Magical Mystery Tour (film)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Magical Mystery Tour | |
|---|---|
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| Directed by | The Beatles |
| Produced by |
The Beatles Gavrik Losey |
| Written by | The Beatles |
| Starring |
The Beatles Vivian Stanshall Mal Evans Ivor Cutler |
| Music by | The Beatles |
| Cinematography | Daniel Lacambre |
| Distributed by | New Line Cinema |
| Release date(s) | December 26, 1967 (UK release) |
| Running time | 55 min. |
| Language | English |
| IMDb profile | |
Magical Mystery Tour, starring The Beatles, was an hour-long special that aired on BBC TV on Boxing Day (the day after Christmas) 1967. Upon its initial showing, the film was poorly received by critics and audiences, but is now considered somewhat of a cult classic[citation needed].
Contents
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Plot
There was no script for the film, only a (mostly handwritten) collection of ideas, sketches, and situations, which Paul McCartney called the "Scrupt"[citation needed]. The basic plot involves a group of people on a British charabanc bus tour, focusing mostly on Mr. Richard Starkey (Ringo Starr) and his aunt, Mrs. Jessie Starkey (Jessie Robbins). Other group members on the bus include the "tour director" Jolly Jimmy Johnson (Derek Royle), the tour hostess Miss Wendy Winters (Mandy Weet), Buster Bloodvessel (Ivor Cutler), and other guests, as well as the other Beatles.
During the course of the tour, "strange things begin to happen" at the whim of "four or five magicians". Four of the magicians are played by The Beatles themselves, the fifth by long-time road manager Mal Evans.
During the tour, Starkey and his aunt argue considerably. Meanwhile, Mrs. Starkey begins to fall in love with Buster Bloodvessel, who displays eccentric and disturbing behavior. The tour involves several strange activities, such as an impromptu race where each tour group member grabs a different mode of transportation (some start running, a few jump into cars, a group of people have a long bike they can pedal). The tour also goes through a long crawl tunnel which leads to a set-up projector theatre, and involves a strange scene where the group walks through what appears to be a British Army recruiter's office. The film culminates with the group splitting up to see strip shows.
Musical interludes include The Beatles performing "I Am the Walrus" wearing animal masks.
Distribution
The film was first shown in the United Kingdom as a made-for-television film on the BBC; it was shown in black-and-white on BBC1, then in colour on BBC2 a few days later. It was shown at Christmas time 1967 on NBC in the United States in color. It was rereleased in the US in 1976, when New Line Cinema acquired the rights for limited theatrical distribution, and it was shown on American television in the 1980s in syndication. The original reception in 1967 had been so poor that no one had properly archived a negative, and the re-release version had to be copied from poor quality prints. By the end of the 1980s, MPI (via rights holder Apple Corps) had released the movie on video, and a DVD release followed later.
Criticism
The British public's reaction to the film was scathing. Hunter Davies, the band's biographer, said: "It was the first time in memory that an artist felt obliged to make a public apology for his work". McCartney spoke to the press: "We don't say it was a good film. It was our first attempt. If we goofed, then we goofed. It was a challenge and it didn't come off. We'll know better next time."[1]
Songs
- "Magical Mystery Tour"
- "The Fool on the Hill"
- "Flying"
- "I Am the Walrus"
- "Blue Jay Way"
- "Death Cab for Cutie" (Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band)
- "Your Mother Should Know"
- "Hello Goodbye" (finale played over end credits)
- "Jessie's Dream"
- "All My Loving" (orchestrated, as background music)
- "She Loves You" (played during the marathon with a carnival-style organ)
Release history on VHS and DVD
Videography
USA
| Year | Company | Format(s) | Comments |
| 1978 | Media-Home Entertainment | VHS/Beta | - |
| 1988 | Video Collection/Apple | VHS & Laserdisc | This version came with a digitally re-mixed and re-mastered soundtrack by Producer George Martin. |
| 1992 | MPI/Apple | Laserdisc | - |
| 1997 | MPI/Apple | DVD | The first ever DVD release of MMT. |
UK
| Year | Company | Format(s) | Comments |
| 1980's | Empire Films | VHS | - |
| 1988 | MPI/Apple | VHS & Laserdisc | This version came with a digitally re-mixed and re-mastered soundtrack by Producer George Martin. |
| 1997 | MPI/Apple | DVD | The first ever DVD release of MMT. |
External link
- IMDB entry for Magical Mystery Tour (1967)
| The Beatles |
|---|
|
John Lennon |
Paul McCartney |
George Harrison |
Ringo Starr Pete Best | Stuart Sutcliffe |
| Management |
| Brian Epstein | Allen Klein | Apple Records |
| Production |
| George Martin | Geoff Emerick | Norman Smith | Phil Spector | Abbey Road Studios |
| Official studio albums |
| Please Please Me (1963) | With the Beatles (1963) | A Hard Day's Night (1964) | Beatles for Sale (1964) | Help! (1965) | Rubber Soul (1965) | Revolver (1966) | Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (1967) | Magical Mystery Tour (1967) | The Beatles (The White Album) (1968) | Yellow Submarine (1969) | Abbey Road (1969) | Let It Be (1970) |
| Filmography |
| A Hard Day's Night (1964) | Help! (1965) | Magical Mystery Tour (1967) | Yellow Submarine (1968) | Let It Be (1970) |
| Related articles |
| Line-ups | Bootlegs | Lennon/McCartney | Anthology | Influence | The Quarrymen | London | Beatlemania | Fifth Beatle | Paul is dead | British Invasion | Apple Corps | Northern Songs | Yoko Ono |
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements | The Beatles films | 1967 films | Psychedelia

