Traverse City Record-Eagle

2008 Traverse City Film Festival

July 31, 2008

Film documents 'real-life' Spinal Tap

TRAVERSE CITY — Turn this one up to 11.

Canadian heavy metal band Anvil, hailed as a "real-life Spinal Tap" for their stubborn struggle to succeed over the last three decades, will visit the Traverse City Film Festival Friday and Saturday nights to play short sets following the screening of a documentary of the band's career.

"Someone described it as 'Rocky' with Marshall amplifiers," said Sacha Gervasi, director of "Anvil! The Story of Anvil" who also wrote the screenplay for Steven Spielberg's "The Terminal."

The band remains devoted to heavy metal, much like the subjects of actor/producer Rob Reiner's classic 1984 mock-rock-documentary "This is Spinal Tap," which included a famous comedy bit about an amplifier that goes to 11 instead of 10.

And get this: Anvil's drummer is Robb Reiner. He and guitarist Steve "Lips" Kudlow are the two members who met in high school and have stuck with it as other members have come and gone.

"There's coincidences all over the place," Kudlow said during a telephone call to his day job as a file clerk in Toronto. "The second you try to make a documentary about a rock band, it's going to be compared to that."

Gervasi was a teenager in London when the Toronto-based band played a music festival in his hometown. He already owned their album "Metal on Metal."

"I was an immediate convert to the Anvil cause," he said. "I invited them around London and became their tour guide."

At age 16, he summered in North America and worked as a roadie for the group.

About 20 years later, Gervasi contacted his old friends to see what they were up to. He was impressed that, while he had stopped hearing about them, they were still at it.

"When I met Lips again, it was really inspiring," Gervasi said. "Lips hadn't changed. Oddly enough, he still thought they could make it."

Gervasi hadn't done a documentary before, but decided their story was worth telling.

Kudlow said he's enjoyed his career despite the lack of a major show-biz breakthrough. Long after many aspiring rockers would've given up, he's continued to work low-stress, low-pay jobs that he doesn't have to worry about when he gets home. That allows him to hit the studio in the afternoons.

"I have a family, a home and I've carried on pretty much a regular life," Kudlow said.

He now works for his sister and brother-in-law, and takes a vacation whenever the band tours.

"You get free, paid vacations while you're on tour and you get to pretend you're a rock star when you're not at work," he said.

He relishes that the group has a loyal, though small, following.

"The intent of the band is not to be a commercial commodity," Kudlow said. "That's anti-metal."

He's excited about the attention the movie has created for the band and where it might lead.

"I haven't made a living off the band yet," he said. "That would be the nicest thing that could happen."

The band will perform after both showings of the film, which are screening at 6 p.m. Friday and Saturday at Lars Hockstad Auditorium.

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  • Film Festival Outtakes: 08/04/2008

    Sights and sounds from the Film Festival.

    Continued ...
    Aug 4, 2008 12:00 pm
  • Video: Standing ovation for Baghdad High

    Only one of the four young men featured in "Baghdad High" was able to travel to Traverse City for the film's screening, but video was taken of the standing ovation to share with those who could not make it.

    Continued ...
    Aug 4, 2008 11:53 am
  • Moore shares some life lessons

    A laid-back, more comfortable side of Michael Moore came through in the final panel discussion at the Traverse City Film Festival, as he reminisced with some old friends and co-workers about what it took to pull his films together.

    Continued ...
    Aug 4, 2008 11:48 am
  • Roll the Credits: Film Festival wraps up

    Traverse City Film Festival founder Michael Moore gave the audience two surprises at Sunday's "Mike's Surprise": a special screening of his 2002 live stage show in London and one of local resident Adam Ziegler proposing to girlfriend Erynn Rademacher — both of who were in the audience — in front of the State Theatre.

    Continued ...
    Aug 3, 2008 10:46 pm 3 Photos
  • 10:18 p.m.: Festival award winners announced

    Winners of the jury awards from the 2008 Traverse City Film Festival have been announced.

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    Aug 3, 2008 10:31 pm
  • Saturday, August 2, 2008
  • Crowd rewarded with wave from Madonna

    They gathered for hours, waiting for a moment that lasted just five minutes. But what an important five minutes it was. Madonna, headliner of the fourth annual Traverse City Film Festival, stepped out of a sport-utility vehicle about 7:15 p.m. Saturday under the lights of the State Theatre downtown, as hundreds of fans screamed and snapped pictures.

    Continued ...
    Updated Aug 3, 2008 10:00 am 3 Photos
  • Madonna: film was 'journey of lifetime'

    World-famous superstar Madonna made a warm and much-welcomed return to her home state. quot;There's a lot of poetic things about me being here ...," Madonna told a packed State Theatre crowd Saturday night. "You know what they say. You can take the girl out of Michigan, but you can't take the Michigan out of the girl."

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    Updated Aug 3, 2008 10:01 am 3 Photos
  • What's funny? At this panel, almost anything

    Comedy is a serious business. What's offensive, what's funny and the fine line in between was tackled by Saturday's Film Festival "All-Star Comedy Panel" in front of another large crowd at the City Opera House downtown.

