Review: Crash and Bernstein ‘The Nosejob Job’
Spoilers Below
New season, new nose. Crash loves it but he ends up sending his first one down the drain.
Unfortunately, new season and Pesto’s back and he’s got some hot new game that Disney is too cheap to pay for the licensing rights to say which. Problem is when the bros get back to the house, Amanda, Jasmine, and Cleo all have company over which of course ruins everybody’s evening. The guys leave, but not before Crash takes the toilet seat. Crash tries on another nose, but then a group of kids come by and start talking like Dungeons and Dragons speak which turns out to be too much for Crash, Wyatt, and Pesto to handle and as such they leave the only hang out spot outside.
Crash and Bernstein need to find a new place to hang out, but despite the stuffed one’s best efforts, nothing works. Later, Pesto helps Amanda take some pics for a modelling shoot, but he screws that up too. He takes off with Wyatt and Crash and the trio discover this abandoned house where they can fix it up and turn it into a hang out. With Cleo and Jasmine party planning, the guys continue working on their lot and guess what? Those D&D kids are back and yea they take over again.
Crash and Bernstein head back to their hideout and Crash tries to reason with the boys, but they keep kicking his ass out. Amanda and Pesto are trying to figure out why the cute blonde isn’t getting any modelling work…but the douche Pesto is. The next scene shows Crash and Bernstein still fighting the girls for space, so they head back to their secluded hideout this time with an army of kids to help fight back…well not really. Wyatt uses a diversion to scare the big kids away.
Crash and Bernstein returns, but there are a bunch of changes some of which you may have noticed at the tail end of Season 1. For starters the show has slowly shifted away from the multi-camera format of a sitcom and has instead used more of a single-camera which is a bit odd and worse yet its distracting. Instead of getting the full picture of any setting, the camera gets in the way on a lot o scenes and as such you can tell it’s a bunch of kids directing this. As for the cast, Aaron Landon continues to try his best at being legit but fails miserably, but it’s cool because Oana Gregory is starting to become my favorite cast members. She’s sarcastic and doesn’t take the dialogue too seriously, and you can tell her spunk really adds to the character of Amanda. Tim and Cole (Crash and Bernstein) seem to be working as well together as they ever have, and yes Landry’s still as adorable as ever. Crash and Bernstein needs to fix its camera issues, but the show is getting there.
My Love Affair with Marriage was great! I hope this gets enough of a release in the US for me to be able to go to it in theatres.