Beatlemania Finds a Perfect Groove in A Hard Day’s Night
Bringing a joyous, free-wheeling spirit to the screen that
beautifully encapsulates the worldwide frenzy over the Fab Four circa 1964,
director Richard Lester’s upbeat, modish comic take on a day in the life of
Paul McCartney, John Lennon, George and Ringo Starr, A Hard Day’s Night features
the Beatles in their feature film debut, and at their iconic early peak.
Dynamically utilizing directional measures and camerawork, including a wealth
of on-location London shots that give a quasi-documentary feel to the
proceedings, to showcase the charismatic quartet and their hectic, lively
environs, the free-form screenplay by Alun Owen featuring a scant plot concerning
the band preparing for a television concert amid a series of misadventures affords
Lester and his stars the chance to spontaneously capture the Beatles’
personalities, interactions and performances of the incredible soundtrack by
Lennon and McCartney with a joie de vivre rare to find in the cinema. Creatively
crafted by Lester with a keen eye towards catching a specific moment in pop
history when the Beatles were leading a British Invasion in the Arts, and
performed by the group and a solid supporting cast of pros with great gusto and
wit, A Hard Day’s Night is accessible to both fans of the surging
phenomenon known as the Beatles and any moviegoer looking for a splendid,
invigorating night of entertainment.
For Richard Lester, Night represented
a huge rise in his stock as a preeminent director, after starting in American
and British television in the 1950’s, then moving on to film with a 1959 short,
The Running, Jumping & Standing Still Film, then a feature debut
with the musically-fused It’s Trad, Dad!, followed a 1963’s comedy The
Mouse on the Moon. Lester’s short film was beloved by the superstar group,
leading to his involvement with Hard. From the opening shots wherein the
four lads are chased thorough the London streets by an onslaught of impassioned
teens as the lilting, exuberant strains of title song and fast cut editing by
John Jympson sets the appropriate tone, until they finally elude the ecstatic
fans and find refuge in a train, it’s clear Lester is up to the challenge of adapting
the right visual approach to fully grant viewers a look inside the Beatles’
mammoth success, and how the abrupt fame affected their lifestyles as they
became instant icons of the era.
Lester finds ingenious, surprising ways to
showcase the supreme Lennon/McCartney songbook rife with great songs, from
using the title number again during an artful, vivid end credit sequence
featuring a wealth of pictures of John, Paul, George and Ringo, then going to
two different extremes concerning the mood of the piece, from taking a break
from the endearingly chaotic proceedings by utilizing the gentle strains of
“And I Love Her” as the band rehearses on the television stage in casual
fashion, to the exhilarating high of the famous “Can’t Buy Me Love” sequence,
wherein the group runs from the studio to cavort in the fields nearby, while
Lester dizzyingly films their escapades with overhead shots from a helicopter
to bring a literally uplifting, singular elation to the scenario. The director
also incorporates methods to add surreal moments, such as when the stars are
shown outside of a train waving at a gentleman they have just encountered
inside, before the next shot shows them back in the terrain compartment passing
by the perturbed fellow’s cabin.
The director aptly wraps up the film with the excitingly staged mini concert, wherein the action is focused as much on the (mostly) young girls in the balcony screaming and crying in ecstasy as the Beatles putting over several hit numbers before finishing things off with the perennially enchanting and buoyant “She Loves You.” If one is looking for one piece of archival footage to illustrate how overwhelming the influence was of the Beatles on the youths of this generation, the forceful shots of these enraptured groupies emotionally overcome and enthralled by their idols’ talent and appeal serves as a blueprint for the Beatlemania of the period. Lester would follow up his major Hard hit with another trendy British hit, The Knack. . .and How it Get it before reuniting with the Beatles for their second movie, 1965’s Help!, before going on to the helm one of the seminal 1960’s movies, Petulia, then maintaining a nice run of titles during the next two decades creating screen entertainments with often a sly comic touch, such as The Three (then Four) Musketeers, The Ritz and his biggest box office result via 1981’s Superman II, followed by the less impactful III, before making his fitting last screen effort in 1991's Get Back, which documented a Paul McCartney world tour, then settling into a lengthy retirement.
With seemingly effortless charm, magnetism and individuality, the
Beatles hold the screen throughout the film’s 87 minutes in a spirited,
endearing manner. Lester deftly illustrates each distinct persona involved in
the group, with John coming across as sophisticated, gib and impish, Paul (or
“Paulie”) more earnest and boyishly endearing, George the most mature,
thoughtful member, and sad-eyed Ringo as the good-natured, honest and childlike
innocent in the quartet. Whether jamming or trading barbs in tandem or featured
in singular vignettes, the Fab Four are persistently likable and sincere screen
presences, allowing one to wonder how much Lester’s guidance and to what extent
their natural thespian aptitude was responsible for their consistently
unforced, believable interactions with each other and their fellow castmates.
