This Is Spinal Tap (1984) USA
This Is Spinal Tap Image Cover
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Director:Rob Reiner
Studio:MGM (Video & DVD)
Producer:Karen Murphy
Writer:Christopher Guest, Michael McKean
Rating:4.5
Rated:R
Date Added:2007-03-06
Purchased On:2007-06-03
ASIN:6305922756
UPC:0027616852809
Price:$14.98
Awards:2 wins & 2 nominations
Genre:Nothing Goes Right
Release:2000-12-09
IMDb:0088258
Duration:88
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.85:1
Sound:Dolby
Languages:English, Dolby Digital 5.1
Subtitles:Spanish, French
Features:Anamorphic
Rob Reiner  ...  (Director)
Christopher Guest, Michael McKean  ...  (Writer)
 
Ed Begley Jr.  ...  John 'Stumpy' Pepys
Dana Carvey  ...  
Jean Cromie  ...  Ethereal Fan
Chazz Dominguez  ...  Heavy Metal Fan
Fran Drescher  ...  
Christopher Guest  ...  Nigel Tufnel
Shari Hall  ...  Heavy Metal Fan
Tony Hendra  ...  Ian Faith
David Kaff  ...  Viv Savage
Bruno Kirby  ...  Tommy Pischedda
Danny Kortchmar  ...  Ronnie Pudding
Patrick Macnee  ...  
Patrick Maher  ...  New York M.C.
Michael McKean  ...  David St. Hubbins
R.J. Parnell  ...  Mick Shrimpton
Julie Payne  ...  
Harry Shearer  ...  Derek Smalls
Kimberly Stringer  ...  Heavy Metal Fan
Memo Vera  ...  
Rob Reiner  ...  Marty DiBergi
Comments: Does for rock and roll what "The Sound of Music" did for hills

Summary: Director Marty DiBergi (Rob Reiner) solemnly alerts us to the glory that was Spinal Tap in his introduction to this "rockumentary" about the legendary British heavy-metal group, featuring lead guitarist Nigel Tufnel (Christopher Guest), lead singer David St. Hubbins (Michael McKean), bassist Derek Smalls (Harry Shearer), and a succession of drummers whose careers were cut short by spontaneously combusting on their stool, drowning in somebody else's vomit, or otherwise perishing in untimely fashion. Under DiBergi's studious interrogation, the band and their familiars retrace the band's evolution from head-bopping Mersey Beat poseurs to head-banging metal poseurs, each change in musical direction or tonsorial chic having little effect on the surviving trio's sublime idiocy. For, as St. Hubbins (he's the "deep" one, relatively speaking) sagely observes, "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever."
Happily for us, director Reiner, who developed the underlying story line with Guest and former Credibility Gap pranksters McKean and Shearer, stays squarely on the right side of the line, even as his writer-actors remain hilariously trapped on the other side. In lieu of a formal shooting script, the quartet created an extensive and detailed band history ripe with the sort of dead-pan detail that hard-core rock historians and screwball aficionados will savor on countless replays; with the three Tap members also musicians themselves, the "band" developed its stage act under the unsuspecting noses of L.A. club denizens, who accepted them as just as loud, flashy, sexist, and obvious as any other mullet-tressed, leather-garbed brigade of guitar slingers, circa 1984. The resulting footage thus manages to lob its punch lines and build its characters (including some thinly veiled character assassinations of various industry folks) with a loose, tossed-away verve rooted in the improvisational approach. This Is Spinal Tap remains the funniest, and most truthful, look at rock culture ever filmed and a personal best for all involved. --Sam Sutherland