Spice World (film)

Spice World

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Bob Spiers
Produced by Uri Fruchtmann
Barnaby Thompson
Written by Kim Fuller
Jamie Curtis
Starring Victoria Beckham
Melanie Brown
Emma Bunton
Melanie Chisholm
Geri Halliwell
Music by Paul Hardcastle
Cinematography Clive Tickner
Editing by Andrea MacArthur
Studio Icon Entertainment International
Distributed by PolyGram Filmed Entertainment (UK)
Columbia Pictures (US)
Release date(s) December 26, 1997 (1997-12-26) (UK)
January 23, 1998 (1998-01-23) (US)
Running time 93 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Budget $25 million
Box office $100,342,592 (worldwide)

Spice World is a 1997 British musical comedy film directed by Bob Spiers, written by Kim Fuller and Jamie Curtis, and starring the best-selling pop girl group the Spice Girls. The lighthearted comedy, made in a similar vein to The Beatles' A Hard Day's Night, depicts fictional events leading up to a major concert at London's Royal Albert Hall, liberally interspersed with dream sequences and flashbacks as well as surreal moments and humorous asides. The film premiered on December 15, 1997 and was released in British cinemas on Boxing Day, followed by the release in North America on January 23, 1998. Despite it being successful at the box office, the film garnered negative reviews. However, it has since become a cult classic due to home video releases.[1]

Contents

Plot

As their film begins, the Spice Girls are enjoying their fame, but they become dissatisfied with the burdens of it. A sinister newspaper owner, Kevin McMaxford (Barry Humphries), is trying to ruin the girls' reputation in order to cash in on the headlines, and even dispatches a photographer, Damien (Richard O'Brien), to take pictures and tape recordings of the girls. Less threatening but more annoying is a film director, Piers Cuthbertson-Smyth (Alan Cumming), who stalks the band along with his crew, hoping to use them as documentary subjects; at the same time, the girls' manager, Clifford (Richard E. Grant), is fending off two overeager Hollywood writers, Martin Barnfield and Graydon (George Wendt and Mark McKinney), who relentlessly pitch absurd plot ideas for the girls' film. Amid this, the girls must prepare for a concert at the Albert Hall, their biggest performance yet. At the heart of it, the constant practices, traveling, publicity appearances, and other burdens of celebrity affect them on a personal level, preventing them from spending much time with their best friend outside the band, Nicola (Naoko Mori), who is due to give birth soon. Throughout their busy schedule, the girls keep asking Clifford for time off to spend with Nicola and to relax, but he refuses, mainly because his own boss, the cryptic and eccentric "Chief" (Roger Moore), would not allow it. The stress and overwork compound, culminating in a huge argument with Clifford, the girls' assistant, Deborah (Claire Rushbrook), and among the band mates; the girls storm out on the evening before their concert at the Albert Hall the next day.

Separately, the girls think back on their humble beginnings, their struggle to the top, and their strengthened friendship. They reunite by chance outside the now-closed pub where they practised in the early days, reconcile, then decide to take Nicola out dancing. However, Nicola goes into labour at the nightclub and is rushed to the hospital in the girls' bus. The girls decided to stay at the hospital to provide Nicola with support, refusing to perform until after she has given birth. The next morning, the day of the girls' Albert Hall gig, Nicola finally gives birth to a girl. As the girls are leaving the hospital for their Albert Hall gig, they bump into a doctor, but when Emma notices he has a camera, the girls realize the doctor is Damien, who runs off with the girls in hot pursuit, only to hit his head after accidentally colliding with an empty stretcher. When Damien saw the girls standing over him, he told them that they have made him see the error of his ways, and he goes after McMaxford, who is subsequently fired in a "Jacuzzi Scandal". After noticing the girls' bus driver, Dennis (Meat Loaf) is missing, Victoria decides to drive herself. So, it becomes a race against time as Victoria drives like a maniac, screaming, "Get out of the way! Get out of the way!" to innocent bystanders. Along the way to the Albert Hall, the bus drives by Buckingham Palace and the girls all wave to the Royal Family. The girls end up on the roof of the bus and fall through its sunroof, collapsing onto each other in a pile after Victoria puts her foot down on the accelerator pedal. While approaching to the Tower Bridge, it starts to go up to let a boat through. The bus eventually land safely on the other side, but when Emma opens a trapdoor in the floor, she discovers a bomb, and the girls scream before Emma slams the trapdoor shut again. The girls finally arrive at the Albert Hall, and run up the steps to the Rocky theme, but they have one more obstacle to overcome; a London policeman (Kevin McNally) charged the girls with: "dangerous driving, criminal damage, flying a bus without a license, and frightening the pigeons". Emma is pushed forward, and she told him that they were late for their performance. Emma smiles at him, and the policeman lets the girls off.

