Spinal Tap II: The End Continues (2025) is another one of those legasequels - sequels of a property from long ago. Quite a few came out during Covid - Matrix, Bill and Ted, etc The appeal is partly nostalgia, partly that these are great stories. STII holds up for both.
Spinal Tap hasn't been talking to each other since the last movie. They all have new lives: Nigel Tufnel (Christopher Guest) has a young wife and a cheese and guitar shop in the country. David St. Hubbins (Michael McKean) is composing music for murder podcasts and hold music - he has even won a Holdie award. Derek Smalls (Harry Shearer) runs a Museum of Glue - after all, he was the glue that held the band together.
But a video of Garth Brooks and Trish Yearwood performing Big Bottom goes viral. The daughter (Kerry Godliman) of their late manager inherited a contract that said Spinal Tap owed one concert, and that was now worth something. So she's got to get the band back together, and Marty Dibergi (Rob Reiner) wants to film it.
They get a new drummer - after getting turned out by every famous drummer they could contact. Since no Tap drummer has survived, this is understandable. They head for New Orleans, where a concert cancellation gives them a venue, and start rehearsing.
Things are very tense between Tufnel and St. Hubbins. It doesn't help when Paul McCartney drops by and agrees with St. Hubbins that the fiddly bit of Tufnel's new song should be dropped. Elton John comes by to try out Smalls' new song about death - Rockin' in the Urn and to play Flower People, then agrees to join them onstage for Stonehenge. And this time, they have a full-sized prop. Surely nothing will go wrong.
This movie might not be quite as funny as the first one, but it's pretty close. There's no "It goes to 11", although Elton John's "Fuck Spinal Tap!" is pretty iconic. The crew has lost none of their oddball improv skills. The music is great too, both the classics and some new material, like Urn and Small's Hell Toupee, performed with orchestra. I understand this is from a previously released album.
And, of course, this turned out to be Reiner's last movie, as the original was his first. Sadly, this meant that a planned third film, The Final Finale, will not be made. But this was a great bookend to a great career. Glad we go it.