Tag: the beatles

  • ‘Man on the Run’ Interview: Director Morgan Neville

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    Debuting on Prime Video February 27th is the new documentary ‘Man on the Run‘, which was directed by Morgan Neville (‘Piece by Piece’) and follows the life of Paul McCartney from his formation of Wings through the 1970s.

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    'Man on the Run' director Morgan Neville.
    ‘Man on the Run’ director Morgan Neville.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with director Morgan Neville about his work on ‘Man on the Run’, how he got involved in this project, McCartney’s post-Beatles career, the legacy of Wings, conducting the interviews, choosing to only use the audio in the film, and what it was like for him to spend time with Paul McCartney.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interview.

    Related Article: Director Kevin MacDonald Talks Documentary ‘One to One: John & Yoko’

    Paul McCartney in 'Man on the Run'. Photo: Prime Video.
    Paul McCartney in ‘Man on the Run’. Photo: Prime Video.

    Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about how you got involved in this project and what interested you in telling the story of Wings and focusing on this specific post-Beatles point in Paul McCartney’s life?

    Morgan Neville: I got a call from Paul’s manager, almost five years ago, saying, “Would you be interested in working on a documentary that touches on the Wings era of Paul’s career?” Within three seconds, I said, “Yes.” I’ve been an obsessive Beatles and Paul McCartney fan my whole life and a big Wings fan. The first record I ever bought was a Wings record, so I go way back. But I also knew that this period of his life was one that people don’t know that much about. So, the film begins essentially the day the Beatles break up, and then Paul must figure out all kinds of existential questions about, “Who am I, who am I as an artist? What kind of person am I?” You know, in a very short period, he gets married, has a kid, adopts his wife, Linda‘s child, and the Beatles break up. Then he moves to a rural farmhouse in Scotland. I mean, this is all like within nine months this happens. So, that’s kind of the beginning that sets up this story. But what you see is that Paul really struggles through this time for all these different reasons. So, it was kind of understanding the human part of it that I find very relatable.

    (L to R) Linda McCartney and Paul McCartney in 'Man on the Run'. Photo: Linda McCartney. Copyright: © Paul McCartney under exclusive licence to MPL Archive LLP.
    (L to R) Linda McCartney and Paul McCartney in ‘Man on the Run’. Photo: Linda McCartney. Copyright: © Paul McCartney under exclusive licence to MPL Archive LLP.

    MF: What was it like conducting the interviews and can you talk about making the choice to only use the audio in the film?

    MN: I did many interviews with Paul over many months. I never filmed them. I just did audio. Part of it was we could have more intimate conversations, I guess, and really try to take our time and talk. But the other thing I knew was that I don’t want to have 80-year-old people saying, “50 years ago this was a great thing.” Those types of films are very retrospective. Somehow, when you take those off camera, it just becomes a present tense story. So, you’re just kind of flowing through it, and all the voices from the archive voices to the new voices, just become this soup. I feel like it’s a bit of a trance that the film can put you in. It feels like you never leave that decade, really, the 1970s through the film.

    Paul McCartney in 'Man on the Run'. Photo: Linda McCartney. Copyright: © Paul McCartney under exclusive licence to MPL Archive LLP.
    Paul McCartney in ‘Man on the Run’. Photo: Linda McCartney. Copyright: © Paul McCartney under exclusive licence to MPL Archive LLP.

    MF: Finally, as a fan, what was it like for you to spend time with Sir Paul McCartney and really get to know him on a personal level because of this project?

    MN: Totally surreal. I am a huge fan, but I think about 15 minutes into the first interview, I said, “Okay, I have to take my fan hat off and put my filmmaker hat on and just talk to him as Paul.” Then there are moments where my fan hat pops back on. But the amount of trust and space he gave me to make this film is kind of remarkable. So, I am I’m very grateful to him and grateful to consider him a friend.

    Paul McCartney in 'Man on the Run'. Photo: Rupert Truman. Copyright: © MPL Communications Ltd.
    Paul McCartney in ‘Man on the Run’. Photo: Rupert Truman. Copyright: © MPL Communications Ltd.

    What is the story of ‘’Man on the Run’?

    Paul McCartney forms new band Wings after Beatles breakup. Archival home footage shows his life with Linda McCartney, who influenced his music. The film follows Wings from formation through the 1970s, during which McCartney wrote hit songs.

    Who is featured in ‘Man on the Run’?

    'Man on the Run' premieres on Prime Video February 27th.
    ‘Man on the Run’ premieres on Prime Video February 27th.

    List of Rock and Roll Documentaries:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Man on the Run‘ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Morgan Neville Movies On Amazon

  • First Images Arrive From Sam Mendes’ Beatles Biopics

    (L to R) Paul Mescal is Paul McCartney, Harris Dickinson is John Lennon, Joseph Quinn is George Harrison, and Barry Keoghan is Ringo Starr in 'The Beatles – A Four-Film Cinematic Event'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    (L to R) Paul Mescal is Paul McCartney, Harris Dickinson is John Lennon, Joseph Quinn is George Harrison, and Barry Keoghan is Ringo Starr in ‘The Beatles – A Four-Film Cinematic Event’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Preview:

    • The first official pictures of leads Paul Mescal, Barry Keoghan, Joseph Quinn and Harris Dickinson as the Beatles are online.
    • Sam Mendes is busy making linked movies under the banner The Beatles – A Four-Film Cinematic Event.
    • The movies will be released in 2028.

    The cameras have already been rolling on Sam Mendes’ ambitious aim to chronicle a particular period in the life of musical sensations The Beatles, known as ‘The Beatles — A Four-Film Cinematic Event.’

    And we now have our first official look at actors Paul Mescal as Paul McCartney, Barry Keoghan as Ringo Starr, Joseph Quinn as George Harrison, and Harris Dickinson as John Lennon, the iconic foursome who changed the face of music in the 1960s and beyond.

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    The movies will also feature the likes of Mia McKenna-Bruce, Anna Sawai, Saoirse Ronan and David Morrissey.

    Related Article: Saoirse Ronan, Anna Sawai & more Circling Sam Mendes’ Beatles Biopics

    What’s the plan for Sam Mendes’ Beatles films?

    Paul Mescal is Paul McCartney in 'The Beatles – A Four-Film Cinematic Event'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Paul Mescal is Paul McCartney in ‘The Beatles – A Four-Film Cinematic Event’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    With the backing of Sony Pictures Classics –– not to mention being granted full life story and music rights by Beatles holding company Apple Corps Ltd. (not the iPhone gang), surviving members McCartney and Starr and the families of deceased colleagues Lennon and Harrison –– Mendes will make four different biopics, covering each Beatles’ experiences during the band’s rise to massive popularity.

    Though a strict time period for what the movies will cover has yet to be announced, the idea is for the stories to (naturally intersect), looking to get a fuller, clearer picture of their time than any one movie could hope to accomplish.

    Harris Dickinson is John Lennon in 'The Beatles – A Four-Film Cinematic Event'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Harris Dickinson is John Lennon in ‘The Beatles – A Four-Film Cinematic Event’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    Here’s what Mendes had to say about the project:

    “I’m honored to be telling the story of the greatest rock band of all time, and excited to challenge the notion of what constitutes a trip to the movies.”

    When will ‘The Beatles — A Four-Film Cinematic Event’ be in theaters?

    Barry Keoghan is Ringo Starr in 'The Beatles – A Four-Film Cinematic Event'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Barry Keoghan is Ringo Starr in ‘The Beatles – A Four-Film Cinematic Event’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    The current plan is for all four movies to land in April 2028.

    Joseph Quinn is George Harrison in 'The Beatles – A Four-Film Cinematic Event'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Joseph Quinn is George Harrison in ‘The Beatles – A Four-Film Cinematic Event’. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    'The Beatles - A Four-Film Cinematic Event', directed by Sam Mendes. (L to R) Harris Dickinson (John Lennon), Paul Mescal (Paul McCartney), Barry Keoghan (Ringo Starr), and Joseph Quinn (George Harrison). In theaters April 2028. Photo by: John Russo.
    ‘The Beatles – A Four-Film Cinematic Event’, directed by Sam Mendes. (L to R) Harris Dickinson (John Lennon), Paul Mescal (Paul McCartney), Barry Keoghan (Ringo Starr), and Joseph Quinn (George Harrison). In theaters April 2028. Photo by: John Russo.

    List of Movies Similar to The Beatles Biopics:

    Buy Sam Mendes Movies on Amazon

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  • Saoirse Ronan and More Added to Sam Mendes’ Beatles Biopics

    (Left) Saoirse Ronan as Rona in ‘The Outrun’. Photo: Martin Scott Powell. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics. (Center) Anna Sawai in 'Monarch: Legacy of Monsters,' coming soon to Apple TV+. (Right) Aimee Lou Wood in 'The White Lotus' Season 3. Photo: Fabio Lovino/HBO.
    (Left) Saoirse Ronan as Rona in ‘The Outrun’. Photo: Martin Scott Powell. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics. (Center) Anna Sawai in ‘Monarch: Legacy of Monsters,’ coming soon to Apple TV+. (Right) Aimee Lou Wood in ‘The White Lotus’ Season 3. Photo: Fabio Lovino/HBO.

