A new restoration has been made
from the original negatives of “A Hard Day's Night” film will have its world premiere at the Turner Classic Film Festival this April 10 through 13 in Hollywood,USA. Is being presented in collaboration with
Janus Films.
When The Beatles made their feature debut 50 years ago,
nobody expected much. The rock ‘n’ roll musical had been around for a
decade without producing many great films. A HARD DAY’S NIGHT changed
all that. Directed kinetically by Richard Lester, the film captured a
day in the life of the teen heartthrobs in high style. Writer Alun Owen
toured with The Beatles for weeks to capture their characters and
speaking styles. Lester let the Fab Four throw in a few improvisations
and surrounded them with adept comic actors like Wilfred Brambell as
Paul McCartney’s grandfather and Victor Spinetti as a hassled television
director. Made for $560,000, A HARD DAY’S NIGHT grossed ten times that
in the U.S. alone, making it one of the most profitable films of all
time. The album shot to number one instantly, which is hardly a surprise
considering that the picture introduced The Beatles classics “All My
Loving,” “Can’t Buy Me Love,” “And I Love Her,” “Tell Me Why” and the
title tune, which was written by John Lennon in one night.
World premiere restoration from the original negative and presented in collaboration with Janus films.
Dir. Richard Lester
Interesting. I heard they were going to do somerhing ro commerate the 50th Anniversay, however I heard they were going to colorize it. Im glad they changed their minds about that! I think it would ruin it if they did that.
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