The Beatles‘ “Help!” is one of the group’s most famous hits. Despite this, John Lennon had a major issue with the song. In the 1970s, John said he wanted to rerecord the track to fix it. John Lennon ...
The Beatles were given the opportunity to make another film after the runaway commercial and critical success of their first one, A Hard Day's Night. Their second movie, Help!, had its world premiere ...
John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr began filming the second Beatles movie on Feb. 23, 1965. The project was originally named Eight Arms to Hold You, an innocent but prophetic ...
Sixty years after they invaded the US, The Beatles continue to be the gift that keeps on giving. After November’s release of “Now and Then” — “the last Beatles song” — some more unearthed treasure ...
Paul McCartney revealed an important actor who appeared in Help! inspired The Beatles’ “Eleanor Rigby.” Paul knew her well before writing The Beatles’ “Eleanor Rigby.” She compared the Fab Four to ...
The greatest challenge that any biographical film about the Beatles has faced is that the “Fab Four” rose to prominence during an unprecedented explosion of celebrity-focused media. Even if the ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. In The Number Ones, I'm reviewing every single #1 single in the history of the Billboard Hot 100, starting with the chart's ...
60 years ago, on August 6, 1965, The Beatles released Help!, and it soon became one of their most iconic albums in their discography. From “Yesterday” to “It’s Only Love,” the Fab Four came together ...
Unseen footage of the Beatles on the set of their 1965 movie Help! will soon go on sale after the 8mm film was unearthed after 50 years in storage. Actor Leo McKern, who played the evil swami Clang in ...
It’s 50 years since the release of the Beatles’s second feature film, Help!. Whatever you may think of the film itself (which got very mixed reviews) this rollicking film of “good, clean insanity” ...
In addition to the digitally-restored film, the new disc features outtakes, a 30-minute documentary, an introduction by director Richard Lester and an appreciation by Martin Scorsese. By THR Staff ...