    Preview:

    • Saoirse Ronan will play Linda McCartney in Sam Mendes’ Beatles project.
    • Anna Sawai and Aimee Lou Wood are among those circling roles.
    • The movies will be released in 2028.

    With his chosen cast in place to play the band members, Sam Mendes is busy putting the pieces together for his hugely ambitious, linked movie epic ‘The Beatles — A Four-Film Cinematic Event.’

    The films will feature Paul Mescal as Paul McCartney, Barry Keoghan as Ringo Starr, Joseph Quinn as George Harrison, and Harris Dickinson as John Lennon, iconic foursome who changed the face of music in the 1960s and beyond.

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    Now Mendes is finding the right people to play their wives, with Deadline reporting that Saoirse Ronan (‘Lady Bird’) is locked into a deal to be Linda McCartney (Paul’s better half) and Mia McKenna-Bruce (‘How to Have Sex’) is aboard to be Maureen Starkey (Ringo’s wife).

    And circling roles, per Variety? ‘Shogun’s Anna Sawai, who is the lead contender for the crucial role of Yoko Ono (who married John) and ‘The White Lotus’ Aimee Lou Wood, close to playing Pattie Boyd (George Harrison’s wife).

    Related Article: Paul Mescal and Joseph Quinn are Reportedly Playing Beatles Paul McCartney and George Harrison

    What’s the plan for Sam Mendes’ Beatles films?

    Ringo Starr, George Harrison, Paul McCartney, and John Lennon in 'The Beatles: Eight Days a Week - The Touring Years.'
    (L to R) Ringo Starr, George Harrison, Paul McCartney, and John Lennon in ‘The Beatles: Eight Days a Week – The Touring Years.’

    With the backing of Sony Pictures Classics –– not to mention being granted full life story and music rights by Beatles holding company Apple Corps Ltd. (not the iPhone gang), surviving members McCartney and Starr and the families of deceased colleagues Lennon and Harrison –– Mendes will make four different biopics, covering each Beatles’ experiences during the band’s rise to massive popularity.

    Though a strict time period for what the movies will cover has yet to be announced, the idea is for the stories to (naturally intersect), looking to get a fuller, clearer picture of their time than any one movie could hope to accomplish.

    Here’s what Mendes had to say about the project:

    “I’m honored to be telling the story of the greatest rock band of all time, and excited to challenge the notion of what constitutes a trip to the movies.”

    When will ‘The Beatles — A Four-Film Cinematic Event’ be in theaters?

    Mendes is currently aiming for the movies to release close together in April 2028, so he has his work cut out for him and a lot of hard day’s nights ahead.

    Olivia Colman and Sam Mendes on set of the film 'Empire of the Light.'
    (L to R) Olivia Colman and Sam Mendes on set of the film ‘Empire of the Light.’ Photo by Parisa Taghizadeh, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2022 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved.

    List of Movies Similar to The Beatles Biopics:

    Buy Sam Mendes Movies on Amazon

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  • Paul Mescal and Joseph Quinn Reportedly Aboard Beatles Biopics

    (Left) Paul Mescal plays Lucius in 'Gladiator II' from Paramount Pictures. (Right) Joseph Quinn plays Emperor Geta in 'Gladiator II' from Paramount Pictures.
    (Left) Paul Mescal plays Lucius in ‘Gladiator II’ from Paramount Pictures. (Right) Joseph Quinn plays Emperor Geta in ‘Gladiator II’ from Paramount Pictures.

    Preview:

    • ‘Gladiator II’s Paul Mescal and Joseph Quinn are reportedly playing Paul McCartney and George Harrison in new Beatles biopics.
    • Sam Mendes is putting the films together.
    • Barry Keoghan and Harris Dickinson are also linked to the movies.

    Ever since we first learned months ago that ‘Skyfall’ and ‘Empire of Light’ director Sam Mendes had come up with an ambitious plan to craft not one, but four interlinked music biopics about possibly the most famous group in the world –– that would be The Beatles –– everyone has been wondering who would land the coveted, challenging roles of main members Paul McCartney, John Lennon, Ringo Starr and George Harrison.

    That is now really coming into focus as, while nothing has been confirmed by either Mendes or the studio, the latest word from Deadline is that ‘Gladiator II’s Joseph Quinn is aboard to play George Harrison.

    That follows the report, from Ringo Starr himself, that ‘Saltburn’s Barry Keoghan will play Starr in the film.

    (Left) Barry Keoghan in 'Masters of the Air,' premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+. (Right) Ringo Starr in 'A Hard Day's Night'. Photo: United Artists.
    (Left) Barry Keoghan in ‘Masters of the Air,’ premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+. (Right) Ringo Starr in ‘A Hard Day’s Night’. Photo: United Artists.

    And talking of other people letting slip about potential casting, we also recently had Ridley Scott jokingly complaining that his ‘Gladiator II’ star Paul Mescal may not be able to reunite with him for the director’s next movie ‘The Dog Stars’ because of a clash with the Beatles movies.

    Here’s what Scott said about Mescal acting in his next project when asked by Christopher Nolan in a conversational Q&A held this week at the Director’s Guild of America:

    “Yes. Maybe. Paul is actually stacked up, doing the Beatles next. So I may have to let him go.”

    It’s an odd coincidence that two ‘Gladiator II’ stars are both now linked to the Beatles movies, but we shouldn’t really be surprised –– both are in-demand talents, with Quinn also having just worked on Marvel’s new ‘Fantastic Four’ movie (and according to Deadline’s sources toting a guitar around set as he practices guitar for the McCartney role.)

    Read on for more details on the Beatles film and the other current rumored casting…

    What’s the plan for Sam Mendes’ Beatles films?

    (L to R) George Harrison, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and John Lennon in 'The Beatles: Eight Days a Week - The Touring Years.'
    (L to R) George Harrison, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and John Lennon in ‘The Beatles: Eight Days a Week – The Touring Years.’

    With the backing of Sony Pictures Classics –– not to mention being granted full life story and music rights by Beatles holding company Apple Corps Ltd. (no, not the company behind the iPhone), surviving members McCartney and Starr and the families of deceased colleagues Lennon and Harrison –– Mendes will make four different biopics, covering each Beatles’ experiences during the band’s rise to massive popularity.

    A strict time period for what the movies will cover has yet to be announced.

    Here’s what Mendes had to say about the project:

    “I’m honored to be telling the story of the greatest rock band of all time, and excited to challenge the notion of what constitutes a trip to the movies.”

    And this is the statement from Mendes’ Neal Street Productions partner Pippa Harris:

    “We intend this to be a uniquely thrilling, and epic cinematic experience: four films, told from four different perspectives which tell a single story about the most celebrated band of all time. To have The Beatles’ and Apple Corps’ blessing to do this is an immense privilege. From our first meeting with [Sony execs] Tom Rothman and Elizabeth Gabler, it was clear that they shared both our passion and ambition for this project, and we can’t think of a more perfect home than Sony Pictures.”

    Who else has been rumored for Sam Mendes’ Beatles biopics?

    Harris Dickinson as David Von Erich in 'The Iron Claw.'
    (Left) Harris Dickinson as David Von Erich in ‘The Iron Claw.’ Photo: A24.

    Alongside Mescal, Quinn and Keoghan (who we’ve heard was originally hired to play Emperor Geta in ‘Gladiator II,’ only to be replaced by Quinn when scheduling issues reared their heads), the buzz for John Lennon has been around Harris Dickinson.

    The British actor, who has appeared in movies including ‘The Iron Claw, ‘Where the Crawdads Sing,’ ‘The King’s Man’ has a couple of films on the way, including ‘Babygirl,’ an erotic thriller co-starring Nicole Kidman and Steve McQueen’s World War II drama ‘Blitz.’

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    Is it wrong that there’s a tiny part of us hoping for Mendes to shock the world by announcing that he’s instead chosen the actors who played the Fab Four in 2007’s ‘Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story’? Yes, the world demands that Paul Rudd, Jack Black, Justin Long and Jason Schwartzman return as John, Paul George and Ringo!

    Related Article: Ringo Starr Claims Barry Keoghan Will Play Him in Sam Mendes’ Beatles Biopics

    When will Sam Mendes’ Beatles biopics hit theaters?

    (L to R) Olivia Colman and Sam Mendes on set of the film 'Empire of the Light.' Photo by Parisa Taghizadeh, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2022 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Olivia Colman and Sam Mendes on set of the film ‘Empire of the Light.’ Photo by Parisa Taghizadeh, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2022 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved.

    Given the scope of the movies, the current aim is to have the movies in theaters by 2027, with the plan for their release dates still to be announced. Will we see them release a month apart? Spread out across the years? It’s too early to tell.

    But here’s what Sony chief Tom Rothman told The Hollywood Reporter about his plans:

    “You have to match the boldness of the idea with a bold release strategy. There hasn’t been an enterprise like this before, and you can’t think about it in traditional releasing terms

    (L to R) Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, and John Lennon in 'The Beatles: Get Back - The Rooftop Concert.'
    (L to R) Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, and John Lennon in ‘The Beatles: Get Back – The Rooftop Concert.’

    List of Biopics Based on Musicians:

    Buy Sam Mendes Movies on Amazon

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  • Ringo Starr Says Barry Keoghan will Play Him in New Beatles Biopic(s)

    (Left) Barry Keoghan in 'Masters of the Air,' premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+. (Right) Ringo Starr in 'A Hard Day's Night'. Photo: United Artists.
    (Left) Barry Keoghan in ‘Masters of the Air,’ premiering January 26, 2024 on Apple TV+. (Right) Ringo Starr in ‘A Hard Day’s Night’. Photo: United Artists.

