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This Is Spinal Tap poster

This Is Spinal Tap

1984 ยท 82 min ยท movie
โญ 7.9 (160,633 votes)

Filmmaker Martin "Marty" Di Bergi is filming a documentary about English rock band Spinal Tap 's 1982 United States concert tour to promote their new album, Smell the Glove. The band comprises childhood friends David St. Hubbins and Nigel Tufnel on vocals and guitar, along with bassist Derek Smalls, keyboardist Viv Savage, and drummer Mick Shrimpton.

The documentary shows Spinal Tap's early days as the skiffle group The Originals; they renamed themselves the New Originals when it was discovered another band was already called The Originals, only to change it back when the original Originals changed their name to The Regulars. They later had a hit as the Thamesmen, "Gimme Some Money", before changing their name to Spinal Tap and achieving a hit with the flower power anthem "Listen to the Flower People"; they subsequently began performing heavy metal.

Several of the band's previous drummers died under strange circumstances: John "Stumpy" Pepys died in a "bizarre gardening accident" that police said was better left unsolved, Eric "Stumpy Joe" Childs died choking on someone else's vomit, and Peter "James" Bond exploded on stage. Nigel shows Marty his extensive guitar collection (including a Fender Bass VI so valuable it cannot even be looked at), as well as a custom-made amplifier with volume knobs that go up to eleven; Nigel claims that this makes the amplifier "one louder" than most others, on which the volume setting only goes up to "ten".

Tensions rise between the band and their manager, Ian Faith, as several shows are canceled due to low ticket sales and major retailers refuse to sell Smell the Glove because of its sexist cover art. David's girlfriend Jeanine, a yoga and astrology devotee, joins the group on tour and participates in band meetings. Nigel and Ian dislike Jeanine's ideas for Spinal Tap's costumes and stage presentation. Without consulting the band, the band's record label releases Smell the Glove with an entirely black album cover. Despite Ian's assertion that it could have a similar appeal to the Beatles ' White Album, Smell the Glove fails to sell.

Nigel suggests staging a lavish, Druid -themed stage show and asks Ian to order a replica Stonehenge trilithon. However, Nigel mislabels its dimensions, and the resulting prop is only 18 inches (46 cm) high rather than 18 feet (5.5 m), making the group a laughing stock. The group blames Ian, and when David suggests Jeanine should co-manage the group, Ian quits. The tour continues, rescheduled for much smaller venues, and Jeanine and David increasingly marginalize Nigel.

At a gig at a United States Air Force base, Nigel is upset by an equipment malfunction and quits mid-performance. At their next gig, in an amphitheater at an amusement park where the band is billed below a puppet show, the band finds their repertoire is severely limited without Nigel. At Derek's suggestion, the band improvises an experimental "Jazz Odyssey", which is poorly received.

On the last day of the tour, David and Derek consider ending Spinal Tap and exploring other projects, such as a musical about Jack the Ripper called Saucy Jack. Before they go on stage, Nigel arrives and tells them that Spinal Tap's song "Sex Farm" has become a major hit in Japan and that Ian wants to arrange a tour there. David bitterly refuses; later, however, as Nigel watches the band's performance from backstage, David relents and invites him onstage, delighting the crowd but infuriating Jeanine. Mick subsequently explodes on stage. Ian is rehired as the group's manager, and Spinal Tap (now with Joe "Mama" Besser as their drummer) performs a series of sold-out shows in Japan.

Directed by

Rob Reiner

Starring

Ed Begley Jr.
Patrick Macnee
Christopher Guest
Anjelica Huston
Archie Hahn
Sandy Helberg
Harry Shearer
Fran Drescher