The Rutles Synopsis & Summary

Synopsis

A mockumentary of a Beatles-like singing group called the Rutles, The Rutles is a collaboration between Monty Python alumnus Eric Idle and Saturday Night Live filmmaker Gary Weis. The members of the "pre-Fab Four" are Nasty, Barry, Stig, and Dirk. There really isn't any plot, just a series of vignettes, unctuously narrated by Idle, which mercilessly skewer the Beatles mythology. Under the guidance of agent Leggy Mountbatten (before he tragically takes a teaching post in Australia), the Rutles rise to the top with such hit songs as "Please Please Let Me Hold Your Hand" and "I Am the Waitress." Mention is made of the Rutles' film successes: "A Hard Day's Rut," "Ouch!," "Tragical History Tour," "Yellow Submarine Sandwich," and "Let It Rot." We also see such career highlights as Nasty's declaration that the Rutles are more popular than God (he meant "Rod," as in Rod Stewart), the rumor that Dirk is dead (whereupon Stiggy starts his own rumor that he is dead), and Nasty's unfortunate liaison with a Yoko Ono counterpart (depicted as a Neo-Nazi dominatrix). The Rutles gains an added veneer of verisimilitude through the participation of such rock stars as Paul Simon, Mick Jagger, and Ron Wood, as well as George Harrison himself, who shows up as a BBC commentator. - Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Movie Info

Starring:
Theatrical Release Date:
09/12/2004
DVD Release Date:
03/13/2001
Rating:
Not Yet Rated
Run Time:
70 min.
Production Co.:
Rutles Corps Productions
Director(s):
Genre(s):
Themes:
All Washed Up, Ladder to the Top, Rise and Fall Stories
Tone:
Matter-of-Fact, Deadpan, Humorous, Satirical, Wry, Witty, Silly
Keywords:
behind-the-scenes, break-up [romantic], cross-cultural-relations, fanatic, music-business, performer, physical-examination, reporter, rock-band, rock-music, songs, songwriter, television, tourist
Time Period:
1960s
Language:
English
Status:
DVD