A Mighty Wind (2003) USA
A Mighty Wind Image Cover
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Director:Christopher Guest
Studio:Warner Home Video
Producer:Karen Murphy
Writer:Christopher Guest, Eugene Levy
Rating:4
Rated:PG-13
Date Added:2006-06-21
ASIN:B0000ALFVD
UPC:0085392771820
Price:$14.98
Awards:Nominated for Oscar. Another 11 wins & 12 nominations
Genre:Comedy
Release:2003-09-22
IMDb:0310281
Duration:92
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.85:1
Sound:Dolby
Languages:English, Dolby Digital 5.1, French, Dolby Digital 5.1, Commentary by Christopher Guest and Eugene Levy, Unknown
Subtitles:English, Spanish, French
Features:Anamorphic
Dubbed
Subtitled
Christopher Guest  ...  (Director)
Christopher Guest, Eugene Levy  ...  (Writer)
 
Eugene Levy  ...  Mitch Cohen
Michael McKean  ...  Jerry Palter
Harry Shearer  ...  Mark Shubb
Jim Moret  ...  Newscaster
Stuart Luce  ...  Irving Steinbloom
Mary Gross  ...  Ma Klapper
Marty Belafsky  ...  Ramblin' Sandy Pitnik
Michael Baser  ...  Pa Klapper
Jared Nelson Smith  ...  Young Chuck Wiseman
Ryan Raddatz  ...  Bill Weyburn
Todd Lieberman  ...  Fred Knox
Matthew Joy  ...  Boy Klapper
Laura Harris  ...  Girl Klapper
Brian Riley  ...  Young George Menschell
Christopher Guest  ...  Alan Barrows
Catherine O'Hara  ...  
Parker Posey  ...  
Jane Lynch  ...  
Comments: Back together for the first time, again.

Summary: There's A Mighty Wind a-blowin', along with the gales of laughter you'll get from Christopher Guest's third exercise in brilliant "mockumentary." After tackling small-town theatricals in Waiting for Guffman and obsessive dog-show contestants in Best in Show, Guest and his reliable stable of repertory players (including Fred Willard, Parker Posey, and Bob Balaban) apply their improvisational genius to a latter-day reunion of fictional '60s-era folk singers, a comedic goldmine that Guest first explored 30 years earlier on The National Lampoon Radio Hour. Collaborating with costar and cowriter Eugene Levy (who gives the film's funniest performance), Guest is so delicate in his satirical approach that the laughs aren't always obvious, and the subtlety can be as wistful (as in Catherine O'Hara's performance as Levy's auto-harpist partner) as it is hilarious. Some may wish for more blatant comedy, but that would compromise the genuine affection that Guest & Co. have for the music they're spoofing. --Jeff Shannon