A
Hard Day's Night Movie Review:
As
a comfirmed Beatlemaniac, I've seen this movie many times.
However, until now, I had never seen it on the big screen,
or seen it with the intention of writing a review. As a
fan, I've always enjoyed this movie simply for the music
and comedy it so joyfully provides.
Now, turning a more critical eye toward the film, A Hard
Day's Night takes on an even greater significance to me.
This film really is one of the greats. It heralded the true
birth of the music video format as we know it today, a full
17 years before the advent of MTV. Though Elvis Presley
had previously used film as a medium to promote his music,
A Hard Day's Night was the first time that film had been
used to promote the images of an entire band, not as fictional
characters, but as themselves.
In
the film, The Beatles act out stylized versions of their
public personae. The real genius of this concept is that
the packaged and mass-marketed images portrayed are those
of four young musicians who resist all attempts to be packaged
or mass-marketed. Throughout the film, the Beatles show
disdain for the corporate establishment while, at the same
time, feeding their own corporate machine. As a result,
their popularity with the youth of Britain, and the world,
increases exponentially. This is irony at its greatest magnitude,
and I absolutely love it! The Beatles were, indeed, one
of the first rock & roll bands to continually update their
public images to conform with the changing times. Again,
irony is a wonderful thing.
The
Beatles, themselves, do a grand job of mugging it up for
the camera, as the story revolves around the group preparing
to appear on a television program. They are all very natural
actors, and give good performances as those cheeky mop-topped
lads from Liverpool. Lennon especially seemed comfortable
with his part, proving once and for all that he really was
a devoted Marxist... Groucho, that is! The comedy styles
of the Marx Brothers and the Keystone Cops play prominently
in A Hard Day's Night.
The
music is, need I say, first rate. When it comes to early
Beatles tunes, and the days of Beatlemania, A Hard Day's
Night is the perfect time capsule. For this re-issue of
the film, the sound has been digitally remastered, with
the musical portions of the movie significantly enhanced.
The
print has also been digitally restored to it's original
1964 crispness, so that the true brilliance of Richard Lester's
mock-documentary style can be fully appreciated.
A
Hard Day's Night is playing in limited release across America.
It may take some time to find at a theatre near you, but
I guarantee it's well worth the search.
Allen
J. Vestal
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