If Hetfield and Ulrich sometimes come off as arrogant and narcissistic, well, you and I might be like that too if we'd sold 90 million albums and spent the last 15 years being ass-kissed and told we were great artists. (In the middle of Metallica's struggle to record a new album, for instance, some guys flew airplanes into some buildings in New York. The band doesn't seem to notice, and the events of Sept. 11 are never mentioned here.) Their flaws, including their sometimes amazing self-absorption, make them seem human. Whether you love Metallica's music or can barely tolerate it, by the end of the movie you'll be rooting for the band to survive.

Formed in 1981 by the then-teenage Ulrich and Hetfield, Metallica became the uncrowned kings of the semi-underground thrash-metal genre in the '80s. (Just ask that stringy-haired guy down the block -- the one who works on his Chevelle even when it's snowing -- if he thinks "Master of Puppets" kicks ass or what.) With the eponymous "Metallica" (aka "The Black Album") in 1991, the band moved toward a more mainstream arena-rock sound that owed as much to Led Zeppelin and U2 as to Ozzy. If this left the head-banging Anthrax/Slayer purists behind, it sure sold a lot of records. (The band's Web site claims that in the last decade it has been the No. 1 concert draw in North America, and has outsold Britney Spears, Madonna, the Backstreet Boys, 'N Sync and Celine Dion.)

When Berlinger and Sinofsky showed up in 2001 to start making their Metallica film, it already seemed like a dramatic moment. The band hadn't released a new studio album since "ReLoad" in 1997 (which was basically a bunch of leftover tracks from the previous year's "Load"). Bassist Jason Newsted had not-so-amicably departed after 15 years (to the aforementioned purists, he had never lived up to original bassist Cliff Burton, who died in a 1986 bus crash).

As the film begins, acerbic control freak Ulrich and the stone-faced, tattooed Hetfield are barely on speaking terms. Celebrated lead guitarist Hammett (who looks and sounds exactly like Carlos Santana's unacknowledged metalhead offspring) seems to be retreating ever more into his rural California ranch and his quasi-Buddhist worldview. ("I try to be an example of egolessness for the other guys," he tells the filmmakers.)


"Metallica: Some Kind of Monster"

Directed by Joe Berlinger and Bruce Sinofsky

Berlinger and Sinofsky could never have guessed, however, that the process that eventually led to Metallica's 2003 "St. Anger" album would take two full years. It involved a lengthy stint in rehab for Hetfield and the band's increasingly head-trippy relationship with a therapist-guru figure with a bad Rudy Giuliani combover named Phil Towle.

Towle begins usefully enough, coaxing Hetfield and Ulrich back into the studio despite their increasingly obvious mutual dislike. During Hetfield's year-long disappearance, Towle keeps the nucleus of the band together, preventing Ulrich and Hammett from slipping into total despair. But when he starts writing song lyrics and posting inspirational slogans all over the recording studio, and the band has to hold a private meeting to discuss firing him -- well, that's one of about 100 occasions in this film where you'll say, "They're doing this in front of a camera?"

When Hetfield reappears, armed with a nifty new '50s-greaser haircut, a renewed commitment to his family (earlier, he misses his son's first birthday party -- to go kill bears in Russia) and a full panoply of New Age recovery clichés, the movie itself comes into question. Berlinger, Sinofsky and their crew actually enter the film for a few minutes to talk with the band members about why they should go through with this crazy level of self-exposure. I don't know that Metallica, in the end, will prove to be more than a minor chapter in rock history. But to go through with this film took guts, honesty and even a kind of nobility -- and all of us who are fascinated by the unsolvable quandaries of pop culture owe the band for that.

Recent Stories