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Publication date Usage Attribution 3. The filmed account of the Beatles's attempt to recapture their old group spirit by making a back to basics album, which instead drove them further apart. The film, which was shot in January , was originally intended to be a TV special called Get Back featuring the group rehearsing for their first live show in over two years.
The early rehearsals captured the group, along with John Lennon's soon-to-be wife Yoko Ono, clearly bored, with only Paul McCartney showing any real enthusiasm for the new material.
The first part of the film shows the strain of the early morning sessions held in a cavernous soundstage at London's Twickenham film studios. Producer George Martin recalled in The Beatles Anthology that the Let It Be project held great promise in the beginning: "They were going through a very, very revolutionary period at that time.
And they were trying to think of something new. They did actually come up with a very good idea, which I thought was well worth working on; The wanted to write an album completely and rehearse it and then perform it in front of a large audience -- and for that to be a live album of new material.
And we started rehearsing down at Twickenham film studios, and I went along with them. I suppose kinda like they do these days on Unplugged, except, y'know, it wasn't to be unplugged.
It was to do a live album. In John Lennon recalled the nearly month-long film shoot saying: "It was just a dreadful, dreadful feeling being filmed all the time. I just wanted them to go away. And we'd be there at eight in the morning and you couldn't make music at eight in the morning, or 10, or whatever it was.
Reviews for the film, which was released a month after the group's breakup, were mixed, citing the sluggish and depressing nature of the film, as well as director Michael Lindsay-Hogg's sloppy editorial choices.
But across the board, both critics and fans agreed on the power of the group's triumphant rooftop set. Y'know, even before they assembled in January, the idea was, 'Let's get back to playing as a live band' -- pretty good idea. But then it was, 'Let's make it an album and a film, and we're going to make the album a film of us doing a concert of songs we've never recorded before.
And then you're recording it -- the comparison I made in the book is kind of Nixon's 'The Watergate Tapes,' you have no idea that this stuff is going to comeback to haunt you forever. But, what made it worthwhile was the rooftop, y'know? Because when I left that theater, I was this far off the ground. Despite the fact that we knew everything that happened afterward. Yeah, that saves the film. He recalled prior to the lunchtime gig walking in on the four Beatles who were using one of the Apple offices as a makeshift dressing room: "It was like walking in on a band, a nervous bunch of guys getting ready to do an audition.
I don't know if it's because they hadn't played together, or whether they were trying to put the set together, but it was one of those kind of tense things where they were nervous. When we locked the doors upstairs, and the minute they started playing -- and y'know all the.
It's like it all went away and I really believe in my mind that they forgot everything and they were what they were. They were the Beatles. Let It Be is a filmed documentary of the Beatles rehearsing and recording their new album in The film culminated with a concert by the group set on the rooftop on their own Apple office building in London's west end. Paul McCartney's concept for the album and film was that it wasn't going to have studio trickery like overdubs and effects.
It was "back to the roots" with the Beatles performing the songs in a natural way. The film and it's accompanying soundtrack was delayed while the Beatles recorded and released their final album "Abbey Road". For the Beatles completist and serious fans, the biggest frustration has been in not finding the "Beatles - Let It Be" in a complete, uncropped, great quality version. The reason for this is quite interesting.
The film is available for download on Torrent websites and other channels. However, this is not the first time, a film has been leaked online for free watch. As almost every movie falls prey to this mess. In the past, many strict actions and restrictions were taken against these sites, but even after getting blocked, the sites bounce back promoting piracy.
This needs severe action by the cyber cell. Apart from leads, the movie also stars Guz Khan, Ruby O. Army of Thieves is now streaming on Netflix. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website latestly. Live Breaking News:. Home Entertainment Hollywood. Having said that, unfortunately the film is the latest victim of piracy, as it has been leaked online for free watch and download.
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