    Preview:

    • Ringo Starr says Barry Keoghan will play him for director Sam Mendes’ ambitious multi-biopic plan
    • He’ll make one film about each member’s time in the iconic band.
    • Apple Corps and the band have granted full life rights.

    Back in February, news first broke that Sam Mendes, the director behind movies such as ‘American Beauty,’ ‘Skyfall’ and most recently ‘Empire of Light’ had hatched an ambitious plan to make a biopic of legendary music group The Beatles.

    In fact, his idea was not to simply make one about the Liverpool-based supergroup whose music has dominated corners of the public consciousness for years, but four –– one each for members John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and George Harrison, their stories intertwining to produce a fuller picture of their rise to pop and rock stardom in the 1960s.

    Naturally, there has been feverish speculation about which rising stars or establish actors might be cast to play the four Beatles (not to mention those who were in the group before they hit it big and any appropriate partners etc.)

    Nothing has been officially announced yet, though now we have Ringo Starr saying he’s heard that ‘Saltburn’ and ‘The Banshees of Inisherin’s Barry Keoghan is in line to play him.

    Here’s what Starr told Entertainment Tonight about the potential casting:

    “I think it’s great. I believe he’s somewhere taking drum lessons, and I hope not too many.”

    Yep, Ringo’s got jokes.

    What’s the plan for Sam Mendes’ Beatles films?

    (L to R) George Harrison, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and John Lennon in 'The Beatles: Eight Days a Week - The Touring Years.'
    (L to R) George Harrison, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and John Lennon in ‘The Beatles: Eight Days a Week – The Touring Years.’

    With the backing of Sony Pictures Classics –– not to mention being granted full life story and music rights by Beatles holding company Apple Corps Ltd. (no, not the company behind the Mac), surviving members McCartney and Starr and the families of deceased colleagues Lennon and Harrison –– Mendes will make four different biopics, covering each Beatles’ experiences during the band’s rise to massive popularity.

    A strict time period for what the movies will cover has yet to be announced.

    Here’s what Mendes had to say about the project:

    “I’m honored to be telling the story of the greatest rock band of all time, and excited to challenge the notion of what constitutes a trip to the movies.”

    And this is the statement from Mendes’ Neal Street Productions partner Pippa Harris:

    “We intend this to be a uniquely thrilling, and epic cinematic experience: four films, told from four different perspectives which tell a single story about the most celebrated band of all time. To have The Beatles’ and Apple Corps’ blessing to do this is an immense privilege. From our first meeting with [Sony execs] Tom Rothman and Elizabeth Gabler, it was clear that they shared both our passion and ambition for this project, and we can’t think of a more perfect home than Sony Pictures.”

    Related Article: Sam Mendes Has Ambitious Plans For A Biopic About Each of The Beatles

    Who else has been rumored for Sam Mendes’ Beatles biopics?

    Paul Mescal plays Lucius in 'Gladiator II' from Paramount Pictures.
    Paul Mescal plays Lucius in ‘Gladiator II’ from Paramount Pictures.

    At this point, we can only imagine the size of the casting net Mendes and his producers have been throwing for the project, not to mention the clamoring of agents to get their clients either a meeting or an audition.

    As for the other main Beatles, the rumors so far have swirled around ‘Gladiator II’s Paul Mescal circling the role of Paul McCartney, ‘The Iron Claw’s Harris Dickinson linked to John Lennon, and Mescal’s fellow ‘Gladiator II’ actor Joseph Quinn (who will also be appearing in next year’s ‘Fantastic Four’ movie for Marvel) to portray George Harrison.

    Essentially, it’s been a who’s who of who’s hot. Mendes, of course, will make his choice in due time (assuming he hasn’t already) and we’ll have to wait for a big announcement to see who actually ends up on screen.

    Mendes’ movies will be highly anticipated, and not just for the scope of their ambition –– you need to find a way to stand out in the music biopic business; just look at the upcoming film on the life of Robbie Williams, which sees the pop star brought to life as a CG ape.

    The Beatles, of course, are on a whole other level.

    And interest in them continues to be high –– we’ve only just seen the latest documentary about the group, ‘Beatles ‘64’, which blends previously-shown footage with some new interviews.

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    When will Sam Mendes’ Beatles biopics hit theaters?

    (L to R) Olivia Colman and Sam Mendes on set of the film 'Empire of the Light.' Photo by Parisa Taghizadeh, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2022 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Olivia Colman and Sam Mendes on set of the film ‘Empire of the Light.’ Photo by Parisa Taghizadeh, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2022 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved.

    Given the scope of the movies, the current aim is to have the movies in theaters by 2027, with the plan for their release dates still to be announced. Will we see them release a month apart? Spread out across the years? It’s too early to tell.

    But here’s what Sony chief Tom Rothman told The Hollywood Reporter about his plans:

    “You have to match the boldness of the idea with a bold release strategy. There hasn’t been an enterprise like this before, and you can’t think about it in traditional releasing terms.”

    (L to R) Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, and John Lennon in 'The Beatles: Get Back - The Rooftop Concert.'
    (L to R) Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, and John Lennon in ‘The Beatles: Get Back – The Rooftop Concert.’

    Other Movies Similar to The Beatles Biopic:

    Buy Sam Mendes Movies on Amazon

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  • Sam Mendes to Direct Four Beatles Biopics

    (Left) Director Sam Mendes from 'Empire of the Light.' (Right) George Harrison, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and John Lennon in 'The Beatles: Eight Days a Week - The Touring Years.'
    (Left) Director Sam Mendes from ‘Empire of the Light.’ (Right) George Harrison, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and John Lennon in ‘The Beatles: Eight Days a Week – The Touring Years.’

    Preview:

    • Sam Mendes has a biopic plan for The Beatles.
    • He’ll make one film about each member’s time in the iconic band.
    • Apple Corps and the band have granted full life rights.

    Everything about The Beatles these days seems to be outsized. You have their legendary status, their record-breaking chart accomplishments and, more recently, Peter Jackson’s epic documentary limited series ‘The Beatles: Get Back’, released on Disney+ in 2021 and running for an astonishing 468 minutes.

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    Do you want to know a secret? Now ‘1917’ and ‘American Beauty’ director Sam Mendes has a plan for something that challenges that in terms of scope and ambition.

    While music biopics are all the rage at the moment (the most recent release, ‘Bob Marley: One Love’ has done decent business at the box office, and there’s a film about British singer Amy Winehouse due in May), Mendes is developing something that goes beyond the norm.

    He’ll make four films, one for each of the main Beatles –– John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr and George Harrison.

    What’s the plan for Sam Mendes’ Beatles films?

    Ringo Starr, George Harrison, Paul McCartney, and John Lennon in 'The Beatles: Eight Days a Week - The Touring Years.'
    (L to R) Ringo Starr, George Harrison, Paul McCartney, and John Lennon in ‘The Beatles: Eight Days a Week – The Touring Years.’

    With the backing of Sony Pictures Classics –– not to mention being granted full life story and music rights by Beatles holding company Apple Corps Ltd. (not the iPhone gang), surviving members McCartney and Starr and the families of deceased colleagues Lennon and Harrison –– Mendes will make four different biopics, covering each Beatles’ experiences during the band’s rise to massive popularity.

    Though a strict time period for what the movies will cover has yet to be announced, the idea is for the stories to (naturally intersect), looking to get a fuller, clearer picture of their time than any one movie could hope to accomplish.

    Here’s what Mendes had to say about the project:

    “I’m honored to be telling the story of the greatest rock band of all time, and excited to challenge the notion of what constitutes a trip to the movies.”

    And this is the statement from Mendes’ Neal Street Productions partner Pippa Harris:

    “We intend this to be a uniquely thrilling, and epic cinematic experience: four films, told from four different perspectives which tell a single story about the most celebrated band of all time. To have The Beatles’ and Apple Corps’ blessing to do this is an immense privilege. From our first meeting with [Sony execs] Tom Rothman and Elizabeth Gabler, it was clear that they shared both our passion and ambition for this project, and we can’t think of a more perfect home than Sony Pictures.”

    Related Article: Top Ten Beatles Movies of All-Time!

    When will Sam Mendes’ Beatles biopics hit theaters?

    Olivia Colman and Sam Mendes on set of the film 'Empire of the Light.'
    (L to R) Olivia Colman and Sam Mendes on set of the film ‘Empire of the Light.’ Photo by Parisa Taghizadeh, Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures. © 2022 20th Century Studios All Rights Reserved.

    Given the scope of the movies, the current aim is to have the movies in theaters by 2027, with the plan for their release dates still to be announced. Will we see them release a month apart? Spread out across the years? Will they come together? Any way it happens, we’ll dig it.

    Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, and John Lennon in 'The Beatles: Get Back - The Rooftop Concert.'
    (L to R) Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, and John Lennon in ‘The Beatles: Get Back – The Rooftop Concert.’

    Other Movies Similar to The Beatles Biopic:

    Buy Sam Mendes Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘If These Walls Could Sing’ Interview with Mary McCartney

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    Premiering on Disney+ beginning December 16th is the new documentary ‘If These Walls Could Sing,’ which chronicles Abbey Road Studio, the London recording studio made famous by The Beatles and many other musical artists.

