IMDb 8.5 2026 HD

Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie

Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie

2026
Adventure Comedy Science Fiction
102 min R Canada
7.7 / 10
8.5 IMDB

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

Personnel // Cast & Crew

Director Matt Johnson / Lauren Andrews / Austin Birtch
Starring
Matt Johnson / Jay McCarrol / Ben Petrie / Ethan Eng / Michael Scott / Reid Janisse / Luke Lalonde / Maddy Wilde

How Viewers Describe This Film

Common themes and sentiments

unhinged cult favourite meta chaotic niche repetitive inventive cringe humour self-indulgent heartfelt shambolic committed

Reviews

R
Rebecca Shaw
Feb 25, 2026
5.0 / 5
5.0

An audacious masterpiece of meta-cinema that redefines comedic ambition. This film is the glorious, logical endpoint of Johnson and McCarrol's decade-long project, transforming their petty quest for a gig into a profound and hilarious statement on art, friendship,…

D
David Chen
Feb 25, 2026
2.5 / 5
2.5

The law of diminishing returns applies to even the most inspired gimmicks. 'Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie' feels like an extended episode with a higher resolution, but without the disciplined runtime that made the television format…

C
Chloe Fitzgerald
Feb 25, 2026
4.0 / 5
4.0

As a piece of pure, unadulterated comedic ethos, this movie is a marvel. It doubles down on everything that made the series a cult treasure: the breathtaking audacity, the cringe-soaked sincerity, the blurring of every conceivable line. The…

M
Marcus Thorne
Feb 25, 2026
3.0 / 5
3.0

There is undeniable creative energy here, but the film's insularity risks alienating the uninitiated. The guerilla-style antics and meta-humour that powered the TV series can feel stretched at feature length, with the 2008 time-travel conceit serving more as…

E
Eleanor Vance
Feb 25, 2026
4.5 / 5
4.5

A triumphant, chaotic crescendo for one of comedy's most stubbornly original duos. 'Nirvanna the Band the Show the Movie' weaponises its low-fi aesthetic and time-travel premise not for nostalgia, but for a sharper examination of artistic obsession. Johnson…

FAQs

This is likely a deliberate meta-joke consistent with the show's aesthetic. The television series was famously credited to a fictional director, 'Lionel Twain,' as part of its blurring of reality and fiction. Listing the director as 'Unknown' for the film continues this tradition, playfully obscuring the creative hand behind the camera—presumably still Matt Johnson—to maintain the illusion that we are watching raw, unfiltered footage of real events. It's a signature piece of the project's unique mythology.