18 out of 22 people found the following comment useful :- Tapeheads- A bizarre unique and twisted comedy- Who could ask for more, 20 April 1999
Author:
Gregory R. Greco (grgreco@star.net)
Tapeheads is not a subtle film. It is not brilliant film. What it is is
one of the most unique and funny American comedies in a long time. What
allows this movie to rise above the stupidity in which it revels in is
two-fold. Its quirky sense of humor is so unique and refreshing, that
you're not only willing but looking forward to the plot which can politely
described as asinine. Secondly, it has the Swankey Modes, who are
actually
soul legends Sam Moore and Junior Walker. They bring a delightful energy
and great music to the movie.
It would be pointless to bring up specific scenes, except to say that
this movie has approximately ten or fifteen of the funniest vignettes of
the
year. There are also plenty of misses, but the joy in seeing them make
the
effort allows you to forgive all the misses.
John Cusack and Tim Robbins, both exceptional actors capable of great
subtlety, exhibit none of it here. What they replace it with is a great
comic energy and a willingness to do almost anything for a joke. Cusack
is
especially endearing as a total sleazeball who will do anything for a
buck.
Michael Nesmith (yes, That one!) produces this farce and demonstrates what
we already knew- He was really the talented one, and the funniest one.
I imagine that there will be people who hate this movie. People who
hate its lack of subtlety, who hate the implausible plot, and who just
don't
get a humor that most can most aptly described as off kilter. What they
don't understand is that the humor in this movie is a complete original,
and
the lengths this movie takes to see it through are admirable and at times
breathtaking. And it is for those reasons that Tapeheads is one of the
great American comedies of the 1980's, and one of the most underrated
movies
ever made.
11 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- Strange 1980s curio ripe for rediscovery!, 30 October 2001
Author:
INFOFREAKO from Perth, Australia
Looking back at 'Tapeheads' all these years later is a strange trip! John
Cusack is now a respected leading man and Tim Robbins is Mr. Credibility.
Back in the day they were two zany dorks up for just about anything. This
movie is sometimes surreal, sometimes silly. Very uneven with some segments
just falling flat on their face. But there is more than enough unhinged
invention on show to make it something unique.
It might on the surface seem like the precursor to Bill and Ted and Wayne
and Garth et al, but there is an underlying subversive, almost punk
attitude, that puts it closer in spirit to 'Roadside Prophets' (which also
featured Cusack) or even some of the movies of Alex Cox. Cox has no direct
involvement with 'Tapeheads', but like his 80s cult classic 'Repo Man' it
was produced by ex-Monkee Mike Nesmith, and several Cox regulars appear - Sy
Richardson, Zander Schloss, Xander Berkeley, Bobcat Goldthwait, and even (an
uncredited) Courtney Love.
The plot doesn't matter all that much, at times it's just an excuse for
music video parodies, pop culture in-jokes, and cameos by an almost endless
parade of musicians, familiar TV faces, and other oddballs, everyone from
Jello Biafra to Connie Stevens. It's like channel surfing while tripping and
listening to oldies radio. Just the sight of seeing 'The Killers' Clu
Gulager being spanked by Courtney Love while cult favourite Susan Tyrrell
urges her on (blink and you WILL miss it!!), is almost worth watching this
alone for. 'Tapeheads' may not be THE great lost 80s cult movie, but it does
deserve to be rediscovered. There's no other movie QUITE like it! And it
will put a smile on your face, guaranteed.
13 out of 16 people found the following comment useful :- I can't explain why but I've watched this a hundred times and I keep laughing, 14 November 2001
Author:
cinemadaz from Tucson
I can't explain why but I've watched this a hundred times and I keep
laughing, alongside Cusack's Better Off Dead. John Cusack and Tim Robbins
were still playing losers and became good friends off camera when they
made
Tapeheads, as they play bumbling would-be music video makers. In order to
get their boyhood heroes The Swanky Modes (played by real-life singers Sam
Moore and Junior Walker) the gig of all gigs, they scam and plug their way
through unpaid work, Roscoe's chicken and waffles, relentless hitmen and a
vengeful politician. Great character acting by Jessica Walter, Don
Cornelius
and Clu Gulager. Cameos by a ton of folks, including executive producer
Michael Nesmith (from the Monkees), Jello Biafra, Fishbone and the Nuge.
