Some comedies land in the moment and vanish; others lodge in the culture until quoting them becomes second nature. This one is firmly in the latter camp. “Turn it up to eleven” isn’t just a line anymore—it’s shorthand for excess itself.
What Rob Reiner and his cast pulled off still crackles with invention. By playing it straight, they made parody sharper than broad satire ever manages. The band is absurd, but never reduced to a punchline. They’re ridiculous and, somehow, heartbreakingly real. Christopher Guest, Michael McKean, and Harry Shearer walk the fine line between self-delusion and sincerity, which is why the jokes feel fresher than many of the rock anthems they skewer.
The mockumentary form has been copied endlessly since, but few match the precision here. This Is Spinal Tap is both a send-up and a love letter to rock pomp, a film as clever as it is silly. It might just be the funniest rock film ever to take itself seriously.
The quintessential mockumentary and one of the great movie satires. The very fact that many believed this was an actual documentary about a real band and that many very famous rock musicians have stated this is actually very like real life to them reflects just how brilliantly clever it is and that people think rock musicians are really like this. The film charts the making of a 'rockumentary' by Marti DiBergi (played by director Rob Reiner) who follows British rock band Spinal Tap on a disastrous tour of America. It really is laugh out loud stuff and any music fan will spot the various similarities to the stories of real bands such as Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath and even The Beatles. The realism is emphasised in that the actors playing the band were also accomplished musicians and played all their own parts as well as writing the songs ('Lick My Love Pump' for example). Michael McKean and Christopher Guest are the two main members of the band, David St Hubbins and Nigel Tufnel, who grew up together and are the writing partnership of the band (a sort of Lennon & McCartney) and as the film follows the falling apart of the band when David brings his girlfriend in to help with the management (Nigel hates her) you'll recognise the Yoko Ono analogy. Loads of cameo appearances by the likes of Billy Crystal, Bruno Kirby, Patrick MacNee and Angelica Huston too. Full of hilarious quotable lines and a film where more jokes can be spotted every time you watch it this is one of the great modern comedy films and highly recommended if you've never seen it.