Goofs
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damusicman33 — 12 years ago(June 21, 2013 07:29 AM)
It's actually a combination of the two "popular" stories. The Crickets inspired them to use the name of an insect and Stu and John had just recently seen a Marlon Brando movie(can't remember the title at the moment) with gangs, and one the gangs called themselves "The Beetles."
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hutcj@perkinscoie.com — 18 years ago(February 11, 2008 11:18 AM)
I want to add something to Todd-175's post. There was no mention of Silver Beatles. That was their name before changing it to jus Beatles. I'm a big Beatles fan too!!!
All Work and no Play Makes Jack A Dull Boy -
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johnston.scot — 17 years ago(June 21, 2008 02:31 AM)
There are a quite a number of instances of compression and time-shifts to make the story flow better and make more dramatic sense. I mean, face it: if any movie showed life as it really happens, it would be a sloppy mess of unrelated details happening in the wrong order, wouldn't it?
On point 7 - as shown in the movie, John's support of Pete lasted for about 18 seconds; then he promptly assigned Brian the task of doing the actual dismissal. Which, I suspect, is pretty much accurate.
I'll replace that with another one: I'm pretty sure George's line about not liking George Martin's tie was said directly
to
Martin himself. Which, personally, I think would be a funnier scene. -
RibSantasey — 17 years ago(July 20, 2008 08:02 AM)
yea, george martin said," well, boys is there anything you don't like?" (i don't remember what to but still) and george responded "I don't like your tie." george martin has said that that is one of the reasons he signed them to parlophone.
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fivefids — 17 years ago(November 05, 2008 11:53 AM)
This movie claims that John's mother bought him his first guitar and his aunt Mimi protested. Every book I've read about the Beatles, and the documentary film "The Complete Beatles" state that Mimi bought John his first guitar.
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chains01 — 17 years ago(January 23, 2009 10:23 AM)
First, there are two stories about the death of Stu. The first, and probably the most accurate, is that it was caused by the group who didn't like him and attacked him after the show. (The problem with this scene in the movie was that Stu wasn't hitting on their girl, Stu stood with his back to the audience because he was embarrassed of his guitar playing, and the guys liked it because it gave him an air of mystery.) According to Stu's sister though, Stu told her on a trip to Liverpool shortly before his death that one night while him, John, and Paul were drunk walking back hom one night, John just starting beating him up from no where out of the blue and kicked him in the head several times. Paul doesn't remember the story, and since she didn't say anything until around '93 John couldn't deny or corroborate the fact.
Second, John had been in Hamburg for a while prior to finding out about Stu's death. No one told him prior to leaving Liverpool, and no one was there to meet him when he arrived in Hamburg. After a few days he was on his way to see Stu and the Kirchher house when Astrid met up with him first and finally told him the news.
Thirdly, the name went through several different changes. They were The Quarrymen, but then they started leaning more toward rock and away from skiffle so they changed it to John and the Moondogs to fit the scheme of the way other bands were naming themselves at that time. Then they changed to to The Beatals, first as a reference to Buddy Holly and The Crickets, and also with the spelling changed to avoid references to creepy crawly creatures. They kept getting made fun of with the name and it was suggested that they go by Long John and the Silver Beetles, but John didn't like the allusion to Long John Silver so they just went by Silver Beetles when touring Scotland. The idea of going with just The Beatles was actually a suggestion from a famous poet they hung out with at the time and it stuck from there. Using the name The Beatles though had nothing to do with The Wild One, as suggested in the film, which none of them had seen at the time they initially decided to go with Beatals.
Fourth, the mop top haircuts actually had two different starts. First it started when Stu started having Astrid do his hair, at that point everyone else (except Pete Best) went to Astrid to have their hair done, but didn't want to be considered fags so John, Paul, and George redid their hair back in the old Elvis style. Later on, John and Paul took a trip to Paris and saw the hair style there and decided to style their hair like that at that point. (On another interesting note, they also bought bell bottoms in Paris, but ended up getting them hemmed to match the drainies they wore at the time because they didn't want to look faggy.) What Astrid did though wasn't quite the mop top as it would become.
Fifthly, as Mimi survived John (she passed away in 1992), and has been able to tell her story longer, the accepted story is that she bought John his first guitar, but since he played shows on a guitar prior to the guitar she bought him (which she paid the down payment, but John paid the installments) he had to have a guitar prior to that point. John had stated that his mother did buy him his first guitar, Mimi wasn't happy about it, and sometime later she bought him a new guitar when he said he really wanted a different guitar just to keep him off her back.
The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was convincing the world that he didn't exist.-Verbal Kint -
fivefids — 17 years ago(February 19, 2009 07:06 AM)
There's an interview with John's aunt Mimi on youtube and she claims she bought him his first guitar for 17 pounds. In any case, it appears there is much more to the story than can be told in a 1 hr 40 min TV movie.
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mcode518 — 15 years ago(February 18, 2011 01:27 PM)
Near the end of the movie while the Beatles are in Paris in January 1964, Brian tells them that they will soon appear on the Ed Sullivan Show. This was already arranged in November 1963.
Also, Brian had the Beatles changed into suits sometime in the spring of 1962, not after Ringo replaced Pete.
"They're not gonna catch us. We're on a mission from God." -Elwood Blues