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    Updated Aug 3, 2008 10:01 am
  • Sunday's Film Festival schedule

    Traverse City Film Festival schedule for Sunday, Aug. 3, 2008.

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    Updated Aug 3, 2008 10:01 am
  • Traverse City welcomes megastar Madonna

    A packed movie house will see the queen of reinvention in person, but all of Traverse City has caught Madonna mania. The entertainment superstar, singer, tabloid fixture, trend-setter, philanthropist, Michigan native and Traverse City Film Festival headliner is scheduled to introduce her documentary "I Am Because We Are" at an 8 p.m. screening tonight at the downtown State Theatre.

    Continued ...
    Aug 2, 2008 9:51 am 2 Photos
  • Friday, August 1, 2008
  • Film takes aim at religions

    The name of the movie "Religulous" pretty much describes how the filmmakers view organized religion. Combining the name of what many people hold dear with the word ridiculous may seem like box-office poison, yet its two showings at the Traverse City Film Festival were the first to sell out -- not counting Madonna's film. And director Larry Charles and star Bill Maher expect it to do well in multiplexes everywhere.

    Continued ...
    Updated Aug 2, 2008 9:31 am
  • Donahue panel takes a political turn

    Michael Moore's Friday film discussion segued into a politically-charged anti-war rally. Moore and his guest panelist, former television talk show host Phil Donahue, related candid personal experiences and vented their frustrations in crossing paths with the country's corporate media.

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    Updated Aug 2, 2008 9:31 am 1 Photo
  • Businesses help set tone for festival

    If "just great movies" are the main attraction at the Traverse City Film Festival, downtown display windows celebrating cinema and its stars are helping to set the mood for the event.

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    Updated Aug 2, 2008 9:31 am 1 Photo
  • Saturday's Film Festival schedule

    Traverse City Film Festival schedule for Saturday, Aug. 2, 2008.

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    Updated Aug 2, 2008 9:31 am
  • Film Festival Outtakes: 08/02/2008

    Continued ...
    Updated Aug 2, 2008 9:32 am
  • Friday's Film Festival schedule

    Traverse City Film Festival schedule for Friday, Aug. 1, 2008.

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    Aug 1, 2008 9:02 am
  • Thursday, July 31, 2008
  • East meets West at film festival

    The title pretty much says it all. "Movies from People who want to Kill Us." The new, tongue-in-cheek category at this year's Traverse City Film Festival may poke fun at the American perspective on Arab culture and its people, but five movies under the title are expected to give attendees something more to reflect on.

    Continued ...
    Updated Aug 1, 2008 9:56 am
  • Panel discussion is take on terrorism

    Filmmakers whose movies captured life and war in Iraq shared their insights with a Traverse City audience. An eight-member panel of documentary filmmakers gathered Thursday during the Traverse City Film Festival to sound off on the topic "Who Are These Terrorists, and Why Do They Make Movies?" But a packed audience at the City Opera House gleaned more than just a look into the mind of Middle East terrorists.

    Continued ...
    Updated Aug 1, 2008 9:57 am
  • Son chronicles father's persecution

    Hollywood screenwriter Dalton Trumbo was blacklisted during the post-World War II red scare and spent years selling screenplays under assumed names. Now his son Christopher Trumbo is here to present "Trumbo," his own movie about his late father, telling the tale of that part of his life through letters his father wrote.

    Continued ...
    Updated Aug 1, 2008 9:57 am 1 Photo
  • Festival-goers snatch up T-shirts

    Olivia Jankoski came to last year's Traverse City Film Festival with her family from New Jersey and bought a film festival sweater. This year the 11-year-old is on the other side of the counter, helping to sell film festival merchandise.

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    Updated Aug 1, 2008 9:57 am 1 Photo
  • Film Festival Outtakes: 08/01/2008

    Continued ...
    Updated Aug 1, 2008 9:57 am
  • Review: 'Man on Wire' is a wild ride

    Philippe Petit is alive. Alive and quite well, in fact, nearing 60 but exhibiting the strength and enthusiasm of a man half his age. That in itself is a bit of a miracle, considering the myriad death-defying acts the French high-wire artist has pulled off over the past four decades.

    Continued ...
    Updated Aug 1, 2008 10:01 am 1 Photo
  • Film Festival lets kids in on the act

    From workshops to free, nightly movies at the Open Space to student film discussions, this year's festival offers several opportunities for young people to get involved.

    Continued ...
    Jul 31, 2008 9:05 am 2 Photos
  • Wednesday, July 30, 2008
  • Panel looks at state's film industry

    The economic impact the film industry on both the Grand Traverse area and the state was the topic of discussion Wednesday during the Traverse City Film Festival's opening panel discussion "Front and Vine: Showing Movies at the State, Making Movies in Michigan."

    Continued ...
    Jul 30, 2008 9:59 pm