    Directed by Mary McCartney, the film looks at the 90-year history of Abbey Road Studio including the recording of The Beatles albums, scoring ‘Star Wars,’ and the 90’s Britpop movement.

    The documentary features interviews with Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, Elton John, Jimmy Page, Roger Waters, David Gilmour, Noel Gallagher, Liam Gallagher, and John Williams.

    In addition to being a documentary filmmaker, director Mary McCartney is also an accomplished photographer, and cooking show host with her Discover+/Food Network series, ‘Mary McCartney Serves It Up.’ She is also the daughter of Paul McCartney and Linda McCartney, who in addition to being a musician was also an accomplished photographer and cookbook author herself.

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with director Mary McCartney in an extended interview about her work on ‘If These Walls Could Sing,’ the history of Abbey Road, interviewing her father, Elton John’s love for her dad, Jimmy Page’s contribution to ‘Goldfinger,’ how Indiana Jones saved the recording studio, and having to record the Gallagher Brothers from Oasis separately.

    Sir Paul McCartney, in Studio 2 Abbey Road in 'If These Walls Could Sing.'
    Sir Paul McCartney, in Studio 2 Abbey Road in ‘If These Walls Could Sing.’ Credit: Mary McCartney.

    You can read the full interview below or click on the video player above to watch our interview with Mary McCartney about ‘If These Walls Could Sing.’

    Moviefone: To begin with, obviously you and your family have a long history with Abbey Road Studios, but how did this documentary come together and as a filmmaker why did you want to tell this story?

    Mary McCartney: Well, up until doing this documentary, I was a portrait photographer and a photographer doing exhibitions and books. So, I was approached. A natural progression from photography is to move into directing and I’ve been directing more short pieces. Then I was invited by John Battsek from Ventureland, who is an Oscar nominated documentary director, he messaged me one day and said, “Have you thought of directing documentaries?” I was like, yes, I have. Then he said, would you please direct the documentary of the 90-year history of Abbey Road?

    If I’m honest, if you can believe it, my first reaction was to say no, because I thought it’s a bit too close to home. Then I had a little word with myself and I thought, yes, I will do this. It’s an amazing opportunity. I love Abbey Road and I’ve been going there since I was born. Even before I was born, probably in my mother’s tummy. There was so much I did not know about the studio, and I didn’t even know that it had a 90-year history. So, it has been a complete adventure and a pleasure to do this.

    MF: In addition to the amazing interviews you conducted for the movie, you also include a lot of archive footage. Can you talk about the challenges of finding all the material you needed for the documentary?

    MM: So, originally it was like, “Will you direct the documentary about the history of Abbey Road?” I was like, okay, yes. Then they were like, “We’ll make the archive completely available to you.” So, I thought I was going to go into this Aladdin’s cave of pictures and footage. Then I soon realized, which I should have known, is there isn’t very much footage because one of the golden rules is when you’re recording musicians and artists, producers and engineers, they’re locked in the space and it’s creative. You don’t want people filming you and distracting you.

    I soon realized that any archive footage we had, we’d have to make work. I think we worked really hard to make it look like there was a lot of footage, but actually it was scarce and we built it up through, as you say, audio interviews, photographs, and what film we could find.

    So, then going onto the interviews, the interviews had a lot of importance placed on them because I really needed to capture the essence and emotion of the studio through those interviews. That’s where my kind of career as a photographer came in because I have this bag of tricks. It created a nice environment for the person we’re interviewing. A lot of them, the majority of them, we were actually able to film at the studio, in Studio One, Studio Two or Studio Three.

    I think that really helped with the feel of it. Also, I just really tried to make it very relaxed and casual. I think that’s one thing that I’m really happy with in the documentary is that it is very conversational. They’re relaxed and I think it really allows the viewer to connect. I want to draw the viewer in and make them feel that by the end of watching it, that they’ve been in Abbey Road, that they feel that the essence of Abbey Road in their hearts.

    MF: Seeing how you are Paul McCartney’s daughter, and all the musicians you interviewed love and respect your dad, do you think that helped with conducting the interviews?

    MM: I think it did. I was slightly nervous because I haven’t interviewed people before and one of my habits is interrupting people. I get overexcited in conversation. I butt in and I kind of talk over people, so I really had to rein myself in. But you are right. I hadn’t really met Jimmy Page before. I know Elton John, but not that well. But then they’d end up saying, “Oh your dad.” My voice wasn’t going to be in it. So, it was funny in the end I gave into it and it became part of the feel of ‘If These Walls Could Sing.’

    'If These Walls Could Sing' director Mary McCartney taking photos at Abbey Road.
    ‘If These Walls Could Sing’ director Mary McCartney taking photos at Abbey Road. Photo: Mary McCartney/Tim Cragg.

    MF: The documentary starts with your narration and home photos of you and your family at Abby Road with your pony Jet, who the Wings song was written about. Can you talk about the choice as a filmmaker to really personalize the movie?

    MM: Once you’ve got a project like this, you’re really making it for the viewer. I’ve grown up in London so I go past that crossing on a regular basis and it’s always got people taking photographs on it, but it has more than this feeling of, tourists have come here to take their pictures. It’s more like when I look at some of those people, it feels like a family pilgrimage. It feels like a really heartfelt reason and it feels quite emotional. They’re there by the wall and at the crossing but they can’t go into the studio.

    So, I actually did think this was a real opportunity to bring this into people’s homes. I still get that feeling when I walk through the doors at Abbey Road. I did all the beauty shots there and I still walk in and it’s like you get this feeling of “There’s something special here.” It makes you feel good. It makes you want to up your game.

    MF: One of the many things I love about your dad is how unassuming he is. In the movie, he picks up a guitar and starts playing ‘Blackbird,’ and acts like it is no big deal. What was it like for you to interview your own father?

    MM: It’s a little nerve-wracking because interviewing anybody or photographing anybody, it’s like what mood are they going to be in? How are they going to be feeling on that day? So, I create the space that when they walk in, it’s going to feel good, but I can’t say what’s happened to them or if somebody annoyed them over breakfast. So, you want someone to arrive in a good mood because otherwise it’s difficult to be interviewed if you’re not feeling it.

    So, I set the studio, I had his Hofner bass, and I had a piano. When he walked in it had this feeling for him to be like, “I’m in Abbey Road.” It ignited some memories for him. The funny thing is, I had the acoustic guitar next to him and I was like, “Look, I really want to include ‘Blackbird,’ so if you feel like you could pick it up and just play some of it, but no pressure.”

    So he does, but my sound recordist had put a little square of carpet under his foot because when you’re interviewing you don’t want to hear people tapping their feet on the wooden floor in the studio. So, my dad is also a bit of a rebel and if you tell him he can’t do something… so he was like, “Why have you got this under my feet?” Then he was really happy. He was like, “Oh, and it’s in the documentary.” It’s like, “Oh, I’m just going to have to move this so you can hear my foot tap.” So, it was sort of quite sweet.

    He was in a really good mood and he loves Abbey Road. I think it’s one of the most relaxed interviews I’ve ever seen him do because he was really happy to talk about it. The people that he’s worked with there over the years, he loves and he really admires the technical brilliance of the space. I feel like that really comes across. He wanted to tell the world his feelings about Abbey Road. He was happy to reminisce.

    (L to R) Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney, John Lennon, and George Harrison in Disney+'s 'The Beatles: Get Back'
    (L to R) Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney, John Lennon, and George Harrison in Disney+’s ‘The Beatles: Get Back’

    MF: I get goosebumps every time Paul mentions The Beatles. Do you have that same reaction or are you somewhat desensitized to the whole Beatles-thing?

    MM: I knew partly any of the stories that I’ve put into the documentary. I think a lot of kids, like my kids don’t pay attention to what I do. I’ve taken pictures of the Queen, but they don’t go, “Mom tell us about when you went to the palace.” For some reason you just don’t until you become an adult and you leave home, I think then I’d question Dad more about his life and career. But I learned a lot through making this documentary, which is why I’m really happy that I did it.

    I didn’t realize that they had done all of their albums except one at Abbey Road. I didn’t realize that they had used all the different spaces. One of the interesting things about Abbey Road was that they had done comedy recordings there in the early sixties. They had a whole sort of special effects area for radio shows. So, those worked their way in on ‘Yellow Submarine.’ It just pieced together a whole area that I didn’t know about.

    MF: Can you talk about filming George Martin’s son, Giles Martin and having him play the original studio tracks for ‘A Day in the Life?’

    MM: Well, Giles Martin was a dream to interview because he worked so closely with his father and he’s been remastering a lot of The Beatles albums. He did the ‘Love’ album as well with his dad. So, he’s the total expert, but also he’s very eloquent. He was really able to explain a lot of the story about Brian Epstein, the manager, bringing in all of those kind of bands and singers then.

    He was a real dream to interview. He’s also a producer, so I was like, do you think we can get hold of the original Beatles master tapes? So, we filmed him and it’s great just to be able to see and hold those tapes with the original handwriting on them. It was really magical.

    Then, he’s pulling up the orchestral pieces, or the vocals, or the drums, and he knows it so well. He can just tell you the stories behind it. Again, it just really brings it alive and helps shows the recording process. So, within this, it is very important to show the recording process. It’s a recording studio and that’s a moment where the viewer can really see the mixing levels and feel how it comes together to be the finished piece.

