Everyone looks very young.
How should he have travelled?Loved the series. As has been mentioned watching Paul McCartney in particular almost force a song into existence was sight to behold and spookily surreal.
I thought John Lennon was all over the place. Funny one minute (albeit his humour lacked any charm or warmth), stoned out of his mind the next, then totally focussed on getting the job done. Oh and I loved how he is touted as a "working class hero" turning up in a chauffeur driven limo.....
It feels like you’re standing just behind them for most of the time, which adds to the sense otherworldliness.Watched just over half an hour earlier, quite compelling & a little surreal to see them being rather ordinary in their interactions. Everyone looks very young.
How should he have travelled?
No, you’re not being stupid - I couldn’t find it on my daughter’s subscription either. You need to set the age to 16+ because it’ll be filtered out otherwise. There are one or two rather fruity words! (Nothing most 12year olds haven’t heard, mind)Does anyone have any idea why I can't find this on my daughter's subscription to Disney+...? It just isn't there. Am I being stupid...?
No, you’re not being stupid - I couldn’t find it on my daughter’s subscription either. You need to set the age to 16+ because it’ll be filtered out otherwise. There are one or two rather fruity words! (Nothing most 12year olds haven’t heard, mind)
I’m holding off watching this for that very reasonI've watched parts 2 and 3 totally hypnotised: at times extremely uncomfortable with the interpersonal dynamics, at times joyous, marvelling at the creative process, the endless banter. At times I felt reverential. When Yoko joins the band and does primal screaming ... wow, that is a band I want to see: if only they'd made a record!
Now I'm faffing about, delaying watching part 3. I'm scared, because then it'll be over.
It is fascinating how much people still resent Yoko Ono. Much of the contemporary coverage at the time was essentially racist or xenophobic but a worrying undercurrent remains.