Along the way are all kinds of catchy little jokes that you either like
and
remember forever or. just don't like. "We love Menudo." "On spec." The
mounting parking tickets. At least watch it for Cusack and Robbins passing
the Brothers Against Drunk Driving (BADD) alcohol test: going through the
alphabet backwards with your eyes closed, skipping all the vowels and
giving
the hand sign for each letter.
The DVD is letterboxed and has a strong analog track with Nesmith,
director
Bill Fishman and production designer Catherine Hardwicke. Much of the time
it is as light-hearted as the movie and interesting. Unfortunately,
Fishman
brings up tons of scenes that were deleted from the film but aren't
included
on the DVD. I'm sure there's some reason for this, maybe they just weren't
available, but it's kind of frustrating - they actually sound funny
instead
of the usual deleted scene that deserved to be cut out and forgotten. I
was
surprised that so much stuff was actually cut out, and that Cusack and
Robbins wanted to play the opposite roles when they auditioned. But, this
ain't the high theater either. At times the analog track has some of those
"Remember when that happened" stories, that only work if you really really
like the film. But then, why else would you watch the whole thing with the
analog track on?
10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- Loved this flick, 24 December 2004
Author:
shebop-1 from United States
It's a next-generation Blues Brothers. Quick-moving visuals, good
script, well executed. Funny, irreverent, and best of all the music is
great. Love the two leads (Cusack & Robbins) and wonder if they
remember having fun making this movie because it sure looked like they
did. (Cusack can dance; Robbins can't.) Great to see some old-timers in
the music roles - Sam Moore and Junior Walker, for two; plus there are
several tunes I've never heard before so I got to hear and appreciate
them for the first time. Cinematographywas well done. I'm surprised
it's not a cult film for old r & b rock & rollers. The DVD came with a
CD of the ending song "Ordinary Man" by the Swanky Modes (Moore &
Walker), guaranteed to get you moving in your chair.
7 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :- Amusing commentary on 80's music-videos scene, 8 September 2005
Author:
bortels from United States
In the 80's, back when MTV actually played videos, I spent plenty of
time with it on in the background, the way radio was in earlier
decades. Tapeheads captures that in spades - the glitzy, superficial,
just plain stupid, yet weirdly captivating 80's music video scene, from
behind. With spoof videos like King Cotton in the "Roscoe's Chicken and
Waffle Commercial", and Devo backing Cube-Squared's video ("The hottest
thing from Sweden since Abba") in mock-Swedish, and some stunningly
good performances by "The Swanky Modes" (Sam Moore and Junior Walker),
it sticks in your head. This is no "The Shawshank Redemption" or
"Grosse Point Blank" - If you're seeing it for Tim Robbins and John
Cusack - this is late-80s throwaway kitsch, and it shows - and there's
nothing wrong with that. If you think more "Better off Dead" or
"Cadillac Man", you're in the right ballpark. Frankly, it's refreshing
to see them in something early in their careers, having some fun. If
you enjoyed your videos in the 80's, it's worth checking out.
8 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :- A brilliant, feel-good comedy with an outstanding soundtrack., 30 November 1998
Author:
Chuck Ivy from Los Angeles, CA
The chemistry between Cusack and Robbins is readily apparent in this
off-beat comedy. The film is full of clever, yet not-so-obvious sight-gags
including the casting of Zander Schloss as both a heavy-metal fan and an R&B
concert-goer.
Sam Moore and Junior Walker pair up as the fictitious band "The Swanky
Modes" adding a number of very soulful tunes to the soundtrack. To quote
Josh & Ivan in the movie "We love the Swanky Modes."
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Brilliant, over the top eighties spoof, 5 March 2006
Author:
Riotgear from United States
Tapeheads is a surprisingly perfect satire of the eighties made at the
end of the eighties. It is very funny, with an intelligent script and
great dialog. Fine comedic performances by Cusack and Robbins. Multiple
intertwined plots. There is a love story between a female artist and
Robbins' nerdy video artist. A self-help guide with Cusack trying to
better himself and his buddy. A music marathon with wonderful
performances. A corrupt politician caught in a delicious scandal. All
this combined with an hysterical dysfunctional family drama, make for a
thoroughly wacky and wild time. The soundtrack is fabulous too. In
particular, Roscoe's Rap manages to send up MTV, KFC, TV advertising
and Rap music. Loved it!