    MF: The documentary also chronicles how the film industry, and especially Lucasfilm helped save Abbey Road after The Beatles stopped making records. Can you talk about that?

    MM: The really interesting thing I hadn’t realized is at a dramatic point in the documentary when they came across hard times, when all of the classical recordings had dried up, and it was like, “What are we going to do with this huge space of Studio One and do we have to make it into a car park or close it down altogether?” Then Ken Townsend, the manager, found out that a movie stage was closing down outside of London and quickly got a movie screen projector and he got the contract to do ‘Star Wars,’ and ‘The Lord of the Rings.’ Even to this day, all the ‘Harry Potter’ films were done there. So, dramatic moments like that, I knew nothing about those things.

    A load of major films are done there. One of the highlights for me in this process was interviewing John Williams. He’s an absolutely incredible and awe-inspiringly talented. There’s a really funny coincidence moment because I was interviewing him at a studio in Los Angeles and then completely coincidentally, and it shows at the end credits, Ringo Starr came in the back of my interview at the end and walked into the interview. So, that was quite a funny moment, which I put on the title credits. Ringo’s interview had been done months before in London, at Abbey Road. It was a complete coincidence he was there.

    I really didn’t know so many things, and through this process, I kind of became an expert, learning exactly what the history of Abbey Road and everyone that ever record there was. Then I thought, which stories do we pluck out? Because there’s no way of putting everything in.

    MF: The film reveals that Jimmy Page from Led Zeppelin was actually a session musician on Shirley Bassey’s recording of ‘Goldfinger’ for the James Bond movie of the same name. Can you talk about how you discovered that fun fact?

    MM: It was one of my favorite moments. I think in dissecting the story, I wanted to put in stories of session musicians and what that meant because I didn’t know that Elton John started his career as a session musician at Abbey Road playing piano on different people’s tracks, which is in the documentary.

    Then I found out Jimmy Page, who’s a legend as well, had recorded with Shirley Bassey on ‘Goldfinger’ for the Bond movie. So, I interviewed him and then intercut it perfectly with Shirley Bassey’s story. I think that’s one of my favorite moments in documentary because it’s so dramatic and fun. Because there’s this famous story of how she had to hold that note for so long and then Jimmy Page was like, “She collapsed on the floor at the end.” So, to get him telling that story was incredible.

    MF: You also were able to find footage of Shirley Bassey telling her side of the story. Was that hard to find?

    MM: Yes, but I had to find that. I knew this folklore story that Shirley Bassey had held this note and collapsed, but we had no proof of it. We hadn’t found that interview at this point. I was like, I really want to put this in the documentary, but how do we do that? Then, what we did have access to, which was incredible, is all the handwritten recording sessions, which were all sort of filed little bits of paper from Abbey Road. So, we could go to the ‘Goldfinger’ sessions and it had Jimmy Page down as one of the session musicians.

    So, it was a very well researched documentary. I had a really good research team. I had a great editor and it’s my first foray into directing and a feature length piece. The chemistry between the team was amazing. So, I’ve definitely got a bug to do more.

    Composer John Williams and Harrison Ford at Star Wars Celebration 2022.
    (L to R) Composer John Williams and Harrison Ford at Star Wars Celebration 2022.

    MF: It’s well documented that brothers Noel and Liam Gallagher from Oasis no longer speak to each other, was it difficult scheduling their interviews at Abbey Road? You had to record them separately, correct?

    MM: Yeah, they were recorded completely separately. My understanding is they do not speak to each other. They’ve parted ways but they still work together I think in a way. They’ve released documentaries. So, I felt it was important to have both of their voices and I was very happy that I had them both. I think even though they’re not together in the documentary, the section about Oasis has a warmth and it’s about the music and it’s about the stories. So, there’s a real warmth to it and they’re brothers, I would love for them to make up.

    But in the meantime, I think it really shows that Britpop moment. It shows how Abbey Road really facilitated the artists first and foremost. They brought in couches and things. They had a hangout chill area for when Liam Gallagher was waiting to sing. They have this canteen and bar at Abbey Road, so there’s sort of really nice little area to hang around in. But I really wanted to get both of their voices. They’re both very funny and they’ve got a good sense of humor. It really brings up that moment alive, and they are really influenced by The Beatles. So, again, it ties it all together.

    MF: Finally, Elton John’s segment in the movie really feels like a love letter to your father. Can you talk interviewing him and what he told you about how your dad influenced and changed his life?

    MM: I mean, Elton was really great on the day he arrived and he seemed really like he wanted to tell the story, and he wanted to do it because he tells an anecdote about when he was recording in Abbey Road Studio Three. It was quite funny because each person I would interview would be like, “We were recording and then your dad would come in and say hi.” He obviously was quite social, kind of nosing his way into different people’s sessions.

    But Elton said, “Your dad came in and was like, do you want to hear my new song?” And he just sat at the piano and played ‘Let It Be.’ Elton says in the documentary, it just really inspired him and it was just such a special moment that he’s held and has been so meaningful to him to this day. So, I think in doing this interview, it was his opportunity to say that out loud and in a way, say it to the audience, but also say it to my dad.

    He was like, “I want him to really know how much that meant to me and how much that really meant to me within my career, and how it sort of creatively inspired me.” It’s quite heartfelt, isn’t it? I couldn’t have expected that before. I had no idea what mood he would be in or what he wanted to say.

    Abbey Road, a detail photo of a tape machine from 'If These Walls Could Sing.'
    Abbey Road, a detail photo of a tape machine from ‘If These Walls Could Sing.’ Photo: Mercury Studios/Tim Cragg.
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  • Best Beatles Movies

    Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney, John Lennon, and George Harrison in Disney+'s 'The Beatles: Get Back'
    (L to R) Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney, John Lennon, and George Harrison in Disney+’s ‘The Beatles: Get Back’

    Beatlemania is back!

    Premiering February 11th only in IMAX theaters is ‘The Beatles: Get Back – The Rooftop Concert.’ The movie contains new and old footage from ’The Lord of the Rings’ director Peter Jackson’s three-part Disney+ series, ‘The Beatles: Get Back.’

    The Disney+ documentary series covers the making of the Beatles‘ 1970 album ‘Let It Be,’ and uses new footage originally filmed for Michael Lindsay-Hogg‘s 1970 documentary of the same name. ‘The Rooftop Concert’ centers on footage from the end of the documentary, which highlights Paul McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr in their final concert together as a band.

    But the Beatles are no strangers to appearing in movies, having starred in several feature films, an animated movie, and countless documentaries. There have also been several fictional films made about members of the band, as well as movies that celebrate the music and legacy of the group.

    In honor of the new IMAX concert movie, Moviefone counts down the top ten Beatles movies of all-time! For this list, we are including not only movies starring the Beatles, but also films about the band and their musical influence around the world.

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    Let’s begin!

    10) ‘Magical Mystery Tour’ (1967)

    Released in 1967, the film was written, directed, and starred the Beatles at the height of their psychedelic phase. The movie follows a group of people on a bus tour who begin to experience strange and magical encounters, and was inspired by Ken Kesey’s own bus, Further, and his work with the Merry Pranksters.

    The movie marks the third outing for the band starring in their own narrative film, and while it is probably the least appealing of any of the movies that the Beatles have appeared in, it does feature a performance of “I Am the Walrus’ with the band wearing animal masks.

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    9) ‘The Beatles: Eight Days A Week’ (2016)

    This documentary directed by Oscar-winner Ron Howard focuses on the Beatles’ touring years between 1962 and 1966, from their first gig in Liverpool to their final concert at Candlestick Park in 1966.

    The highlight of the documentary is 30 minutes of unseen footage from the band’s 1965 Shea Stadium concert, which had its sound remastered by Giles Martin, son of Beatles producer George Martin.

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    8) ‘Nowhere Boy’ (2009)

    Filmmaker Sam Taylor-Wood made her directorial debut with this 2009 film about John Lennon’s teenage years, based on a biography written by Lennon’s half-sister Julia Baird.

    The film stars Aaron Johnson as a young Lennon and follows his complicated relationship with his Aunt Mimi (Kristin Scott Thomas) and his mother (Anne-Marie Duff), as well as the creation of his first band, The Quarrymen, which eventually became the Beatles. Johnson gives a quiet and beautiful performance as Lennon, which gained a lot of attention from Hollywood and basically launched his career.

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    7) ‘Let It Be’ (1970)

    This 1970 documentary about the making of the band’s final album ‘Let it Be’ marked the last original film the Beatles would release before breaking up. The movie documents the interpersonal relationships between band members and illuminates some of the turmoil that would eventually lead to their dismantling.

    The highlight of the documentary is an impromptu rooftop performance, which sadly would become the last time the Fab Four ever played in public. Unused footage from the making of this documentary is what Peter Jackson utilized for ‘The Beatles: Get Back.’

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    6) ‘Yesterday’ (2019)

    Yesterday movie
    Working Title Films

    Directed by Oscar winner Danny Boyle (‘Slumdog Millionaire’) and written by Richard Curtis (‘Love Actually’), ‘Yesterday’ is a clever romantic comedy and a love letter to the music of the Beatles.