The film ends when the girls perform their song "Spice Up Your Life". Footage airs during the closing credits of the supporting cast talking about the girls' film and interviewing with them. Mel C breaks the fourth wall and tells the other girls that the outgoing audience is watching them. The girls talk to the audience and discuss various things about their film; Victoria says to a certain woman in the audience: "Hey, you. No, not you, behind you. Yeah, to the left a bit. I like your dress. Is that a Gucci one?"; Mel B says: "C&A, mate"; Emma says: "Do you know what some people are watching this on video, is there nothing on telly then?!"; Geri says: "Yeah, but you know what they're wondering now, don't you?"; when Mel C suddenly asks: "What happened to the bomb on the bus?!", her question is answered by a loud explosion from the distance.

Cast

The Spice Girls

Actress Also known as
Victoria Beckham Victoria/Posh Spice
Melanie Brown Mel B/Scary Spice
Emma Bunton Emma/Baby Spice
Melanie Chisholm Mel C/Sporty Spice
Geri Halliwell Geri/Ginger Spice

Supporting characters

Actor/actress Role Notes
Richard E. Grant Clifford The Spice Girls' manager
Claire Rushbrook Deborah The Spice Girls' assistant
Roger Moore The Chief The head of the girls' record label
Naoko Mori Nicola The Spice Girls' best friend outside the band
Barry Humphries Kevin McMaxford Media tycoon
Richard O'Brien Damien Paparazzo photographer
Alan Cumming Piers Cuthbertson-Smyth Film director
George Wendt Martin Barnfield Hollywood writers
Mark McKinney Graydon
Michael Barrymore Mr. Step the choreographer
Jools Holland Musical director
Kevin McNally Policeman Dance of the Goblins disassociator
Kevin Allen Gainer TV director
Peter Sissons Newsreader
Stephen Fry Judge
Richard Briers Bishop
Dominic West Photographer
Bill Paterson Brian

Cameos

Actor/actress Role
Jonathan Ross Himself
Elvis Costello Bar Tender
Elton John Himself
Bob Geldof Himself
Bob Hoskins Geri's Disguise
Jennifer Saunders Fashionable Woman/Party Guest, possibly Edina Monsoon
Meat Loaf Dennis the Bus Driver
Hugh Laurie Poirot
Stephen Fry Judge

Production

Director Bob Spiers had been working in America on the Disney film That Darn Cat at the peak of the Spice Girls' popularity. He was unaware of the group when first offered the job until friend Jennifer Saunders advised that he take it. He arrived at a meeting with them in a New York hotel unaware of what they looked like.[2]

Gary Glitter filmed a four-minute cameo appearance as himself, but shortly before the film was to be released he was arrested on child porn offenses. The Spice Girls and the production team agreed that his cameo should be deleted from the final print. However, the girls were shown performing Glitter's "Leader of the Gang".

Two real world deaths after filming prompted edits to the movie. Mentions of Princess Diana and scenes including the designer Gianni Versace were made in the film but cut out because they were both alive when the film was made but both died before its release.

Reception

Audience

Spice World took in US$75 million dollars at the worldwide box office, including $29,342,592 in the U.S.[3]

Critical

 Reception
Review scores
Publication Score
Allmovie [4]
Rotten Tomatoes (29%)[5]

Despite being a commercial success, the film was widely panned by critics. The Spice Girls each won the award for Worst Actress at the 1998 Golden Raspberry Awards. It also received nominations for Worst Picture, Worst New Star (Spice Girls), Worst Supporting Actor (Roger Moore), Worst Screenplay, Worst Screen Couple ("any combination of two people, body parts or fashion accessories"), and Worst Original Song ("Too Much").

Film aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes gave Spice World a "rotten" rating of 29%.[5] AllMovie gave it a 2/5 stars.[4]

Noted American film critic Roger Ebert gave the film 0.5/4 stars and listed Spice World as one of his most hated films, saying: "The Spice Girls are easier to tell apart than the Mutant Ninja Turtles, but that is small consolation: What can you say about five women whose principal distinguishing characteristic is that they have different names? They occupy "Spice World" as if they were watching it: They're so detached they can't even successfully lip-synch their own songs." [6][7]

Although it got a negative reception from critics, the movie received a cult following, as well as earning positive reviews from fans thanks to Columbia TriStar Home Video's home video releases of the film.

DVD release

Spice World - The 10th Anniversary Edition was released on DVD on November 19, 2007 in the UK and Australia and November 27, 2007 in the U.S.

Cultural references

Soundtrack

Notes and references

External links