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Spinal Tap II Review Roundup: What Critics Are Saying About The End Continues

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Early reviews for Spinal Tap II: The End Continues are mixed to warmly positive. Many critics say it is affectionate, funny in spots, and fueled by nostalgia, while others think it cannot touch the cutting edge of the 1984 original. Cameos land for some and feel indulgent for others. Release is set for September 12, 2025 in the U.S., with a brisk ~83–84 minute runtime.


At a Glance

  • Rotten Tomatoes: Early critics score hovering in the low-to-mid 70s as of September 11, 2025 (PT).

  • Metacritic: Mixed or average, around 57 based on early critic reviews.

  • U.S. Theatrical Release: September 12, 2025. Runtime: about 1h 23m. Rating: R.

  • Who’s Back: Christopher Guest, Michael McKean, Harry Shearer, with Rob Reiner as Marty Di Bergi. Select music-legend cameos include Paul McCartney and Elton John.


Review Highlights

Positive-to-lean-positive

  • The Guardian (4/5): Finds “pin-sharp laughs and melancholy,” praising the way the sequel winks at aging rock mythology, with a standout Stonehenge gag and a Springsteen joke. Notes some forced beats but says the band’s musicianship and chemistry still shine.

  • Financial Times (★★★☆☆): Calls it a “respectable follow-up” that balances affectionate absurdity with updated cultural riffs, even if it cannot match the original’s brilliance.

  • Variety (Peter Debruge): A cheeky send-off that plays like a greatest-hits set of past laughs, buoyed by live performance energy and marquee cameos, not revolutionary but respectful of the original.

  • TIME: Says the sequel mostly builds on the legacy rather than coasting on it, following a reluctant reunion setup that feels true to the characters.

Mixed-to-negative

  • Washington Post: Critiques the humor as tepid and the satire as dulled by decades of mockumentaries since 1984, reading the film more as nostalgic homage than sharp parody.

  • The Telegraph: Advises dialing down expectations, arguing it does not come close to the original’s comic genius, despite flashes of inspiration.

  • The Independent: Labels it “startlingly unfunny,” suggesting cameos crowd out fresher ideas.

  • ScreenCrush: Sees a “play the hits” vibe that will satisfy fans without reaching the old peak.


Where Critics Agree

  • Nostalgia is the engine. Most reviews say the movie works best as a reunion concert of jokes, songs, and personas that longtime fans already love.

  • The original is untouchable. Few expect innovation on par with 1984’s genre-defining mockumentary, and most note the sequel does not try to reinvent the wheel.

  • Aging rock star humor lands. The “older and slightly wiser” Tap dynamic, plus music-industry ribbing, provides sturdy laughs, even when not uproarious.


Where Opinions Diverge

  • Cameos and callbacks: Some praise the restraint and timing of appearances, others think big-name moments crowd out new material.

  • How funny is it, really? Warm chuckles vs. consistent guffaws is the dividing line. Supporters cite amiable charm; detractors wanted sharper satire.


Release, Availability, and Tie-ins

  • In theaters only at launch. No immediate Netflix or Prime streaming at release; digital/streaming windows are TBD.

  • Soundtrack and book tie-ins: Alongside the film, Tap are delivering new music and a behind-the-scenes book chronicling both films’ making.


Should You See It?

If you loved This Is Spinal Tap and want a fond reunion with Nigel, David, and Derek, the consensus says you will find enough to enjoy. If you want a sequel that redefines the mockumentary form, critics suggest tempering expectations.

Key Takeaways

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