Completely understandable.It's not my number 1, but definitely in my all time top 10.A Hard Day's Night is my favorite film, period.
Went with my brother and sister and one of her girlfriends the first time I saw the movie. We sat through 3 double feature showings. I got sick after the first two showings and threw up in the theater. But I loved it.
Didn't know that.the lads get a new compartment mate, a stuffy old man (Richard Vernon, who'll be briefing Sean Connery in Goldfinger later the same year) with whom they verbally spar,
And if memory serves, Patty was the young lady who stuck her hand through the fencing in the baggage car attempting to touch Ringo's hair during I Should Have Known Better.Here the Beatles meet a group of schoolgirls, the most prominently featured of whom is Pattie Boyd, who'll soon be George's wife, and later Eric Clapton's.
My sister loved this part since Ringo was her bias.At the lads' hotel room we get some more beats of Ringo's inferiority complex, which are offset by him receiving a load of fan mail that easily outweighs the other three's combined.
So George and Ringo could dance, but John and Paul could not, apparently.Ordered by Norm to answer the mail, the lads quickly slip out to go to a nightclub, where a sequence ensues that seems like it was designed to emulate the Peppermint Lounge footage from the night of the famous first appearance on Sullivan.
Surprised me since I thought they weren't even plugged in for the performance scenes, as the songs were later dubbed in.After the song, Paul does a flourish on his bass that always sounded to me like a cameo of "I Want to Hold Your Hand,"
Too bad, I was looking forward to seeing it.If I could only post one clip to represent the film, it would be this sequence, so it's a pity that there's no good version of it currently available.
My absolute favorite sequence in the movie. George just low key kills these scenes. Plus the sequence was so well written. Hard to believe the actor who played the TV show producer wasn't credited. He was great.This is immediately followed by one of the best scenes in the film, which has George accidentally wandering into the office of the producer of a teen-oriented pop program (a surprisingly uncredited Kenneth Haigh):
Spinelli was perfect as the put upon erstwhile auteur "forced" to shepard this "circus" onto national TV on time and without a hitch. The Beatles nearly killed him.ollowing the performance we meet the fussy, overly worrisome TV director, brilliantly portrayed by Victor Spinetti,
It certainly was a great scene. Beautifully lit and photographed. George played a classical accoustic I'd never seen before.After a brief scene of amusing bits in the dressing room, the lads return to the TV set, redressed for a rehearsal of "And I Love Her," the film's most visually striking music sequence.
Phil Collins's idol worship apparently continued into adulthood. I heard a story about Phil standing in a line waiting to get an autograph from Paul during Paul's solo career and after Phil had achieved fame in his own right. Supposedly, Paul gave Phil a hard time for doing this....all of which is followed by the climax of the film, the television performance, which has the Beatles playing a series of songs to a crowd of ecstatic teens...mostly screaming girls, but also including, I eventually learned, a young Phil Collins, who's briefly visible as an audience member.
I imagine Paul might have been embarrassed by this or maybe was embarrassed for Phil, kinda like "shouldn't you and I, of all people, be beyond this sort of thing?" Don't know how much truth there is to this.
I'd like to see this. Can't Do That is one my favorite of the early songs.An additional performance of "You Can't Do That" was filmed for this sequence, but not used in the final film
The strength of the movie was not only Richard Lester's complete understanding of Beatlemania but also his understanding of the images of the individual Beatles. Lester was able to capture the craziness of Beatlemania and the Beatles's personalities (as we knew them), and weave them into a realistic story while also keeping it funny and full of great musical performances. They also surrounded the Beatles with some great character actors who really carried the story.The film is credited as being one of the most influential of all musical films, inspiring numerous spy films, the Monkees' television show and pop music videos. In 1999, the British Film Institute ranked it the 88th greatest British film of the 20th century.
No wonder HDN is still considered to be a classic, standing head and shoulders above rock movies that came before and the ones it inspired after.