![]() ![]() A must-see for Beatles buffs and anyone interested in how the '60s looked as they were happening (rather than in slick, retrospective recreations) others might want to take a pass. 62 fans 3. The film's sense of humor is very English, and occasionally prefigures the antics of the Monty Python troupe Harrison later produced several Python-related feature films. The psychedelic BEATLES Under appreciated Classic The Beatles 3rd movie - a must have for collectors Great Ok for a Beatles release Different great. But the "kids" are the Beatles, and the film contains genuinely interesting moments, including the "I Am the Walrus" section, which can be lifted out of the film and played as a stand-alone music video. This quintessential 1960s artifact has the amateurish feel of a home movie made by a bunch of overgrown kids with as many goofy ideas as good ones and the money to indulge their every whim, which is pretty much what it is. 106 Reviews Hide Spoilers Sort by: Filter by Rating: Coom on, join in What'sa matter with yer cerdo 2 March 2001 The silliness of this film seems to be lost on many Americans as a matter of cultural difference, but to anyone brought up in the British or Australian tradition it's a shambolic delight. Magical Mystery Tour might not be a masterpiece or have a real script but its still a film thats worth watching-plus, the music rocks. Peppers, and even spacier in parts (especially the sound collages. The psychedelic sound is very much in the vein of Sgt. It follows the Beatles as they rent a bus and take a trip — in both senses of the word, though there's no onscreen drug use — around the English countryside, have a variety of madcap adventures, sing (including "I Am the Walrus," "Fool on the Hill," "Blue Jay Way," "Flying," "Penny Lane" and "Your Mother Should Know") and end up at a ghastly spaghetti dinner. version of the soundtrack for the Beatles ill-fated British television special embellished the six songs that were found on the British Magical Mystery Tour double EP with five other cuts from their 1967 singles. ![]() Directed and produced by Paul McCartney, John Lennon, George Harrison and Ringo Starr, (significantly, no-one takes a writing credit) and originally aired on the BBC, this loosely structured phantasmagoria was reportedly inspired by the antics of Ken Kesey and his Merry Pranksters. ![]()
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