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Idiocracy Full Film [TOP]

Joe is brought to the White House (now a garish, trash-strewn casino). He explains the simple problem: plants need water, not Brawndo. He is met with blank stares. "But Brawndo has electrolytes," they say. Joe asks, "What are electrolytes?" They don't know. "They're what plants crave."

News spreads. President Camacho, who is not evil, just a product of his environment, sees the result and has a moment of clarity. He flies out to the farm, drops to one knee, and says to Joe: "Shit. I thought you was some kinda dickhead. But you ain't. You're a straight-up, badass motherfucker. Not like these other pussy-ass fucks."

After a failed attempt to reason with them, Joe suggests they use water from the toilet. This is considered disgusting. Joe is laughed out of the room and sentenced to a public "smackdown" (execution) on live TV.

Rita helps Joe escape. They steal a time machine prototype (a broken-down police car) and flee into the wasteland. They find an old, abandoned farm with a functioning irrigation system. Joe rigs it to run on toilet water. Within days, the dead crops spring to life, growing enormous, healthy produce. idiocracy full film

President Camacho is facing a massive crisis. The nation’s crops are dying, leading to a looming famine. His best scientific minds (a bunch of wrestlers and strippers) have failed. In desperation, he sees Joe’s high IQ test score (which is a three-digit number, a concept they can barely understand) and declares Joe the new "Secretary of the Interior."

Idiocracy began as a satirical comedy, but over the years, many viewers have noted its disturbing prescience, often quoting lines like "It's got electrolytes" and "Welcome to Costco, I love you" as darkly accurate commentary on modern advertising, anti-intellectualism, and corporate control.

However, the final scene delivers the film’s darkest punchline. Back in the hibernation lab in 2005, another pod is found. It opens, revealing the man who was originally supposed to be the "most average" subject: a defense attorney named Donald. He was swapped out at the last minute by Joe because "that guy was an asshole." Joe is brought to the White House (now

Joe is horrified. He is, by default, the smartest person alive. He tries to find a library or a record of his family, only to find that all books have been replaced by picture-based "books" with single words like "FART" and "POOP." The internet is a series of animated bouncing logos.

The plan: freeze them for one year and see if they can be revived. But the project is abandoned when the lead officer is arrested for selling military secrets. In the ensuing chaos, the hangar housing the hibernation pods is demolished. Joe and Rita are forgotten, buried underground.

He and Rita are arrested for "not having tattoos" (tribal tattoos are mandatory) and sent to a rehabilitation facility. There, Joe explains his situation to a gurney-obsessed doctor and eventually meets President Camacho. "But Brawndo has electrolytes," they say

Donald wakes up in the future, takes one look around at the chaos, smiles, and says: "This is a lot like my old apartment." The implication: society hasn't devolved into idiocy by chance—it has been deliberately engineered by the kind of selfish, shortsighted people Donald represents. He will fit right in.

500 years later, the hibernation pods automatically thaw out. Joe and Rita crawl to the surface of a unrecognizable America. The world they find is a dystopian nightmare of rampant stupidity, consumerism, and environmental collapse.