    The story follows a struggling musician (Himesh Patel) who through a series of events now finds himself the only person on the planet who has ever heard of the Beatles and plagiarizes their music for his own gain. In addition to Patel, the film also stars Lily James, Kate McKinnon, and in a hilarious cameo, Ed Sheeran.

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    5) ‘Across the Universe’ (2007)

    Across the Universe movie
    Revolution Studios

    Directed by Julie Taymor (‘Frida’) and based on an original story by Taymor and screenwriters Dick Clement and Ian La Frenais, the film utilizes over thirty songs composed by members of the Beatles.

    The movie also uses characters from Beatles songs like Lucy (‘Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds’), Jude (‘Hey Jude’), Max (“Maxwell’s Silver Hammer’), Sadie (‘Sexy Sadie’), Jo-Jo (‘Get Back’), and Prudence (‘Dear Prudence’). The film features an excellent cast that includes Evan Rachel Wood, Jim Sturgess, Logan Marshall-Green, Dylan Baker, Bill Irwin, Eddie Izzard, Salma Hayek, Joe Cocker, and Bono.

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    4) ‘Backbeat’ (1994)

    This 1994 movie directed by Iain Softly, centers on the Beatles original bass guitarist Stu Sutcliffe (Stephen Dorff) and his relationship with Astrid Kirchherr (Sheryl Lee), which led to him leaving the band before they had worldwide success. In addition to Dorff and Lee, the film also features Ian Hart as John Lennon, Gary Bakewell as Paul McCartney, Chris O’Neil as George Harrison, and Scot Williams as Pete Best, the band’s original drummer.

    But the best part of this movie might be the soundtrack, which featured an all-star band performing songs that the Beatles played in their early days. The musicians include David Pirner from Soul Asylum, Greg Dulli from The Afghan Whigs, Thurston Moore from Sonic Youth, Mike Mills from R.E.M., Henry Rollins from Black Flag, and Dave Grohl from Nirvana.

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    3) ‘Help!’ (1965)

    The Beatles second film, ‘Help!’ follows the group as they struggle to record a new album and try to protect Ringo Starr from an evil cult out to steal one of his rings. Directed by Richard Lester (‘Superman II’), the film’s plot is boarder-line ridiculous but does mark the last time the band’s pre-psychedelic years were captured on film.

    The highlight of the movie is that the Beatles were just being themselves and having fun, which is a stark contrast to their disillusioned behavior by the time they made ‘Let it Be.’

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    2) ‘A Hard Day’s Night’ (1964)

    The first of their many movies, ‘A Hard Day’s Night’ follows the band at the height of Beatlemania. What I like about this movie is that it is just a “slice of Beatles life,” and brings the audience behind the scenes to see what it would have been like to be a Beatle.

    They mostly just avoid fans, make TV appearances, and try to manage Paul’s “crazy” grandfather, played by Wilfred Brambell. Directed by Richard Lester, the movie was nominated for two Academy Awards including Best Original Screenplay and ranked 88th on the British Film Institute’s greatest British movies of the 20th century list.

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    1) ‘Yellow Submarine’ (1968)

    Not only is ‘Yellow Submarine’ the best of Beatles movie of all-time, it’s one of the best animated movies of all-time. Directed by Charles Dunning, the film marks the fourth movie released by the Beatles. While the band technically doesn’t appear in the film or even voice their own characters, they do perform the music, which includes ‘Eleanor Rigby,’ ‘Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds,’ ‘Nowhere Man,’ ‘All You Need Is Love,’ and of course, ‘Yellow Submarine.’

    The “totally trippy” movie begins in Pepperland, the home of Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, where the music-hating Blue Meanies have just attacked. Young Fred (Lance Percival) is tasked with fleeing Pepperland in a Yellow Submarine to find help to battle the Blue Meanies, eventually returning with Paul (Geoffrey Hughes), John (John Clive), George (Peter Batten), and Ringo (Paul Angelis), to save the day. The animated film also acts as a great gateway for parents who want to introduce their kids to the music of the Beatles.

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  • Every Robert Zemeckis Movie, Ranked

    Every Robert Zemeckis Movie, Ranked

    Paramount/Disney/Universal/DreamWorks

    Robert Zemeckis is one of the most exciting filmmakers working today, still. The filmmaker came of age in the 1980s with his then-writing-partner Bob Gale, working on a string of Steven Spielberg-approved projects to varying levels of success (some of the early projects fell flat until he made certain creative and commercial breakthroughs). And since that initial boom, he has continued to challenge himself (and audiences), utilizing new storytelling forms and technologies, always in the pursuit of the most exciting, emotionally resonant result. In honor of his entire body of work, we have ranked his entire filmography.

    18. ‘Welcome to Marwen’ (2018)

    Paramount

    Zemeckis’ latest film is, objectively, also his worst. Based on a sensational documentary about an artist (played by Steve Carell in this film) who, following a brutal beating, creates a fictional World War II-era in his backyard. Bafflingly, “Welcome to Marwen” turns a third act twist in the documentary that Mark Hogancamp (Carell) was targeted because he had a fetish for women’s clothing, into something that is revealed in the opening scene. Zemeckis, working at the top of his game as a craftsman, conjures Mark’s imaginary world, populated with doll equivalents of the women in his life, using cutting edge motion capture technology. But tonally “Welcome to Marwen” is all over the map, toggling uneasily between tragic drama and WTF-worthy fantasy (spoiler alert: there’s a witch). The only consistency is that both sides of the movie feel horribly inauthentic. Also, there’s a bizarre series of “Back to the Future” references that come off as just sad.

    17. ‘Flight’ (2012)

    Paramount

    After spending years in the wilds of performance capture animation, Zemeckis returned to live action with this overwrought drama, but it failed to connect on a visceral or emotional level. Denzel Washington plays a drunk, druggy commercial pilot who becomes an unwitting hero after a near-miss crash (and falls under increasing public scrutiny). Washington is terrific (as always), garnering a much-deserved Oscar nomination, and Zemeckis manages to eke out one dazzling sequence (the place crash, which includes a moment when Washington flies the plane upside down) but ultimately the entire movie crumbles under the weight of the cliché-riddled screenplay by John Gatins (also, bafflingly, Oscar-nominated) and some of the worst, most on-the-nose soundtrack choices in recent memory. “Flight” could have been great; it’s not.

    16. ‘The Walk’ (2015)

    Sony

    Part of what makes “The Walk” such a bland spectacle (even if you, like me, saw it in IMAX 3D), was that the story was already told just a few years prior in the much, much better “Man on Wire.” Sure, the actual walk between the Twin Towers (and the heist-like preamble) is breathlessly orchestrated in ways that only Zemeckis could, but everything else about the movie, from Joseph Gordon-Levitt’s cringe-worthy performance as whimsical French aerialist Philippe Petit to the maudlin romance that serves as the movie’s “heart,” falls hopelessly flat. Sigh.

    15. ‘Back to the Future Part III’ (1990)

    Universal

    Easily the weakest entry in the “Back to the Future” franchise, “Back to the Future, Part III,” released back-to-back with the sequel (it was teased at the end of “II” in a way that predates the Marvel post-credits scene), suffers greatly from the lack of involvement from Crispin Glover and from its own misplaced earnestness. Whereas the sequel had a prankster’s mischievousness about it, upending not only the rules of time travel but also the traditions of a Hollywood sequel, the third film is more or less a straightforward western with some nifty modern wraparounds. (His 1950s “western” costume is the best. The little atomic symbols are terrific.) But even an anachronistic appearance by ZZ Top doesn’t do much to elevate this well-intentioned bore.

    14. ‘A Christmas Carol’ (2009)

    Disney

    Teaming with Jim Carrey for a motion-capture retelling of the Charles Dickens yuletide classic probably seemed like a no-brainer for Zemeckis and Disney, who probably saw it as the chance to add a potential holiday favorite to the cultural lexicon, updating a beloved tale with cutting-edge technology. (A major talking point when the movie was opening was that it was Zemeckis’ return to the time travel story, which is sort of true.) But “A Christmas Carol” was a financial disappointment and a critical non-starter and led, ultimately, to Zemeckis and his ImageMovers enterprise getting booted from Disney. And it’s a shame, too, not only because of what Zemeckis had planned (a remake of The Beatles’ “Yellow Submarine” and a giant robot movie), but because “A Christmas Carol” is actually something of an achievement, a nifty, whirligig fable anchored by Carrey playing a whole squadron of characters. It’s absolutely gorgeous, too, and so fun to watch Zemeckis load up the original story with his characteristic set pieces.

    13. ‘Beowulf’ (2007)

    Paramount

    The finest film in the slate of motion capture provocations, “Beowulf,” based on the ancient tale, is the kind of heady, muscular filmmaking that only Zemeckis is capable of, but amped up to the nth degree thanks to the breakthroughs in computer technology and his never-ceasing “camera,” able to go places that a physical camera never could. Ray Winstone delivers the performance capture for the titular character, a warrior called upon to aid a village that’s being threatened by a marauding monster (Crispin Glover, collaborating once again with Zemeckis after the contentious fallout surrounding the “Back to the Future” sequels). The script by legendary fantasy author Neil Gaiman and “Pulp Fiction” writer Roger Avary deepens themes and creates plenty of space for Zemeckis to really cut loose. Originally, an NC-17-rated version was going to play in IMAX theaters while the PG-13 version would run in regular houses. That never happened and while the film remains full of implied grit, it’s still a hell of a ride.