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- A Roger Corman-esque "quickie" film for the MTV generation, 7 April 2004
Author:
carlson-8 from Seattle, Washington
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I remember when this film first came out. It played the local "indie"
theatre for about a week. According to a "Details" magazine article on
Cusack, he said that when they were promoting the film, did so in their
"Actor's Gang" personas, wearing skinny ties and trench coats, and they
got
kicked off of a morning talk show for trashing the green room.
Judging by the final product, it seems that Robbins and Cusack wanted to
have some fun, and brought this film to Michael Nesmith's Pacific Arts
Company (not known for its high production values), and banged it out
between schedules.
It's always a treat to see John Cusack and Tim Robbins acting in the same
film. I believe "Tapeheads" is the first one where they co-headline, and
it
is great!
As a cult film, it has all of the factors that make it worthwhile (subtle
sight gags, quotable lines, a stream of cameos, random tangent scenes (the
Roscoe's Chicken and Waffle commercial), and satirical jabs (in this case
the music video industry.)
Minor spoilers ahead:
My one complaint is that the ending could have been a little sharper. The
final chase and apprehension of the politician's videotape should have
been
more suspensful, and I didn't buy the Swanky Modes' concert performance.
Do
you think a concert hall full of people waiting to see Menudo would be won
over by one song by two aging R&B stars? Who knows. Maybe this was a
subtle
jab at Michael Nesmith's former band, who inexplicably gained a new
following in the mid-'80s when MTV started airing episodes of "The
Monkees"
3 times a day.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- Dryly irreverent...ridiculous...and sometimes very funny, 7 July 2007
Author:
moonspinner55 from redlands, ca
"Tapeheads", a scrappy, intermittently funny spoof of the music video
business, might have been the perfect comedic short, and stars John
Cusack and Tim Robbins are effortlessly in the swing of the nonsensical
chaos involved. They play two semi-savvy security guards in Los Angeles
who start their own company, Video Aces, making hilarious videos for
groups, parties, and one deathbed star. It's too bad the filmmakers had
to invent a dim side-plot to pad the running time (shenanigans
involving a crooked politician and his henchmen which doesn't do much
except take away from the movie's primary strength, sending-up the
music culture of the late-'80's). Still, Cusack and Robbins create a
couple of originals here: nerdy but loose, street-smart without being
hipsters or posers, these guys are on the same nutty wavelength, and
they never put each other down. They are the real thing in
buddy-comedies. *1/2 from ****
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- Has its moments but needed more, 12 July 2008
Author:
Wayne Malin (wwaayynnee51@hotmail.com) from United States
Ivan Alexeev (John Cusack) and Josh Tager (Tim Robbins) try to break
into the L.A. music scene in the late 1980s. Quirky Samantha Gregory
(Mary Crosby) tries to help.
I caught this back in the late 1980s at a small art house. The audience
loved it and it was held over for a few weeks. Back then I thought it
was just great. Seeing it now, 20 years later, its charms have faded.
It is very energetic and Cusack, Robbins and Crosby are just great.
There's also a large cast of character actors in small roles that help.
The commercial parodies and music videos are funny and inventive. BUT
the film gets repetitious real quick--the same jokes are made over and
over. It's also very dated (you have to laugh when a character says
"Video is the future"), has plenty of bad jokes and some real mediocre
songs. Still this has enough good moments to give it a 7 and the
closing song/video during the closing credits is lots of fun! Ex MTV DJ
Martha Quinn appears as a--music TV DJ! This might work better with an
audience.
Own the rights?
