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Film's Best Fake Rockers (and the Actors Who Should Keep Their Day Jobs)

Posted Fri Aug 29, 2008 7:00am PDT by Gil Kaufman in GetBack


Being a rock star is hard enough for the men and women who already call that their day job. But acting like a rock star? That’s doubly hard, and when someone totally nails that gig, it’s either because they went way, way over the line doing research or they just naturally have a bit of Jagger or Joplin in them. We were hoping Rainn Wilson would join the elite great-fake-musician club. Alas, his film The Rocker falls short.

 

We love Rainn, but he’s no John C. Reilly, who made us believe he could have been one of the great rock ’n’ rollers in 2007’s Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story. Still, it got us thinking about some other actors who totally nailed it … as well as those who totally blew it.

 

The Best:

Christopher Guest, Michael McKean, and Harry Shearer as Spinal Tap in This Is Spinal Tap


This film has become the stuff of legend. The trio’s characters — Nigel Tufnel, David St. Hubbins, and Derek Smalls — have become so ingrained in pop culture that many people forget they’re a fake band. Can you name another bunch of actors who get asked to play Live Earth? Here's Tap's early incarnation, the New Originals. They play every 1960s British Invasion cliché to perfection.

 

 

 

 

Gary Oldman as Sid Vicious in Sid & Nancy

If you’ve seen file footage of the Pistols’ perpetually shambolic bass man, the eerie way in which Oldman morphs into the junkie punk icon is truly astounding. The hair, the sneer, the total disregard for personal hygiene … Sid would be proud.



 
 

Bob Geldof as Pink in Pink Floyd’s “The Wall”

This one is kind of cheating, because the Boomtown Rats singer was already sort of a rock star himself when the film came out. But the notoriously irascible Live Aid co-founder completely disappears into the role of the numb and self-loathing, eyebrow-deficient rocker slipping into a druggy death spiral.



 

Sam Riley as Ian Curtis in Control

People began to run out of superlatives to describe how perfectly this 27-year-old British actor stepped into the role of the doomed lead singer of Manchester’s Joy Division. It helped that Riley was a failed rock star who so thoroughly transformed his body and voice that many moviegoers didn’t realize it was Curtis singing the band’s songs until the closing credits rolled.



 
 

Joaquin Phoenix as Johnny Cash in Walk the Line

While Phoenix didn’t really look like Johnny Cash in the lauded biopic, there was something about his smoldering, sneering performance that perfectly captured the coiled powder keg of love, violence, and faith that was The Man in Black.



 

 

Val Kilmer as Jim Morrison in The Doors

Kilmer not only looked eerily like Morrison, but he also had the boozy, befuddled mad poet act down to a deranged science. It didn’t hurt that he looked fantastic in tight leather pants and no shirt, either.



The worst:

Val Kilmer as Jim Morrison

On the other hand, the self-indulgent Kilmer plays Morrison as a walking rock ’n’ roll cliché who swings from being ultra-cool to kind of smugly goofy.

 

Prince as The Kid in Graffiti Bridge

You’d think that playing a thinly veiled version of yourself would be pretty easy, right? You’d be wrong. The Purple One is a mumbly, meandering mess in most of his 1980s vanity films, but none of them is more excruciating than Bridge, which has a plotline as skinny as the singer’s tiny waist. You know it’s bad when one of the most exciting singers in rock history bores you to tears.

 


 

 

Mark Wahlberg as Chris Cole in Rock Star


There was only one way for Marky Mark to go in his portrayal of a guy who goes from being the singer of a tribute band to the actual singer of that band (the character is a fictionalized version of onetime Judas Priest fan-turned-singer Tim “Ripper” Owens). That way was over-the-top, and unfortunately for Wahlberg, his eager-eyed, goofy take on metal mania only got him halfway there. Wahlberg was way more believable as Boogie Nights’ Dirk Diggler in the scene where he’s trying to record his horrible album.

 


 
 

Kevin Spacey as Bobby Darin in Beyond the Sea

Maybe it’s because Darin comes off as such a jerk, but most of the time you just get the feeling that you’re watching the fussy, fey Spacey stretching to be the suave, lady-killing climber Darin.



 

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886 Comments

141. Reino -
Jack Black is missing from your best list.School Of Rock is great(must see movie). Do not forget Tenacious D and the pick of destiny(Great music in this movie all performed by Jack).

142. J -
How can have this list and not mention American Pop(1981) by Raplh Bakshi

143. charles s -
jamie fox in ray was remarkable, also i like mark wahlbergs performance in rock star. just because the movie was a flop doesnt mean the performance was

144. Yahoo! Music User -
Since actresses call themselves actors, I do not know why not one of them was included in this list. There are many great performances by women in this category. Shame.

145. Karen -
randy did you read the list? It's the first one!!!

The Best:

Christopher Guest, Michael McKean, and Harry Shearer as Spinal Tap in This Is Spinal Tap

146. Yahoo! Music User -
"6. Yahoo! Music User - 35 minutes ago
unknowncommenter, it is WALK THE LINE, not Walk Hard that is on this list."

Read the article before you try to correct the people that did, nitwit!


"We love Rainn, but he’s no John C. Reilly, who made us believe he could have been one of the great rock ’n’ rollers in 2007’s Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story."

147. Russ -
What about Billy Cruddup in Almost Famous?

148. Alejandro -
i would have said that guy from "La Bamba" or jennifer lopez as "Selena" but yeah also what happened to Jamie Foxx as "Ray Charles?" but that is just my opinion...

149. Shane S -
The Doors and Vilmer had to be the most realistic portayal and Rockstar the most fun and energitic movie. Biggest whoops: where the heck is Jamie Foxx? And I am not fan of his, but one of the best movies.

150. Steve -
Walk hard made me laugh like crazy. But so did Spinal Tap. Gotta watch the outakes on the Spinal Tap DVD.

151. evang -
I didn't read all the comments, so did anyone mention how awesome Ewen Macgregor and Jonathan Rhys Meyers were in Velvet Goldmine?

152. __A_YAHOO_USER__ -
Lou Diamond Phillips in La Bamba, and Gary Busey in buddy Holly are who I thought of right off. Although J-Lo is a singer before being an actor her portrayal of Selena was awesome!

153. Candace -
Uhhh, Angela Basset as Tina Turner in "What's Love Got To Do With It?" She was on point! How could you miss her?

154. Katie Lovering -
Sure, Michael Pare was great in Eddie and the Cruisers, but didn't another band do the singing?

155. Russell S -
What about The Fabulous Stains?????

156. Yahoo! Music User -
No. 17 said it...Gary busey, dennis quaid need to be in there..i didn't see michael pare's...

157. RCC -
Hello! You people who keep saying Jack Black ummm READ!! This list is about actors who played real musicians. Jack Blacks character in SOR wassnt about anyone real. Are we getting it now?

158. nrsmom -
Kevin Spacey was the worst playing Bobby Darrin

159. Yahoo! Music User -
I guess Joliet Jake & Elwood Blues don't fit into the "fake" category....cause as Donald Duck Dunn says: "We had a band so powerful it could turn goat piss into gasoline"

They were an excellent band.

160. OohAah -
How on earth could you forget Gary Busey in The Buddy Holly Story?! Or Lou Diamond Phillips as Ritchie Valens in La Bamba? Also, with regard to Spinal Tap and Graffiti Bridge, as well as Jack Black's School of Rock, you really should distinguish between actors who actually play and singe (e.g., the aforementioned) and those who fake it completely (like Sean Penn blowing it in Sweet and Lowdown).
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