Current:Home > InvestThe Beatles' 1970 film 'Let It Be' to stream on Disney+ after decades out of circulation -Triumph Financial Guides
The Beatles' 1970 film 'Let It Be' to stream on Disney+ after decades out of circulation
View
Date:2025-04-15 10:09:57
The Beatles' final movie hasn't been available to watch in decades, but it's finally making a comeback with a little help from Peter Jackson.
A restored version of the 1970 Beatles documentary "Let It Be" will be released May 8 on Disney+, the streaming service announced Tuesday. Jackson's Park Road Post Production restored the film from its original negative and remastered the sound using the same technology utilized on the director's 2021 docuseries "The Beatles: Get Back."
"Let It Be," which chronicles the making of the Beatles album of the same name, was originally released just one month after the band broke up.
The original movie has been unavailable to fans for decades, last seen in a LaserDisc and VHS release in the early 1980s.
"So the people went to see 'Let It Be' with sadness in their hearts, thinking, 'I'll never see The Beatles together again, I will never have that joy again,' and it very much darkened the perception of the film," director Michael Lindsay-Hogg said in a statement. "But, in fact, how often do you get to see artists of this stature working together to make what they hear in their heads into songs."
Jackson's "The Beatles: Get Back" similarly took fans behind the scenes of the writing and recording of the "Let It Be" album using Lindsay-Hogg's outtakes, although the 1970 documentary features footage that wasn't in "Get Back," the announcement noted.
'Now and Then':The Beatles' last song is wistful, quintessential John Lennon: Listen to the AI-assisted song
In 2021, Jackson told USA TODAY that the original 1970 documentary is "forever tainted by the fact The Beatles were breaking up when it came out," and it had the "aura of this sort of miserable time." He aimed to change that perception with "Get Back," for which the filmmaker noted he was afforded much more time to show the full context than was possible in the original 80-minute film.
"I feel sorry for Michael Lindsay-Hogg," he added. "It's not a miserable film, it's actually a good film, it's just so much baggage got attached to it that it didn't deserve to have."
The director noted at the time that he went out of his way to avoid using footage that was in "Let It Be" as much as possible, as he "didn’t want our movie to replace" the 1970 film.
'They weren't breaking up':Here's why Peter Jackson's 'Get Back' defies Beatles history
In a statement on Tuesday, the "Lord of the Rings" filmmaker said he is "absolutely thrilled" that the original movie will be available to fans who haven't been able to watch it for years.
"I was so lucky to have access to Michael's outtakes for 'Get Back,' and I've always thought that 'Let It Be' is needed to complete the 'Get Back' story," Jackson said. "Over three parts, we showed Michael and The Beatles filming a groundbreaking new documentary, and 'Let It Be' is that documentary – the movie they released in 1970. I now think of it all as one epic story, finally completed after five decades."
He added that it's "only right" that Lindsay-Hogg's movie "has the last word" in the story.
Contributing: Kim Willis
veryGood! (6185)
Related
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- An EV With 600 Miles of Range Is Tantalizingly Close
- Temptation Island's New Gut-Wrenching Twist Has One Islander Freaking Out
- How a New ‘Battery Data Genome’ Project Will Use Vast Amounts of Information to Build Better EVs
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- The creator of luxury brand Brother Vellies is fighting for justice in fashion
- Netflix's pop-up eatery serves up an alternate reality as Hollywood grinds to a halt
- Damian Lillard talks Famous Daves and a rap battle with Shaq
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Amazon Prime Day 2023 Alternatives: Shop Target, Walmart, Wayfair, Ulta, Kohl's & More Sales
Ranking
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- What to know about Prime, the Logan Paul drink that Sen. Schumer wants investigated
- Our fireworks show
- The black market endangered this frog. Can the free market save it?
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Kelsea Ballerini Shares Insight Into Chase Stokes Romance After S--tstorm Year
- Indiana, Iowa, Ohio and Wisconsin Lag on Environmental Justice Issues
- The EV Battery Boom Is Here, With Manufacturers Investing Billions in Midwest Factories
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
Climate Change Makes Things Harder for Unhoused Veterans
Court pauses order limiting Biden administration contact with social media companies
The US Forest Service Planned to Increase Burning to Prevent Wildfires. Will a Pause on Prescribed Fire Instead Bring More Delays?
Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
RFK Jr. is building a presidential campaign around conspiracy theories
Deep in the Democrats’ Climate Bill, Analysts See More Wins for Clean Energy Than Gifts for Fossil Fuel Business
Barbie's Simu Liu Reveals What the Kens Did While the Barbies Had Their Epic Sleepover