IMDb RATING
7.8/10
6.2K
YOUR RATING
A musical odyssey through five decades with Ron Mael and Russell Mael celebrating the legacy of the band Sparks.A musical odyssey through five decades with Ron Mael and Russell Mael celebrating the legacy of the band Sparks.A musical odyssey through five decades with Ron Mael and Russell Mael celebrating the legacy of the band Sparks.
- Awards
- 5 wins & 26 nominations
Sparks
- Themselves
- (archive footage)
Meyer Mael
- Self
- (archive footage)
The Beatles
- Themselves
- (archive footage)
The Who
- Themselves
- (archive footage)
The Kinks
- Themselves
- (archive footage)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaNone of Ron's snow globes were harmed during the making of this documentary.
- Quotes
Jack Antonoff: All pop music is rearranged Vince Clarke or rearranged Sparks. That's the truth.
Featured review
"How can a band be successful, underrated, hugely influential, and overlooked all at the same time?" Edgar Wright (director)
Although the cult art-pop band Sparks has been playing its idiosyncratic music for fifty years, you may never have heard about the two brothers or their music. Be prepared to remember them forever after seeing Edgar Wright's loving and comprehensive documentary covering their zany years of performance.
The two boys, Ron and Russ Mael, were born in California with the creative influence of the Beach Boys but a definite affinity for Brit bad boys like the Beatles and The Stones and touches of Queen. In fact, Ron and Russell Mael may have been a major influence on British synthpop.
Wright skillfully shows their emerging theatrics of Ron's culturally-sharp lyrics and Russell's stagey falsetto gyrations evocative of Mick and Freddie. They have their career careening from high on the charts to being absent from them, but never stopping the two from inventing themselves over and over again.
If you don't believe me, listen to persuasive talking heads who know what they're talking about, like Duran Duran, Weird Al Yankovic, Patton Oswalt, Sonic Youth, et al. However, just listen to their sometimes-inscrutable lyrics and watch Russell gyrate around the implacable Ron, and you will experience music in all its forms, wild and expressive.
As Ringo was alleged to say while watching Top of the Pops, "Marc Bolan is on the tele playing a song with Adolph Hitler" (Ron wore a Hitler-like stache much of the time). In the course of their half century, they went from glam-rock to orchestral art-pop to their take on Sgt Pepper and everything in between. It's exhausting just to try to catalogue their phases.
In Theaters.
Although the cult art-pop band Sparks has been playing its idiosyncratic music for fifty years, you may never have heard about the two brothers or their music. Be prepared to remember them forever after seeing Edgar Wright's loving and comprehensive documentary covering their zany years of performance.
The two boys, Ron and Russ Mael, were born in California with the creative influence of the Beach Boys but a definite affinity for Brit bad boys like the Beatles and The Stones and touches of Queen. In fact, Ron and Russell Mael may have been a major influence on British synthpop.
Wright skillfully shows their emerging theatrics of Ron's culturally-sharp lyrics and Russell's stagey falsetto gyrations evocative of Mick and Freddie. They have their career careening from high on the charts to being absent from them, but never stopping the two from inventing themselves over and over again.
If you don't believe me, listen to persuasive talking heads who know what they're talking about, like Duran Duran, Weird Al Yankovic, Patton Oswalt, Sonic Youth, et al. However, just listen to their sometimes-inscrutable lyrics and watch Russell gyrate around the implacable Ron, and you will experience music in all its forms, wild and expressive.
As Ringo was alleged to say while watching Top of the Pops, "Marc Bolan is on the tele playing a song with Adolph Hitler" (Ron wore a Hitler-like stache much of the time). In the course of their half century, they went from glam-rock to orchestral art-pop to their take on Sgt Pepper and everything in between. It's exhausting just to try to catalogue their phases.
In Theaters.
- JohnDeSando
- Jun 18, 2021
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- 火花兄弟
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $648,665
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $273,530
- Jun 20, 2021
- Gross worldwide
- $1,249,115
- Runtime2 hours 20 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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