Buy it at Amazon Rent it at blockbuster.comDiscuss in Boards More at IMDb Pro Add to My Movies Update Data
Quicklinks
Top Links
trailers and videosfull cast and crewtriviaofficial sitesmemorable quotesOverview
main detailscombined detailsfull cast and crewcompany creditstv scheduleAwards & Reviews
user commentsexternal reviewsnewsgroup reviewsawardsuser ratingsparents guiderecommendationsmessage boardPlot & Quotes
plot summaryplot synopsisplot keywordsAmazon.com summarymemorable quotesFun Stuff
triviagoofssoundtrack listingcrazy creditsalternate versionsmovie connectionsFAQOther Info
merchandising linksbox office/businessrelease datesfilming locationstechnical specslaserdisc detailsDVD detailsliterature listingsNewsDeskPromotional
taglines trailers and videos posters photo galleryExternal Links
showtimesofficial sitesmiscellaneousphotographssound clipsvideo clipsIMDb user comments for
Tapeheads (1988) More at IMDbPro »
18 out of 22 people found the following comment useful :-

Tapeheads- A bizarre unique and twisted comedy- Who could ask for more, 20 April 1999
Author: Gregory R. Greco (grgreco@star.net)
Tapeheads is not a subtle film. It is not brilliant film. What it is is one of the most unique and funny American comedies in a long time. What allows this movie to rise above the stupidity in which it revels in is two-fold. Its quirky sense of humor is so unique and refreshing, that you're not only willing but looking forward to the plot which can politely described as asinine. Secondly, it has the Swankey Modes, who are actually soul legends Sam Moore and Junior Walker. They bring a delightful energy and great music to the movie.
It would be pointless to bring up specific scenes, except to say that this movie has approximately ten or fifteen of the funniest vignettes of the year. There are also plenty of misses, but the joy in seeing them make the effort allows you to forgive all the misses.
John Cusack and Tim Robbins, both exceptional actors capable of great subtlety, exhibit none of it here. What they replace it with is a great comic energy and a willingness to do almost anything for a joke. Cusack is especially endearing as a total sleazeball who will do anything for a buck. Michael Nesmith (yes, That one!) produces this farce and demonstrates what we already knew- He was really the talented one, and the funniest one.
I imagine that there will be people who hate this movie. People who hate its lack of subtlety, who hate the implausible plot, and who just don't get a humor that most can most aptly described as off kilter. What they don't understand is that the humor in this movie is a complete original, and the lengths this movie takes to see it through are admirable and at times breathtaking. And it is for those reasons that Tapeheads is one of the great American comedies of the 1980's, and one of the most underrated movies ever made.
11 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-
Strange 1980s curio ripe for rediscovery!, 30 October 2001
Author: INFOFREAKO from Perth, Australia
Looking back at 'Tapeheads' all these years later is a strange trip! John Cusack is now a respected leading man and Tim Robbins is Mr. Credibility. Back in the day they were two zany dorks up for just about anything. This movie is sometimes surreal, sometimes silly. Very uneven with some segments just falling flat on their face. But there is more than enough unhinged invention on show to make it something unique.
It might on the surface seem like the precursor to Bill and Ted and Wayne and Garth et al, but there is an underlying subversive, almost punk attitude, that puts it closer in spirit to 'Roadside Prophets' (which also featured Cusack) or even some of the movies of Alex Cox. Cox has no direct involvement with 'Tapeheads', but like his 80s cult classic 'Repo Man' it was produced by ex-Monkee Mike Nesmith, and several Cox regulars appear - Sy Richardson, Zander Schloss, Xander Berkeley, Bobcat Goldthwait, and even (an uncredited) Courtney Love.
The plot doesn't matter all that much, at times it's just an excuse for music video parodies, pop culture in-jokes, and cameos by an almost endless parade of musicians, familiar TV faces, and other oddballs, everyone from Jello Biafra to Connie Stevens. It's like channel surfing while tripping and listening to oldies radio. Just the sight of seeing 'The Killers' Clu Gulager being spanked by Courtney Love while cult favourite Susan Tyrrell urges her on (blink and you WILL miss it!!), is almost worth watching this alone for. 'Tapeheads' may not be THE great lost 80s cult movie, but it does deserve to be rediscovered. There's no other movie QUITE like it! And it will put a smile on your face, guaranteed.