The Beatles are perhaps at their most compelling while being show in
the musical passages, wherein a viewer gains insight into how they worked as a
team in creating some of the great popular songs, lending a historical feel to
these moments as they practice their numbers with an easy and rare
synchronicity, or perform hits with precision and electrifying energy, making
it clear why the public was so despondent when this stellar, unusually talented
and unified superstar group broke up. Outside of these remarkable scenes,
possibly the most memorable subplot concerns Ringo, urged to seek out
excitement, leaving the studio environs to quietly roam around with camera in
hand, including a stroll near the waterside by Kew Bridge, wherein he strikes
up a conversation with a young lad, Charley (nicely played by David Janson),
and in the process of the sequence Starr strikes an indelible portrait as a movingly
forlorn, graceful and kind figure.
Among the other players, Wilfrid Brambell appears to be having a ball playing the colorful John McCartney, a.k.a. Paul’s (other) grandfather, a mischievous, leering livewire who’s responsible for Ringo venturing away from the studio. In his most humorous sequence, John journeys to a casino and, equipment with his own (soon to be) Bond girl, Margaret Nolan (shortly before her iconic appearance in Goldfinger, particularly as the bikini and aurum-adorned focus of the title sequence), goes on a spree until the boys come to abate his reckless actions. Norman Rossington and John Junkin form a nice comic duo as Norm and Shake, the Beatles’ frequently exasperated and more benign managers, while a be-specked Anna Quayle has a nice bit as Millie, a woman who encounters Lennon and isn’t quite sure about identifying him as Lennon. Victor Spinetti also stands out as the ultra-dramatic director of the televised show, while Marianne Stone, fresh from her definitive work as Peter Sellers’ mysterious dark lady in Lolita, shows up as a reporter. In other brief parts, Pattie Boyd (soon to be Mrs. George Harrison) can be seen as Jean, the attractive blonde who captures the boys’ attention on the train, while Charlotte Rampling and Phil Collins apparently are also on view as a dancer in a nightclub and a teen fan during the finale, but online research may be necessary to find where they actually appear in the film.
The jubilant A Hard Day’s Night found favor with both critics and audiences upon its July 1964 opening in London, with Lester’s inventive helming and the Beatles natural charm and talent onscreen gaining substantial hosannas in mainly positive reviews, while potent box-office rentals of $4,473,000 (according to Variety) ranked the film among the top hits of 1964. During awards season, the film ended up on The New York Times “Ten Best” list, then went on to earn Academy Award nominations for Owen’s playful original story and screenplay and George Martin for Scoring- Adaptation or Treatment although, in a true botch rating as one of Oscar’s biggest faux pas, neither the glorious musical score or any of the timeless songs managed to place among the nominees that year. The hit-ladened soundtrack was another key factor in building the film into a major success, with the album amassing 14 weeks at #1 on the Billboard charts, resulting in it gaining status as the top album of the year. With it’s brisk, docu-style filmmaking and constantly beguiling stars holding the screen with flair during both narrative and incredible musical sequences, A Hard’s Day’s Night retains a freshness and a good-natured vibe that should prove irresistible to viewers as it transports them back to a happier time and place when the world was the vibrant, uniquely gifted Beatles’ oyster.
And a fond farewell to another British icon,
Terence Stamp, who passed on August 17th at age 87. Gaining an auspicious
start in films with his Oscar-nominated, Golden Globe-winning (for Best
Newcomer) work as the beatific, observant title character in 1962’s Billy
Budd, Stamp would solidify his place among filmdom’s top young thespians
with Cannes-winning work in William Wyler’s The Collector and 1967’s Far
from the Madding Crowd. Sparser appearances in the 1970s eventually led to his sinister
General Zod in 1978’s blockbuster Superman before being featured more prominently
as one of the chief villains in Superman II. Stamp figured in some 1980s
mainstream offerings such as Wall Street and Young Guns, before
witnessing a career-enlivening comeback via his flamboyant-but-grounded and
powerful depiction of the indomitable Bernadette in 1994’s The Adventures of
Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. Following this landmark role, Stamp scored
another big critical success with 1999’s The Limey, then worked
frequently in films until his final screen role in 2021’s Last Night in
Soho.