Spinal Tap II: The End Continues
Spinal Tap II: The End Continues is a 2025 American mockumentary comedy film directed by Rob Reiner and written by Reiner, Christopher Guest, Michael McKean and Harry Shearer. The sequel to This Is Spinal Tap, it starred Guest, McKean, Shearer, and Reiner, and followed the members of the fictional heavy metal band Spinal Tap as they reunited for a final show.
Spinal Tap II was released on September 12, 2025, by Bleecker Street in the United States and internationally by Sony Pictures Releasing through both their Stage 6 Films and Sony Pictures Releasing International labels. It grossed $3.2 million on a $22.6 million budget. On September 30, the film debuted on digital streaming by means of premium video on demand. As of December 15, 2025, Forbes Magazine reported that the film was number five for the top ten list for most streamed films on HBO Max. It was Reiner's final film before he and his wife were murdered on December 14, 2025.
Plot
Around forty years after the first film, director Marty DiBergi creates a documentary of the reunion/final show of legendary rock band Spın̈al Tap, including original members Nigel Tufnel, David St. Hubbins, and Derek Smalls. He visits Hope Faith, the daughter of Spın̈al Tap's original manager Ian Faith, and finds that she inherited a contract requiring Tap to perform one more concert. Marty reunites with Nigel, former Tap lead guitarist, who runs a cheese-and-guitar shop in the north of England with his girlfriend Moira and plays guitar in a local folk band. Marty then approaches former Tap guitarist and lead singer St Hubbins, who now produces music for true-crime podcasts and on-hold phone music. His wife Jeanine has become a nun. DiBergi finally visits former Tap bassist Smalls, who curates a glue museum and who has composed a symphonic work called "Hell Toupee". Although tension exists between Nigel and David, the trio agree to perform once more, though they will need a drummer, as all their previous drummers mysteriously died. They discuss how, although the band has not performed for 15 years, interest in their music has increased after a video of Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood performing Tap's "Big Bottom" went viral.Finding a sleazy promoter, Simon Howler, who does not understand music, the band goes to New Orleans to rehearse. Their concert will fill an arena slot vacated by Stormy Daniels. Questlove, Chad Smith, and Lars Ulrich turn down requests to be Tap's drummer and auditions go badly, but eventually a spirited young rocker woman, Didi Crockett, is chosen. Keyboardist CJ "Caucasian Jerry" Vanston also comes on board. Former manager Bobbi Flekman reveals that the band stressed her so much that she became a Buddhist. Their PR man, Artie Fufkin, now sells tube men to car dealerships.
The band, now living in a "ghost house" tourist attraction, must endure being served a whole-alligator supper while tourists with "ghost meters" wander through. It is revealed that the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame rejected Tap's membership with a letter saying, "Fuck off, sincerely yours". Hope and Simon propose that Tap establish their own hall of fame, the design for which resembles an IHOP site, featuring themselves. Nigel shows Marty a cavity in his guitar for storing cheese and a grater. As the band reflects on ageing and death, Derek composes a song, "Rockin' in the Urn". Rehearsals are fraught as Nigel and David fail to connect musically. Paul McCartney drops by and offers advice, telling Marty that "Big Bottom" is "almost literature". Elton John also visits, though Simon mocks him, and he sings Tap's "Flower People" and agrees to sing "Stonehenge".
The stage manager makes a huge model of a woman's buttocks for "Big Bottom" which emits flatulent sounds and annoys the band. Didi requests that her drum platform be moved closer to the musicians. Derek makes an unsuccessful pass at Didi, who calls her girlfriend into the room. Simon tries to make Tap exercise with a personal trainer, as he wants them to dance like a K-pop boy band. Earlier, he had proposed that at least one of them could band die on stage to produce a financially-valuable tribute opportunity. Simon abandons Tap, claiming he must visit his birth mother. David accuses Nigel of adultery with Jeanine, which Nigel denies.
David, frustrated, takes a walk in New Orleans and sees a bluesman singing a song which reminds him of good old days with Nigel. He tells Nigel he forgives him, although Nigel still pleads his innocence. When the concert begins the crowd cheers Tap's performance of their old hits. As "Stonehenge" begins, with Elton John at the piano, a huge stone monument descends from the ceiling and teeters precariously on the edge of Didi's relocated drum platform. Two dwarves in druid robes accidentally knock it down and it crushes the piano, Elton and the other musicians. Elton screams, "Fuck Spinal Tap!" They recover in a hospital room. Later, Derek tells Marty that he was the one who had an affair with Jeanine. As Marty congratulates Didi on being the only surviving Tap drummer, she chokes on her meal and Marty gives her the Heimlich maneuver.