13 out of 16 people found the following comment useful :-
I can't explain why but I've watched this a hundred times and I keep laughing, 14 November 2001
Author: cinemadaz from Tucson
I can't explain why but I've watched this a hundred times and I keep laughing, alongside Cusack's Better Off Dead. John Cusack and Tim Robbins were still playing losers and became good friends off camera when they made Tapeheads, as they play bumbling would-be music video makers. In order to get their boyhood heroes The Swanky Modes (played by real-life singers Sam Moore and Junior Walker) the gig of all gigs, they scam and plug their way through unpaid work, Roscoe's chicken and waffles, relentless hitmen and a vengeful politician. Great character acting by Jessica Walter, Don Cornelius and Clu Gulager. Cameos by a ton of folks, including executive producer Michael Nesmith (from the Monkees), Jello Biafra, Fishbone and the Nuge. Along the way are all kinds of catchy little jokes that you either like and remember forever or. just don't like. "We love Menudo." "On spec." The mounting parking tickets. At least watch it for Cusack and Robbins passing the Brothers Against Drunk Driving (BADD) alcohol test: going through the alphabet backwards with your eyes closed, skipping all the vowels and giving the hand sign for each letter.
The DVD is letterboxed and has a strong analog track with Nesmith, director Bill Fishman and production designer Catherine Hardwicke. Much of the time it is as light-hearted as the movie and interesting. Unfortunately, Fishman brings up tons of scenes that were deleted from the film but aren't included on the DVD. I'm sure there's some reason for this, maybe they just weren't available, but it's kind of frustrating - they actually sound funny instead of the usual deleted scene that deserved to be cut out and forgotten. I was surprised that so much stuff was actually cut out, and that Cusack and Robbins wanted to play the opposite roles when they auditioned. But, this ain't the high theater either. At times the analog track has some of those "Remember when that happened" stories, that only work if you really really like the film. But then, why else would you watch the whole thing with the analog track on?
10 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-

Loved this flick, 24 December 2004
Author: shebop-1 from United States
It's a next-generation Blues Brothers. Quick-moving visuals, good script, well executed. Funny, irreverent, and best of all the music is great. Love the two leads (Cusack & Robbins) and wonder if they remember having fun making this movie because it sure looked like they did. (Cusack can dance; Robbins can't.) Great to see some old-timers in the music roles - Sam Moore and Junior Walker, for two; plus there are several tunes I've never heard before so I got to hear and appreciate them for the first time. Cinematographywas well done. I'm surprised it's not a cult film for old r & b rock & rollers. The DVD came with a CD of the ending song "Ordinary Man" by the Swanky Modes (Moore & Walker), guaranteed to get you moving in your chair.
7 out of 7 people found the following comment useful :-

Amusing commentary on 80's music-videos scene, 8 September 2005
Author: bortels from United States
In the 80's, back when MTV actually played videos, I spent plenty of time with it on in the background, the way radio was in earlier decades. Tapeheads captures that in spades - the glitzy, superficial, just plain stupid, yet weirdly captivating 80's music video scene, from behind. With spoof videos like King Cotton in the "Roscoe's Chicken and Waffle Commercial", and Devo backing Cube-Squared's video ("The hottest thing from Sweden since Abba") in mock-Swedish, and some stunningly good performances by "The Swanky Modes" (Sam Moore and Junior Walker), it sticks in your head. This is no "The Shawshank Redemption" or "Grosse Point Blank" - If you're seeing it for Tim Robbins and John Cusack - this is late-80s throwaway kitsch, and it shows - and there's nothing wrong with that. If you think more "Better off Dead" or "Cadillac Man", you're in the right ballpark. Frankly, it's refreshing to see them in something early in their careers, having some fun. If you enjoyed your videos in the 80's, it's worth checking out.
8 out of 12 people found the following comment useful :-

A brilliant, feel-good comedy with an outstanding soundtrack., 30 November 1998
Author: Chuck Ivy from Los Angeles, CA
The chemistry between Cusack and Robbins is readily apparent in this off-beat comedy. The film is full of clever, yet not-so-obvious sight-gags including the casting of Zander Schloss as both a heavy-metal fan and an R&B concert-goer.
Sam Moore and Junior Walker pair up as the fictitious band "The Swanky Modes" adding a number of very soulful tunes to the soundtrack. To quote Josh & Ivan in the movie "We love the Swanky Modes."
