Empire
The lyrics to AC/DC’s Long Way To The Top were never more appropriate. Anvil! is exactly what's needed to slap the recent rash of doomsayer documentaries in the face -- preferably with a studded, fingerless leather glove.
Critic Rating
(read reviews)User Rating
Director
Sacha Gervasi
Cast
Steve 'Lips' Kudlow,
Robb Reiner,
Kevin Goocher,
Glenn Gyorffy,
William Howell,
Tiziana Arrigoni
Genre
Documentary
At fourteen, best friends Robb Reiner and Lips made a pack to rock together forever. They kept their promise. Their band, Anvil, were hailed as “the demi-gods of Canadian metal,” and their music influenced an entire generation of rockers including Metallica, Slayer, and Anthrax. Now they’re back together to record their 13th album.
Empire
The lyrics to AC/DC’s Long Way To The Top were never more appropriate. Anvil! is exactly what's needed to slap the recent rash of doomsayer documentaries in the face -- preferably with a studded, fingerless leather glove.
Entertainment Weekly by Owen Gleiberman
It's a hilarious, and unexpectedly moving, documentary about the greatest metal band you've probably never heard of.
The A.V. Club by Noel Murray
Yet in his despair, there's something Kudlow misses, and it's what makes Anvil! as moving as it is hilarious.
Rolling Stone by Peter Travers
Want to find the heart of rock & roll? You can hear it thundering in Anvil.
Village Voice
Phenomenal rockumentary.
Salon by Andrew O'Hehir
From the too-good-to-be-true desk comes this loving and hilarious portrait of Spinal Tap-esque Canadian metal band Anvil, who were briefly a hard-rock sensation in the early '80s (mainly for the song "Metal on Metal") and have been struggling along in total obscurity ever since.
Variety by Dennis Harvey
Well-shot and edited, Anvil! is an underdog saga even non-metalheads will root for. It tows that fine line between chuckling at its protags' somewhat absurd situation and celebrating their sheer unwillingness to give up.
Premiere
You won't be seeing any stretch Hummers, wild late night parties and 75,000 seat arena shows in this documentary, but that's what makes this so good.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Liam Lacey
Surprisingly touching and funny.
New York Magazine (Vulture) by David Edelstein
The documentary is solid as … as … an anvil. And if you can forget Spinal Tap (hard), it's also rather touching the way these 50-year-olds still have the forged-in-fire fortitude.
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