Cast
- Christopher Guest as Nigel Tufnel, former lead guitarist for Spinal Tap, who now runs a cheese and guitar shop in Berwick-upon-Tweed. He plays electric guitar in a local folk band using penny whistles and mandolins.
- Michael McKean as David St. Hubbins, former lead singer for Spinal Tap, who now lives in Morro Bay, California, composing music for a true crime podcast, The Trouble with Murder and on-hold phone music.
- Harry Shearer as Derek Smalls, former bass player for Spinal Tap, who now lives in London and is curator of the New Museum of Glue. He performs with a philharmonic orchestra and has composed a symphony titled Hell Toupee.
- Rob Reiner as Marty DiBergi, a documentarian who has been unable to get Hollywood work since making the first film, and now teaches at the Ed Wood School of Cinematic Arts.
- Valerie Franco as Didi Crockett, the new drummer
- CJ Vanston as Caucasian Jeff, the new keyboard player
- Kerry Godliman as Hope Faith, the daughter of Spinal Tap's original manager Ian Faith, played by Tony Hendra who died in 2021.
- June Chadwick as Jeanine Pettibone, David's ex-wife
- Fran Drescher as Bobbi Flekman
- Griffin Matthews as Peter La Pierre
- Paul Shaffer as Artie Fufkin
- Chris Addison as Simon Howler, a concert promoter.
- Kathreen Khavari as Yasmine Farangi
- Nina Conti as Moira, Nigel Tufnel's current partner
- Brad Williams as Daniel the Druid
- Wee Man as Damien the Druid
- Don Lake as Tour Guide
- John Michael Higgins as Bob Kitness
- Henry Diltz as himself, photographer for the band
- Jack Black as Supreme Hype Lord Saxaboom, stage announcer
Production
Background
Following the 1984 release of This Is Spinal Tap, its creators, Harry Shearer, Christopher Guest, Michael McKean, and Rob Reiner, were embroiled in a protracted legal struggle over the film's rights and profits. In 2016, Shearer filed a lawsuit against Vivendi and its StudioCanal division, alleging "Hollywood accounting", mismanagement of trademarks and grossly inadequate earnings. He stated that he had received only $81 from merchandising and $98 from music sales over decades. The suit initially sought as much as $400 million in damages and reclaiming rights under the Copyright Act. In addition, the group sued Universal Music Group over soundtrack royalties, also citing grossly insufficient compensation. A settlement was reached in 2019.By late 2020, after four years of litigation, it was determined that from January 1, 2021 all rights, including characters, trademarks, and licensing, would be handled by a newly formed entity, Authorized Spinal Tap LLC, wholly owned by the four creators, to restore their control over the original film and its associated intellectual property.
Development
It was announced in May 2022 that a sequel to This Is Spinal Tap was in development, with Reiner, Guest, McKean, and Shearer reprising their roles and Reiner returning as director. Reiner had deliberately avoided making sequels, but the unexpected cultural resurgence of Kate Bush through Stranger Things, combined with continuing fan interest and the cast's frustration over receiving little or no profit from the original film, caused a rethink. The death of Tony Hendra in 2021, who played Spinal Tap's original manager Ian Faith, inspired a storyline about his character having willed a contract to his daughter Hope Faith which required one last concert from the band, forcing them to reunite after 15 years of not playing together. In November 2023, Reiner announced that the musicians Paul McCartney, Elton John and Garth Brooks were set to make cameo appearances as themselves.Filming began in New Orleans in March 2024, on a budget of $22.6 million, with Questlove and Trisha Yearwood included among the cameo appearances. Fran Drescher was announced at the end of March to be reprising her role as Bobbi Flekman, with John Michael Higgins and Chris Addison among the new additions. Paul Shaffer, who played the inept promo man Artie Fufkin in the original film, was also announced as being in the cast. Like the original film, the production was only loosely scripted and largely improvised by the actors in two to three takes of each scene. Scenes were filmed with a dual digital camera setup, allowing scenes to be captured spontaneously. Live concert footage was filmed at Stonehenge, Wiltshire, in August 2025 which was not used in the film. This footage was originally intended to be released in cinemas as the film concert Spinal Tap at Stonehenge: The Final Finale in 2026, but the project was delayed indefinitely after Reiner and his wife Michele Singer Reiner were killed in December 2025.