A Mighty Wind with Bob Balaban: DVD Cover
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A Mighty Wind Director: Christopher Guest Cast: Bob Balaban, Christopher Guest, Eugene Levy, John Michael Higgins

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  • DVD Release Date: 09/23/2003
  • Rating: Rated PG13
  • Sales Rank: 10,773
 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
  • Customer Reviews
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Scenes

Features

Closed Caption; Feature-length commentary by Christopher Guest and Eugene Levy; Additional scenes ; Live TV broadcast of the concert: the climactic benefit show in its entirety; "Vintage" TV appearances of the bands; The Folksmen, The New Main Street Singers, and Mitch & Mickey biographies; Interactive menus; Theatrical trailer; Scene access; English and French soundtracks; English, French and Spanish subtitles

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Scene Index

Side #1 --
1. The Steinbloom Saga [3:06]
2. The Folksmen (Old Joe's Place) [3:02]
3. Main Street Origins (The Good Book Song) [1:49]
4. Mitch & Mickey (When You're Next to Me, A Kiss at the End of the Rainbow) [4:09]
5. The New Main Street Singers (Just That Kinda Day) [2:53]
6. Mitch Arrives [3:38]
7. Beginnings [3:15]
8. First Rehearsal [3:20]
9. Sissy Knox [2:02]
10. Hi-Class Management [2:05]
11. Lars and Jonathan [2:09]
12. Tuning Up (Skeletons of Quinto) [4:24]
13. Witches [3:23]
14. Moby Dick (Loco Man, Fare Away, A Kiss at the End of the Rainbow) [2:48]
15. We're Professionals [:47]
16. Flashbacks [2:06]
17. The Toast [3:00]
18. Concert Day [1:47]
19. Before Showtime [4:02]
20. Wanderin' (Never Did No Wanderin') [3:48]
21. Potato's in the Paddy Wagon [5:00]
22. Missing (Eat at Joe's) [2:38]
23. Where's Mitch (Barnyard Symphony) [2:57]
24. A Kiss at the End of the Rainbow [3:53]
25. A Mighty Wind [5:22]
26. The Supreme Folk [2:49]
27. I'm a Musician Again (The Catheter Song) [1:45]
28. End Credits (Old Joe's Place, When You're Next to Me, The Good Book Song) [2:24]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

The writing and directing team who created Waiting For Guffman and Best In Show turn their satiric eye toward the world of folk music in this sly mockumentary. Irving Steinbloom was one of the great behind-the-scenes figures of the folk music boom of the late '50s and early '60s, and helped to nurture the careers of three of the best known acts of the era. The Folksmen -- Mark Shubb (Harry Shearer), Alan Barrows (Christopher Guest), and Jerry Palter (Michael McKean) -- were an earnest folk trio who sang of America's noble past and the challenges of the future; they split up in the early '70s after a failed attempt to go electric. Mitch & Mickey were a duo in both music and life, comprised of Mitch Cohen (Eugene Levy) and Mickey Devlin (Catherine O'Hara). They sang soulful songs of love until the collapse of their relationship sent Mitch into a deep and incapacitating depression. And The Main Street Singers were a nine-piece vocal group -- a "neuftet," as they prefer it -- who offered energetic good-time music, cranking out nearly 30 albums in the course of a decade; their current incarnation, The New Main Street Singers (played by Jane Lynch, Parker Posey, John Michael Higgins, David Alan Blasucci, Steve Pandis, Christopher Moynihan, Paul Dooley and Patrick Sauber) is still on the road. When it is announced that the legendary Irving Steinbloom has died (the character never appears in the film), his son Jonathan (Bob Balaban) decides that the best way to memorialize his father is through music, and with the help of Mike LaFontaine (Fred Willard) of Hi-Class Management, they set out to bring The Folksmen, Mitch & Mickey, and The New Main Street Singers back together for a special concert at New York's Town Hall. Christopher Guest, Michael McKean, and Harry Shearer -- who previously teamed up for This Is Spinal Tap -- not only perform together as The Folksmen in A Mighty Wind, but composed most of the songs performed onscreen. Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

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Customer Reviews

Been Thereby Anonymous

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January 06, 2006: Having become a folk singer during the sixties and opened a coffeehouse on my small college's campus, I absolutely recognize where Guest is coming from with this movie. I feel as if I know exactly which groups are represented, "Mike and Mickey" being one of my earliest influences. I'm glad to have sufficient years of perspective on that scene to be able to stand back now and laugh at the portrayals. What a great parody, partly because it was so kind!

Outstandingby Anonymous

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January 26, 2005: This movie is clever at a level that some people just won't get. But if you enjoy good writing and sharp, dry humor this script is an oasis of good stuff. If all you enjoy is sight gags and obvious humor, you might not enjoy this movie.


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