    12. ‘Cast Away’ (2000)

    Fox

    Even when you might not care for the movie, it’s hard not to appreciate the audacity of some of these things. “Cast Away” was scheduled so that Tom Hanks could spend six months away from production, losing wait and growing out his beard and hair (in the interim, Zemeckis directed another movie) to simulate the effects of being stranded on a deserted island. And honestly, looking back on the film, the production is much more interesting than the actual movie, which features another A+ Tom Hanks performance, a couple of nifty sequences (the plane crash is, of course, a Zemeckis masterclass) and … not a lot else. Oddly forgettable (except for “Wilson,” obviously), this one has its charms but fails to stack up when compared to the rest of the filmmaker’s oeuvre.

    11. ‘Back to the Future Part II’ (1989)

    Universal

    In a weird way, “Back to the Future, Part II” has become nearly as influential as the original film, mostly in the ways that it gleefully upends expected tropes in favor of making a meta-textual commentary on the role of sequels and how filmmakers are asked to just repeat everything that made the first sequel great (by going back into the same sequences). An original version of the sequel had Marty traveling back to the 1960s, when his parents were flower-children, but the fact that Crispin Glover refused to collaborate sent them on a much different path. At least two movies in 2019 have referenced the film extensively (“Happy Death Day 2U” and “Avengers: Endgame”), a testament to its continued power (another point of reference is the fact that Biff seems to have become president in our real world). While slightly diminished by the lack of Glover’s involvement, its other biggest sticking point is the decision to make Marty some kind of hair-trigger hot head. It’s the dumbest part of an otherwise ambitious and adventurous follow-up.

    10. ‘Forrest Gump’ (1994)

    Paramount

    By the time that “Forrest Gump” came out, Zemeckis had garnered plenty of commercial success but had never had a runaway critical crowd-pleaser. That all change with “Forrest Gump,” which would not only wind up as the second most successful movie of the year but also land on countless best-of lists at the end of the year and sweep the Oscars, winning Best Picture, Best Actor (Tom Hanks), Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Visual Effects, Best Editing and Best Director for Zemeckis himself. It was a sensation. Looking back on the film, it can’t help but feel a little creaky (especially in the same year that “Pulp Fiction” and “Heavenly Creatures” were released, both signaling the arrival of major talents) but technically proficient and still very moving. This is Zemeckis at his most earnest and big-hearted, two qualities that Hanks’ performance very much embodies, and it’s pretty hard to hate on that.

    9. ‘Death Becomes Her’ (1992)

    Universal

    What began as a contentious production, with confusion over tone, a lengthy screening process and untested visual effects, has wound up a cult classic, celebrated particularly in the LGBTQ community and released as a new, special-features-laden Blu-ray from Shout Factory. A dark comedy is a tough sell to mainstream audiences, especially one this dark (the original trailer utilized music from Zemeckis’ “Tales from the Crypt” HBO series), so it’s understandable that “Death Becomes Her” took a while to find its audience. Meryl Streep and Goldie Hawn play a pair of women chasing the fountain of youth, until they literally find it in a mysterious vial. As the situation becomes more murderous, Zemeckis is given license to pile on the visual effects, including blowing a hole through Hawn and having Streep’s head on backwards. A wild, wonderful ride in which every performer (including a more-than-game Bruce Willis) knows exactly what movie they’re in, “Death Becomes Her” is an oddball delight.

    8. ‘What Lies Beneath’ (2000)

    DreamWorks

    Weirdly underrated, “What Lies Beneath” was the “little movie” that Zemeckis filmed in the six months Tom Hanks was growing out his beard and losing weight for the second half of “Cast Away.” The filmmaker wanted to make a Hitchcock movie but with all of the modern technological advancements (because, of course he did), although that scratches the surface of what he actually accomplished. For one, he made a tightly modulated thriller that veers from the kind of domestic, Hitchcockian tropes he was originally interested in to something far more ghoulish and supernatural. (This is the closest he’s come to recapturing his “Tales from the Crypt” magic.) He also, amazingly, subverted Harrison Ford’s movie-star image, turning him into a creepy letch (and then something even nastier), while cementing Michelle Pfieffer’s place as one of our most beloved leading ladies. Oh and the technological stuff (lots of computer-augmented camera moves and the like) is neat too.

    7. ‘Contact’ (1997)

    Warner Bros.

    It took a while for Zemeckis to settle on his follow-up to the box office-smashing, Oscar-sweeping “Forrest Gump” and when he did, it was a doozy: a long-in-the-works adaptation of scientist Carl Sagan’s lone novel “Contact” (which, in the circuitous universe of Hollywood, began as a screenplay). Some of Zemeckis’ greatest ideas and most breathless set pieces are housed within “Contact” (among them: the famous “mirror shot,” the terrorist attack on the spaceship, and the initial discovery of the message) but there are also some of his very worst inclinations on display, right alongside these breakthroughs and you can feel the sentimentality of “Forrest Gump” seeping into the hard sci-fi. (This is no more apparent than during the anticlimactic third act.) Also, Matthew McConaughey is gravely miscast as a spiritual leader and potential love interest for Jodie Foster. On what planet?

    6. ‘Allied’ (2016)

    Paramount

    Right before “Allied” was scheduled to be released, tabloid reports had stars Brad Pitt and Marion Cotillard carrying on a very real affair. But even that kind of creepy curiosity wasn’t enough to make the film a hit, which is a shame because it’s one of the director’s very best, most mature works, a World War II-set thriller that actually thrills. Pitt is a Canadian spy who starts working with Cotillard’s French Resistance fighter, eventually falling in love with her, before uncovering intelligence that she might be working for the other side. As Pitt struggles to figure out the truth, you can feel the noose tightening, and in many ways the film feels like one of Zemeckis’ patented set pieces but sustained over much of the 124-minute runtime. (Steven Knight’s script is terrific.) It’s a brilliant film, full of nuanced performances and edge-of-your-seat thrills. Eventually people will rediscover it and say, “Where has this been?”

    5. ‘Romancing the Stone’ (1984)

    Fox

    The legacy of “Romancing the Stone” can be felt in the number of modern action adventures that attempt to replicate that film’s tone and style but end up failing horribly. Because it really is something; there’s alchemy on display, a kind of lightning-in-a-bottle electricity, that has yet to be duplicated (even by its Zemeckis-less sequel, “Jewel of the Nile”). Kathleen Turner (who would go on to voice Jessica Rabbit), as a spirited novelist, and Michael Douglas, as a shady smuggler, are a dynamic duo, and their bickering, flirtatious banter felt both classically old school Hollywood as well as hopelessly modern. This movie has real gusto, and Zemeckis treats the comedy just as seriously as the action sequences, staging each moment with his typical meticulous attention to detail and the way that, whether it’s a set piece or a punchline, the moments can build and grow in complexity. More importantly, “Romancing the Stone” would end Zemeckis’ cold-streak and set up him for an unprecedented run of critical and commercial darlings.

    4. ‘Used Cars’ (1980)

    Columbia

    One of Zemeckis’ earliest projects and also one of his best, “Used Cars” is a gonzo, sometimes incredibly dark comedy that the director mounted after his flashy (and ultimately disastrous) writing gig on Steven Spielberg’s doomed farce “1941.” Kurt Russell, at the height of his 1980s, post-Disney charm offensive, plays a handsome dingus working at a ragtag car dealership competing against a much slicker lot across the street from them. As you can imagine, things get wild. At the time of the movie’s release, the humor felt too dark and esoteric for mainstream success, and you can feel that his early setbacks might have curdled the screenplay to a degree (the script was credited to Zemeckis and his longtime partner Bob Gale). But over the years it has garnered the appreciation it rightfully deserves. (Earlier this year a Blu-ray was released by Shout Factory.) No matter the price, “Used Cars” is worth picking up.

    3. ‘I Wanna Hold Your Hand’ (1978)

    Universal

    Zemeckis and Gale’s very first film remains a charming time capsule, cheery and manic in equal measure. “I Want to Hold Your Hand” follows a group of young girls (including a wonderful Nancy Allen) travel from New Jersey to New York City to try and get a glimpse of the Beatles as they perform on “The Ed Sullivan Show.” Of course, anything that can go wrong does go wrong, and the amount of mishaps and misadventures start to pile up. For his very first feature, under the mentorship of executive producer Steven Spielberg, Zemeckis shows a remarkable amount of confidence and talent, as he goes about layering in the humor and interpersonal drama alongside the big, calamitous set pieces that would go on to become part of his directorial signature. Despite strong word-of-mouth the movie never found its audience, although it was recently inducted into the Criterion Collection, cementing it as the classic we already knew that it was.

    2. ‘Who Framed Roger Rabbit’ (1988)

    Disney

    Who Framed Roger Rabbit” is Robert Zemeckis working at the top of his game, marrying technological advancements with a superb story for a film that is nothing short of a masterpiece. Mind-boggling in its complexity and aided considerably, at least when it came to licensing characters from competing studios, by the involvement of executive producer Steven Spielberg, “Who Framed Roger Rabbit” is one of those movies they just don’t make anymore, a film with endless franchise potential that wound up being just one film and one that didn’t take its audience’s sophistication for granted. (It featured cartoon characters and was the best film noir this side of “Chinatown.”) Taking place in a golden age Hollywood where humans exist alongside animated characters, it’s anchored by a wonderful performance by Bob Hoskins (in a role Harrison Ford priced himself out of) and filled with rich animation from Richard Williams (at the time Disney animation was in such bad shape they only contributed minimally). It’s still mind-blowing.

