Judge (who also provided the voices of both protagonists) was using the series to cast a satirical light on the foibles and hang-ups of modern society -- beginning with the fact that Beavis and Butt-head were themselves merciless lampoons of the average "demographic group" of MTV viewers, and extending to scattershot attacks at self-righteous adults, religious zealots, racial bigots, and all forms of hypocrisy. Moreover, the series' crude, amateurish animation was a deliberate stylistic choice, as if Beavis and Butt-head didn't deserve to be any better animated (indeed, Judge was known to reject cartoon work from his artists if it came out looking too good). Lasting nearly 200 episodes, Beavis and Butt-Head not only posted spectacular ratings for MTV, but also spawned a number of well-received spin-off specials, not to mention the hit theatrical cartoon feature Beavis and Butt-Head Do America. The series ended on November 8, 1997, with the appropriately titled episode Beavis and Butt-Head are Dead. Unfortunately, neither the series' rerun package nor its VHS and DVD home versions include the vintage live-action music videos that were included during the original MTV run. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
In its earliest seasons, the cartoon portion of Beavis and Butt-Head served principally as a wraparound for these videos, with Beavis and Butt-head making lewd and inane comments throughout the songs. Slated to debut on March 8, 1993, the half-hour series was test run for four episodes, but production problems delayed the "official" premiere until May 17 of that year. Almost immediately, Beavis and Butt-Head was under fire from the "clean-up TV" brigades, who regarded the show as obscene or worthless or both. Things became even more heated when a five-year-old boy set fire to his trailer home, purportedly after seeing a Beavis and Butt-Head installment in which our heroes chortled, "Fire is cool...huh huh..." Though MTV refused to buckle under pressure to drop the show (pointing out that each episode began with a tongue-in-cheek disclaimer that clearly labeled the show as adults-only fare), the network did agree to move it to a later hour. Ultimately, viewers and critics came to realize that creator Mike Judge (who also provided the voices of both protagonists) was using the series to cast a satirical light on the foibles and hang-ups of modern society -- beginning with the fact that Beavis and Butt-head were themselves merciless lampoons of the average "demographic group" of MTV viewers, and extending to scattershot attacks at self-righteous adults, religious zealots, racial bigots, and all forms of hypocrisy. Moreover, the series' crude, amateurish animation was a deliberate stylistic choice, as if Beavis and Butt-head didn't deserve to be any better animated (indeed, Judge was known to reject cartoon work from his artists if it came out looking too good). Lasting nearly 200 episodes, Beavis and Butt-Head not only posted spectacular ratings for MTV, but also spawned a number of well-received spin-off specials, not to mention the hit theatrical cartoon feature Beavis and Butt-Head Do America. The series ended on November 8, 1997, with the appropriately titled episode Beavis and Butt-Head are Dead. Unfortunately, neither the series' rerun package nor its VHS and DVD home versions include the vintage live-action music videos that were included during the original MTV run. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
Before its "official" launching, the iconoclastic cartoon series Beavis and Butt-Head was test run on MTV with four episodes, the first of which originally aired March 8, 1993. The debut episode "Blood Money" finds our two goonish, giggling protagonists donating blood for money and ending up with neither. Next up is "Door to Door," in which Beavis and Butt-head tool around their neighborhood collecting money for a class project, only to run up against a neighbor lady who's into leather -- and whips. Third on the docket is "Sign Here," wherein our heroes collect signatures for a pro-animal petition. This act of largess does not prevent Beavis and Butt-head from trying to kill some dolphins at a local zoo in the last of the four first-season episodes, "Balloons." When Beavis and Butt-Head originally aired on MTV, each episode included one or more live-action music videos, permitting the pair to make asinine comments while the musicians sweated away. Seen in the inaugural four episodes were performances by the likes of the Ramones, Judas Priest, Guns N' Roses, Madonna, LSD, Def Leppard, Huey Lewis and the News, Red Hot Chili Peppers, and AC/DC, among many others. Alas, these musical highlights have been edited from the current rerun and home-video versions of Beavis and Butt-head. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mike Judge
Though technically the second season of Beavis and Butt-Head (following a four-week test run), the 23 episodes seen on MTV beginning May 17, 1993, were originally advertised as first-season endeavors. They also originally included live-action music videos featuring top artists past and present, which have unfortunately been edited from the home-video version of the series. The first of the 23 half-hours this season is "Customers Suck," with the grotesque, giggling Beavis and Butt-head making a shambles of their duties at Burger World. In later adventures, the boys go skeet-shooting and end up downing a jumbo jet; hapless Mr. Anderson makes his first appearance in the episode "Home Improvement" (a scene in which the boys get high on paint remover had since been removed as a result of viewer complaints); Beavis and Butt-head become "American Gladiators" in hopes of seeing mud-wrestling bikini babes; and the boys' intellectual acquaintance Daria Morgendorffer (who'd later get a cartoon series of her own) has her first showcase in the episode "Scientific Stuff." Also, Beavis and Butt-head get temp jobs as sideshow freaks, almost sign up for the army, fill enema bags full of soda pop while volunteering at a local hospital, hitchhike to Mexico to pick up fireworks and unwittingly wind up as drug runners, and spend no fewer than two full episodes laying waste to their neighborhood drive-in movie. It was during this season that several pressure groups ganged up on Beavis and Butt-head, demanding its cancelation after a youngster, allegedly inspired by one of the episodes, set fire to his home. MTV wasn't about to abandon one of its highest-rated shows -- but the network did meet the critics halfway by moving the show to a later time slot. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mike Judge
The third season of Beavis and Butt-Head finds the giggling, heavy metal-addicted, terminally brainless young protagonists continuing to raise anti-socialism to an art form, beginning with the season opener in which they try in vain to succeed as standup comics. In subsequent escapades, Beavis and Butt-head go fishing from the comfort of their basement, hold a neighbor kid for ransom to raise enough dough to attend a rock concert, sneak into a nudist colony, learn the hard way that eight-track tapes aren't waterproof, try to "score" with a pair of trailer-trash babes in the middle of a tornado, turn the tables on a prison "Scared Straight" program, act as their own attorneys when accused of throwing eggs at the long-suffering Mr. Anderson, set up their own sperm bank, get a poison-ivy rash while taking a leak in the woods, bring a whole new meaning to the phrase "curly fries," form a warm friendship with an escaped serial killer and even gain an audience with president Bill Clinton (who gets along just fine with our heroes). In addition to the official third-season episodes, this year's Beavis and Butt-head manifest also yields a heart-burning -- er, heart-warming Christmas special. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide
- Starring:
- Mike Judge









