"So, ferry cross the Merseycause this land's the place I love,
and here I'll stay..."
--Gerry and the Pacemakers, 1965
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With the Beatles at Royal Albert Dock, Liverpool |
Bringing the topic back to movies, of course I found myself excited to explore the wealth of films about the Beatles, including those in which they appeared. So far, I've only scratched the surface of what promises to be an extensive adventure.
Here are my thoughts about four (fab!) films I recently watched, in order of their release date:
1) A Hard Day's Night (1964): This may be the quintessential Beatles film, with the lads playing more or less themselves, through a loose script about a rock group in 1964 London trying to make it safely to a television gig despite obstacles of crazed fans and clueless adults. If you only can watch one movie to get the feel of Beatlemania in the U.K., this one is it. The boys come off as believably cheeky, Richard Lester's direction is inventive and energetic, and there is enough of that fabulous early Beatles' sound that you'll be dancing or tapping your foot at the very least, if not screaming and swaying with abandon.
3. Beatles '64 (2024): Here is a new documentary produced by Martin Scorcese to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the group's historic first visit Stateside, streaming on Disney+. Director David Tedeschi relies heavily on restored footage (some never aired before) by acclaimed documentarians Albert and David Maysles to provide the backdrop, but interweaves current and archival interviews with people who were there, including Sir Paul McCartney, Sir Ringo Starr, Jamie Bernstein (Leonard's daughter), Ronnie Spector, and many former teenage fans. I've heard some critiques of the film arguing that it tried to say too much and ended up without a clear focus, but I found the film's touching on the JFK assassination and race relations fascinating as parts of the story. I had not seen much of the Maysles' original footage, so to me what I was seeing was fresh and new. Recommended for casual Beatles' fans or anyone who is interested in 20th-century cultural history.
1) A Hard Day's Night (1964): This may be the quintessential Beatles film, with the lads playing more or less themselves, through a loose script about a rock group in 1964 London trying to make it safely to a television gig despite obstacles of crazed fans and clueless adults. If you only can watch one movie to get the feel of Beatlemania in the U.K., this one is it. The boys come off as believably cheeky, Richard Lester's direction is inventive and energetic, and there is enough of that fabulous early Beatles' sound that you'll be dancing or tapping your foot at the very least, if not screaming and swaying with abandon.
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Exhibit at the Beatles' Story Museum in Liverpool had a interpretive piece on Richard Lester, the director of A Hard Day's Night. |
2) BackBeat (1994): I left the actual Beatles playing themselves to arrive at a narrative film that focuses on the group's early years. Before they were John, Paul, George, and Ringo, they were John, Paul, George, Stuart, and Pete, working-class Liverpudlian youths trying to earn a living playing beer halls in Hamburg, Germany's red light district. The sometimes wince-inducing grittiness (a fair amount of violence, sex and -some- drugs) makes for a tough watch, but the central relationship between John Lennon and his roommate and best friend Stuart Sutcliffe, the art prodigy whom John persuaded to take up the bass guitar in the band, is well drawn. Beatles' fans know Stuart's sad ending, but not before his commitment to Astrid Kirchherr in Hamburg laid the foundation for the band's long-lasting connection to their German friends. Stephen Dorff as Sutcliffe and Ian Hart as Lennon are terrific. Sheryl Lee (Laura Palmer in the Twin Peaks franchise) is strong and sympathetic as Astrid.
4. Midas Man (2024). This Brian Epstein biopic was many years in the making, and apparently had a troubled production history. As it screened publicly only at a few film festivals in the U.S., I had to stream it here on Olyn.com). Fans of the Beatles know that Epstein pulled the Beatles out of obscurity in Liverpool (post-Hamburg), got them a record contract against tall odds, and managed them into the stratosphere of superstardom. He then built a music management behemoth in the U.K. and U.S., but dealing with severe emotional turmoil being gay and Jewish in a less-than-accepting society, he became addicted to prescription drugs and sadly succumbed to an accidental overdose in 1967 while trying to hold together the bands he managed. Having read Ray Coleman's competent biography, The Man Who Made the Beatles, I can say the film does a reasonable job with accuracy and empathy, leaning on the skills of lead Jacob Fortune-Lloyd (The Queen's Gambit). Supporting him were veterans Emily Watson and Eddie Marsan as Epstein's parents. With the exception of Eddie Izzard and Jay Leno (in a cameo as Ed Sullivan), the actors playing the Beatles were unknown to me and unremarkable. While the film is worth seeing, this by-the-numbers biopic works best for the casual fan who doesn't know much about Epstein. I came away feeling the film was just a bit too glossy, the anti-BackBeat if you will, with the highs not high enough and the lows not low enough. Check it out, though; your mileage may vary.
Epstein is credited with (among other things) putting the Beatles in suits to smarten their image in the early days. |
Statue of Epstein near his former Liverpool record store from which he walked to the Cavern Club to discover the Beatles. |
I would love your comments on what Beatles films I should watch next!
I grew up listening to the Beatles too. Still the best music after all these years. I would suggest watching Help! next. That is their best popular film after A Hard day's Night. A bit of trivia I just learned. Brenda Lee performed in England and the Beatles were her back up band early in their career. She knew them well and suggested they come to the US and sign with her record company Decca. They told Brenda no because they did not feel they would do well here. Who knew and we know how that ultimately turned out. Brenda Lee was just on a recent televised concert Ringo did to benefit the CA wild fires. I enjoyed your blog Jocelyn. What a wonderful experience you had visiting the Beatles home town.
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by and reading! I will watch HELP! soon. I know it's also directed by Richard Lester, and the plot is a bit more fanciful.
DeleteWow, that is a great story about Brenda Lee. I looked it up and apparently the gig where they played together was during The Beatles Hamburg era. I think the group would not have expected to do well in the U.S. because really no other British pop singer had cracked the U.S. during that era before they did. The Beatles were fans of many U.S. groups and singers, at the very least.
Did you watch the recent Ringo concert? Was it the country one? I'm so glad he's still making music and entertaining old and new fans!
I did watch the Ringo special. It was good to see him and all his guests including Brenda Lee. Yes, the Beatles loved many of our musicians. They were very unique at the time they began. They never dreamed they would be the phenomena and as popular as they became. Ringo loved playing music back then and still loves it now. Paul McCartney loves music as much today as well.
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