    1. ‘Back to the Future’ (1985)

    Universal

    After a string of critical and commercial disappointments, despite the mentorship of Steven Spielberg, Zemeckis made “Romancing the Stone,” a genuine smash but one that was his first “for hire” gig. Undeterred by his early failures, Zemeckis returned to an original concept, once again backed by Spielberg, with “Back to the Future,” a film that was made quickly and cheaply and ended up as a zeitgeist-capturing instant classic. Everything about this movie is noteperfect, from the casting of Michael J. Fox (who replaced Eric Stoltz after several uneasy weeks of filming) and Christopher Lloyd, to the subtle visual effects from Industrial Light & Magic, to Alan Silvestri’s twinkly score. For an entire generation of film fanatics, even the opening moments of the film, with the ticking of a thousand clocks, is enough for nostalgic transportation back to 1985. It’s a testament to the film’s power and singular spirit that it is still being referenced, recited and ripped off all these years later (sometimes by Zemeckis himself – see: “Welcome to Marwen”).

  • ‘Yesterday’ Director Danny Boyle on Whether or Not Oasis Exist in His Post-Beatles Universe

    ‘Yesterday’ Director Danny Boyle on Whether or Not Oasis Exist in His Post-Beatles Universe

    Universal

    If you thought that the only place to catch decent romantic comedies this summer was on Netflix, you are sorely mistaken. “Yesterday,” the greatest (and most swoon-worthy) romantic comedy of the year is set to open this weekend and, please, go see it on the biggest screen possible and with the best sound system available. Trust me. This movie is magical.

    The premise behind “Yesterday” is utterly delicious; it follows struggling songwriter Jack (Himesh Patel) who, following a worldwide blackout, is the only person on earth who remembers The Beatles. It puts him in a sticky situation, as he ascends to stardom based on music that he didn’t actually write and struggles to articulate his feelings to his longtime BFF/manager (Lily James). It’s all hilarious and sweet and charming and wrapped up in such a wonderfully weird concept that it’s virtually impossible not to fall in love with the film.

    And the man orchestrating this high concept carnival is Danny Boyle, the Oscar-winning director behind “Slumdog Millionaire,” “Trainspotting,” “28 Days Later” and “Steve Jobs.” His first proper romantic comedy since 1997’s bizarre “A Life Less Ordinary,” he throws all of the stylization and verve that you’d expect from one of the most expressive filmmakers of his generation, elevating “Yesterday” to an aesthetic level completely apart from its contemporaries.

    We were lucky enough to chat with Boyle from the movie’s Liverpool junket and we talked about the quandary of Oasis in the film, how hard it was to secure the rights to nearly 20 Beatles songs, and what happened to his James Bond movie.

    Moviefone: If the Beatles don’t exist and by extension Oasis doesn’t exist, what song did Jack sing to win Ellie’s heart all those years ago?

    Danny Boyle: It’s “Wonderwall.” When they disappear, it’s instantaneous. So they existed in the past in everyone’s lives and that’s what Oasis did. He sang “Wonderwall.” This is why it’s slightly insulting to Oasis but it’s also a compliment to them as well, because it’s a key song in his life. When he wakes up and thinks, Oh I’ve got to find her, he’s the only one that, obviously nobody else would remember it. And if he brought it up, she wouldn’t remember it, because they do exist until the lights went out and the bicycle accident happened. So they do exist in the past but not anymore in anybody’s memory except for his.

    It’s a slight insult to Oasis but also a compliment to them as well. And Noel has admitted many times the influence the Beatles were upon him and funnily enough when we were making the film Ed Sheeran said, “Listen, they’re the crucible from which everything comes.” So certainly in terms of British bands and songwriters, we’re all indebted to them, whether we admit it or not. From the man himself.


    How much of this world did you and Richard Curtis map out? Do you know how much has changed or what is different?

    I think it’s a different project if you try and literally map it out. It’s an abyss that you can really go into, if you want, but you’ll spend a lot of time in there try and working it out. But obviously it was part of a double helix. That’s one part of the story and the rest of the story is the love affair between his ever-loyal, persistent best friend and manager and his lack of recognition of that – where his heart should truly respond. So we spent more time on that than working out, because it’d more of a sci-fi working out what was going on, which would be a fascinating experiment but it’d take a lot of time to cover what the world would be like if you did not have them and what would happen.

    And we tried to cover that because the Rolling Stones still exist, so you think, Well, it’s not like all popular music has disappeared. There’s movements they led, which is really counter-culture and the ascendance of pop culture and youth in society, the need to listen to young people and their tastes and self-expression and pleasure, rather than duty and job and church and career and all of the things that had been in place before then. This new belief system, which is pop culture, would have still been in safe hands because of the Rolling Stones were even more preeminent in reality. But it’s impossible to work out. It would drive you mad. Because also they did exist until the moment they disappeared, so of course everything would have happened but everybody’s forgotten it. It’s like a nightmare.

    Speaking of things that went away, Ana de Armas was cast in this movie and even appeared in one of the trailers but she’s not in the movie. Can you talk about what happened and what role she played?

    It’s a great tragedy. So there’s an extended sequence, it’s actually on the James Corden show, and in the movie it’s a nightmare he has where he’s called out by Paul and Ringo. But there was a previous scene, just before that, on the Corden show for real, where he meets this actress played by Ana de Armas. She loves his work. And he writes a song for her on the show because Corden says to him, “You came up with ‘The Long and Winding Road’ in ten minutes, write us a song now.” So he does “Something,” the George Harrison song, and it’s a huge hit and she falls in love with him. It’s a wonderful sequence and it’ll be on the DVD extras. It’s very funny and she’s an amazing actress.

    But when we put it in the film, it was clear that we’d made a mistake in the choice of song. Because what we did very carefully through all the 15 songs, so you wouldn’t tire of them, is measure them so that they both compliment each other and there was contrasting one following another. And that felt like a repetition. When you watched it alone, it was fantastic, but when you put it in the film, it felt repetitive. So we sadly decided to take it out and I had the job of writing to Ana and telling her, “I’m so sorry.” She did a wonderful job. It’s not their fault. It’s a real shame. What happens in editing is the story arc dominates whether than your own particular favorite moments. That expression that’s always made in editing is that you should always be prepared to cut your favorite scene or your favorite shot. And you do get distorted in editing. You have to look at it in the way the picture unfolds. It is the final rewrite, editing, and it did reduce those scenes.

    Universal

    How hard was it to get those 15 songs?

    Well, Working Title, who are the preeminent production company in Britain, did a deal before I was even onboard, with Sony, who actually own the financial rights to the songs and Apple who are guardians of the aesthetic rights, i.e. how the songs are used. And they did a deal which allowed us between 15 and 18 of the songs and to be able to use them two or three times in the movie. So they did an overall deal and it was a wonderful deal and that’s a visionary producer knowing that they want the creative team to be able to pick the songs and be able to change them during editing. So we were able to drop songs, bring in new ones, use songs multiple times, we had a lot of freedom.

    That’s for covers of songs. The actual master recordings of songs are very, very expensive. But we were given the master recording of “Hey Jude” for the final credits sequence. We said, “Well, that’s amazing. We’ll play it for all seven minutes over all of the credits.” And it’s a way of honoring a great song which has been insulted during the film, being re-titled to “Hey Dude” by Ed Sheeran. We owed it to one of the world’s great songs, to hear it properly. And also after listening to him do 15 different songs of the Beatles, you deserve to hear the original band once.

    What happened with Bond and would you do another big action like that? Is that something on your wish list?

    Yeah I’ve always wanted to do … I love a big action movie. I’m a big fan of watching them. And part of me thinks, I would love to do one. And you have your own ideas about how to do them. And that’s what happened. John Hodge, the screenwriter I have worked with many times, he came up with this idea and it was a very good idea I have to say. And they just didn’t want to do it in the end. We parted company, because it’s sensible to part company at that point, rather than try and force through something that others are unhappy with. So we parted and I’ve spoken to the new director and wished him well. That’s all you can do really. Maybe they used our idea, maybe they won’t, we won’t find out until we see the film but it was a shame. But would I have another go? Yes. I am very tempted because if you’re lucky enough to be in the position to say, “Well, I’ve never done one of those, I’d love to have a go at that,” and you’re inclined like I am to make as much variety in your work as possible, yes I am still tempted to at some point to make a big action movie. Whether I will or not, I don’t know.

    Do you know what’s next?

    Sadly I can’t tell you because we’re in negotiations for the life rights at the moment. It’s at a very tricky stage. We may succeed, we may not. But if it was announced it would influence those negotiations. So I can’t tell you but it’s a great idea. It’d be a while before it sees the light of day, because it has to be written. And we have to get the life rights before we write. It’s like you have to get the Beatles music before writing the script. There’s no point in writing a script for a movie about the Beatles disappearing if you can’t use their songs. We need the life rights to this story before we set out to make it. So we’ll see.

    “Yesterday” is wonderful and it’s in theaters Friday.