Movie |
Archive Footage | Music Documentary
Featuring never-before-seen footage of the band and the legions of young fans who helped fuel their ascendance, follow McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison and Starr as they land in New York City in February 1964 and solidify their status as the biggest band in the world.
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Featuring never-before-seen footage of the band and the legions of young fans who helped fuel their ascendance, follow McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison and Starr as they land in New York City in February 1964 and solidify their status as the biggest band in the world.
Best Music Documentary | 2024 | Jonathan Clyde
Outstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing for Television NonFiction Variety or Music Series or Specials | 2025 | Josh Berger
Outstanding Achievement in Music Editing Documentary | 2025 | John M. Davis
Best Edited Documentary Film | 2025 | Mariah Rehmet
Producer Martin Scorsese previously directed the documentary film George Harrison: Living in the Material World (2011), about The Beatles' guitarist George Harrison.
Includes rare footage filmed by documentarians Albert Maysles and David Maysles utilized for the film What's Happening! The Beatles in the U.S.A. (1964).
In a 2024 interview with Variety, David Tedeschi spoke about some of the previously unseen footage and one interview in particular that surprised him: "That Harlem footage had never been seen before. So you have various reactions from young, black teenage girls and boys, and a few older people, and of course you have these young men in the record store. The one guy says, 'It's just disgusting the way they play that music over and over again. I like Miles Davis. I like John Coltrane.' But it was sort of interesting the way the teenage girls in Harlem just loved The Beatles, loved their hair, loved their music. That to me was a surprising thing, because of course the civil rights movement was going on. Of course I knew that later on when they actually toured the States, they refused to play before segregated audiences. But when we decided to interview Smokey Robinson, I didn't expect him to say everything that he said. One of the things was that the Beatles were the first white artist of their magnitude that said they loved and learned from black music and sang black music. We have several people, from David Lynch to Smokey, talking about the power of music, I thought in a very beautiful way. And when Smokey says in regards to the audiences being desegregated, that it gave kids a common love and that it was the power of music that literally overcame the barrier that was set up between the white audience and the black audience, I thought that was really a wonderful thing for him to say, and unexpected."