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-

Brilliant, over the top eighties spoof, 5 March 2006
Author: Riotgear from United States
Tapeheads is a surprisingly perfect satire of the eighties made at the end of the eighties. It is very funny, with an intelligent script and great dialog. Fine comedic performances by Cusack and Robbins. Multiple intertwined plots. There is a love story between a female artist and Robbins' nerdy video artist. A self-help guide with Cusack trying to better himself and his buddy. A music marathon with wonderful performances. A corrupt politician caught in a delicious scandal. All this combined with an hysterical dysfunctional family drama, make for a thoroughly wacky and wild time. The soundtrack is fabulous too. In particular, Roscoe's Rap manages to send up MTV, KFC, TV advertising and Rap music. Loved it!
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-
A Roger Corman-esque "quickie" film for the MTV generation, 7 April 2004
Author: carlson-8 from Seattle, Washington
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
I remember when this film first came out. It played the local "indie" theatre for about a week. According to a "Details" magazine article on Cusack, he said that when they were promoting the film, did so in their "Actor's Gang" personas, wearing skinny ties and trench coats, and they got kicked off of a morning talk show for trashing the green room.
Judging by the final product, it seems that Robbins and Cusack wanted to have some fun, and brought this film to Michael Nesmith's Pacific Arts Company (not known for its high production values), and banged it out between schedules.
It's always a treat to see John Cusack and Tim Robbins acting in the same film. I believe "Tapeheads" is the first one where they co-headline, and it is great!
As a cult film, it has all of the factors that make it worthwhile (subtle sight gags, quotable lines, a stream of cameos, random tangent scenes (the Roscoe's Chicken and Waffle commercial), and satirical jabs (in this case the music video industry.)
Minor spoilers ahead:
My one complaint is that the ending could have been a little sharper. The final chase and apprehension of the politician's videotape should have been more suspensful, and I didn't buy the Swanky Modes' concert performance. Do you think a concert hall full of people waiting to see Menudo would be won over by one song by two aging R&B stars? Who knows. Maybe this was a subtle jab at Michael Nesmith's former band, who inexplicably gained a new following in the mid-'80s when MTV started airing episodes of "The Monkees" 3 times a day.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-

Dryly irreverent...ridiculous...and sometimes very funny, 7 July 2007
Author: moonspinner55 from redlands, ca
"Tapeheads", a scrappy, intermittently funny spoof of the music video business, might have been the perfect comedic short, and stars John Cusack and Tim Robbins are effortlessly in the swing of the nonsensical chaos involved. They play two semi-savvy security guards in Los Angeles who start their own company, Video Aces, making hilarious videos for groups, parties, and one deathbed star. It's too bad the filmmakers had to invent a dim side-plot to pad the running time (shenanigans involving a crooked politician and his henchmen which doesn't do much except take away from the movie's primary strength, sending-up the music culture of the late-'80's). Still, Cusack and Robbins create a couple of originals here: nerdy but loose, street-smart without being hipsters or posers, these guys are on the same nutty wavelength, and they never put each other down. They are the real thing in buddy-comedies. *1/2 from ****
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

Has its moments but needed more, 12 July 2008
Author: Wayne Malin (wwaayynnee51@hotmail.com) from United States
Ivan Alexeev (John Cusack) and Josh Tager (Tim Robbins) try to break into the L.A. music scene in the late 1980s. Quirky Samantha Gregory (Mary Crosby) tries to help.
I caught this back in the late 1980s at a small art house. The audience loved it and it was held over for a few weeks. Back then I thought it was just great. Seeing it now, 20 years later, its charms have faded. It is very energetic and Cusack, Robbins and Crosby are just great. There's also a large cast of character actors in small roles that help. The commercial parodies and music videos are funny and inventive. BUT the film gets repetitious real quick--the same jokes are made over and over. It's also very dated (you have to laugh when a character says "Video is the future"), has plenty of bad jokes and some real mediocre songs. Still this has enough good moments to give it a 7 and the closing song/video during the closing credits is lots of fun! Ex MTV DJ Martha Quinn appears as a--music TV DJ! This might work better with an audience.
Add another comment
Related Links