15 Greatest Fictional Bands Of All Time

The characters may be fictional, but that sweet music is oh so real.

By Jacob Trowbridge /

One of the most important aspects of filmmaking is creating believable characters that an audience can connect with. Strong characters grab people and force them to invest a little bit of themselves into the movie.

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So when you decide to make a movie about a band -- or at least angle to have that band play an integral role in it -- then you'd better make sure they come off as a believable group.

And if the real music that fictional band composes is complete garbage, then you might as well hand everyone who pays to see the movie a Hootie & The Blowfish CD and send them on home, because at least then their vanilla listening experience would come with a coaster.

Luckily for movie buffs and music aficionados alike, there have been plenty of pretend bands that have churned out some excellent, bona fide songs that were captured on film.

As a note, we're going to focus solely on bands that were created explicitly for a movie or TV series. not those who started as actual bands prior to landing a televised gig. (Sorry Tenacious D and Flight of the Conchords fans.) Though some of these bands went on to achieve wider acclaim outside of their fictional universes, as well.

15. Mouse Rat (from Parks & Recreation)

They've been known to Pawnee, Indiana locals by many names -- Scarecrow Boat, Punch Face Champion, Radwagon, Puppy Pendulum, Nothing Rhymes With Orange, Everything Rhymes With Orange -- but in the hearts of Parks & Recreation's loyal fans, it doesn't matter what they call themselves, so long as the band formerly (and possibly currently) known as Mouse Rat keeps finding a way to rock.

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Self-described as a cross between Matchbox Twenty and The Fray, it's easy to dismiss Andy Dwyer and his ragtag group of jock-rockers as a joke. After all, that's certainly what the creators of Parks & Rec intended when they came up with songs like "Sex Hair" and "Menace Ball".

But underneath the silly titles and Eddie Vedder-aping vocal delivery, there's some real heart and a surprising knack for melody.

Best Song: "5,000 Candles in the Wind"

While most Mouse Rat songs fall squarely into the jangly 90s pop rock milieu, this one aims for power ballad territory. And nails it.

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