When their plan to book a show at the Rivoli goes horribly wrong, Matt and Jay accidentally travel back to the year 2008.
Nirvanna, The Band, The Show, The Movie arrives as a chaotic and affectionate continuation of the Canadian cult series, yet it is crafted in a way that welcomes newcomers with open arms. It carries the same spirit of mischief that defined the original show, but it also stands on its own as a playful and inventive mockumentary. The film thrives on confusion, spontaneity, and the strange chemistry between two friends who have spent far too long encouraging each other’s worst ideas. The result is a comedy that constantly invites the viewer to question what is real, what is staged, and how much of the chaos was planned.
The story follows Matt Johnson and Jay McCarrol, who once again portray exaggerated versions of themselves. Their fictional band, Nirvanna the Band, has been trying to perform at the Rivoli for years. The joke is that they have never taken the simple step of asking for a booking. Instead, they have devoted their lives to increasingly bizarre stunts that they believe will force the venue to acknowledge them. As the film begins, Jay is clearly tired of Matt’s endless schemes, and that tension becomes the emotional anchor of the story.
This dynamic is one of the film’s strongest elements. Matt is the reckless dreamer who believes that every idea is brilliant. Jay is the reluctant partner who goes along with the plans out of loyalty, frustration, and a faint hope that something might finally work. Their friendship is messy and sincere, and the film treats that complexity with surprising care. Even when the plot spirals into absurdity, the relationship between the two men remains recognisable and grounded.
The first major sequence sets the tone perfectly. Matt and Jay attempt to sneak into the CN Tower with parachutes strapped to their backs. Their plan is to jump off the tower, land in the Skydome, and announce a show that does not exist. The scene is shot in a way that makes it genuinely difficult to tell how much of it is real. Security guards react with confusion and mild irritation, and the entire moment feels like a prank video that has gone too far. This blend of real reactions and scripted chaos is where the film shines. It creates a constant sense of uncertainty that becomes part of the humour.
The film takes an even stranger turn when a chain of events involving an RV and a long expired novelty drink sends the pair back to 2008. The movie does not dwell on the mechanics of time travel. Instead, it uses the premise as a playground for visual jokes, pop culture references, and a clever merging of old and new footage. By using consumer grade cameras from the period, the filmmakers blend present day scenes with material from the original web series. This gives the time travel idea a strange sense of authenticity, as if the characters really have stepped into their own past.
For longtime fans, this is a delight. The film revisits the world of the series in a way that feels both nostalgic and fresh. It rewards viewers who know the show, but it never excludes newcomers. For first time viewers, the time travel plot works as a simple and chaotic device. The characters are out of their depth, the world looks slightly different, and the film uses the contrast between 2008 and the present day for some of its funniest moments.
The movie’s unpredictability is one of its greatest strengths. Scenes unfold with the loose energy of a hidden camera show, yet the film is clearly constructed with care. Extras react with genuine confusion, and the camera often lingers just long enough to make the viewer wonder whether the filmmakers had permission to shoot any of this. That uncertainty becomes part of the experience. The film invites the audience to question everything, not in a puzzle solving way, but in a gleeful, how did they manage this way.
Stylistically, the film borrows from mockumentaries, reality television, and guerrilla filmmaking. It is scrappy, handheld, and intentionally rough around the edges. The unpolished style reinforces the sense that Matt and Jay are dragging the film crew along on a mission that no reasonable person would support. The editing leans into chaos, jumping between pranks, arguments, and surreal detours. Even so, the emotional through line remains clear. Jay is tired. Matt is oblivious. Their friendship is reaching a breaking point.
As the story progresses, the film becomes less about time travel and more about the consequences of their choices. The narrative does become messy, sometimes intentionally and sometimes not. But even when the plot threatens to collapse under its own weight, the emotional honesty keeps it afloat. There is a genuine affection between the two leads, even when they are driving each other to the edge.
The humour ranges from clever visual tricks to childish banter, from carefully staged sequences to moments that feel improvised. Not every joke lands, but the film’s commitment to its own strange identity is admirable. It embraces failure, awkwardness, and the thrill of doing something foolish with your best friend simply because you can.
By the end, Nirvana, The Band, The Show, The Movie has delivered something rare. It is a film that feels completely unhinged yet strangely sincere. It celebrates creativity, friendship, and the blurry line between performance and reality. Fans of the series will find it a loving continuation of everything they enjoyed. Newcomers will be swept up in its unpredictable charm. It is messy, inventive, and frequently hilarious, and it invites the viewer to stop worrying about what is real and simply enjoy the ride.
Nirvanna: The Band - the Show - the Movie is coming to select Aotearoa NZ cinemas for limited screenings. Find your nearest screening here
























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