

- #Let it be the beatles original video mod#
- #Let it be the beatles original video series#
- #Let it be the beatles original video tv#
#Let it be the beatles original video mod#
Same director, same witty, camera-ready group as those in “A Hard Day’s Night.” But although the color film and mod production design look terrific, “Help!” regrettably gives our foursome too much of a plot. Lightning doesn’t strike the same place twice. Then they climb the roof and tear into “Don’t Let Me Down” and “Get Back” and prove that these guys literally and figuratively ended on top. Billy Preston enters the mix and things loosen up. Yoko Ono sits wordlessly at his side at all times. Paul is demanding, George Harrison is frustrated and John can be flip. But it is heartbreaking to watch these guys be jerks to one another.

#Let it be the beatles original video series#
It is undeniably fascinating to see Paul introduce “Maxwell’s Silver Hammer” as a series of chord changes and to watch his bandmates get it. The finale is the famous “concert on the roof” at Apple Records, the last time the Beatles ever performed live. The first two-thirds document the band as it works through and records new songs in the studio. But it is significant not only as a record of the Beatles’ process, but as an end-of-an-era time capsule. “Let It Be,” Michael Lindsay-Hogg’s fly-on-the-wall documentary of the Beatles’ last days is a considerable downer and has been somewhat locked in the vault. Read on to learn where to find them, ranked in order from best to most ridiculous - with the understanding that ridiculous is not necessarily a bad thing. But why stop there? The Fab Four’s other major film appearances are streaming, too, along with a few interesting cinematic vehicles for their music that came after they split. If you can’t catch it in theaters (see the official Yellow Submarine website for information on screenings and tickets), we’ve provided details on where to stream it from home. And while the film was famously born out of a contractual obligation, some distance shows that it is one of the better examples of the Beatles on film (even if John, Paul, George and Ringo aren’t actually in the film until the last few minutes - more on that later.) In celebration of its 50th anniversary, a newly restored 4K version of the animated Beatles film “Yellow Submarine” has returned to theaters in select cities this week (with 5.1 surround sound for extra psychedelic effect). Sign up for our thrice-weekly newsletter here.

#Let it be the beatles original video tv#
Watching is The New York Times’s TV and film recommendation website.
