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The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back

James Clayton


James intends to save the world from the proposed Yellow Submarine remake...

Published on Sep 25, 2009

Following the fresh re-release of their back catalogue and the arrival of their Rock Band game, The Beatles once again find themselves as grand overlords of pop culture and ruling the world once more. With the masses simulating life in the Fab Four to a remastered soundtrack of the old albums, we have entered what scientists may identify as Beatlemania Mk. II.

Brainwashed into Beatles frenzy by The Beatles: Rock Band marathons and too many repeat listens of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, everyone seems to be talking about the ‘60s icons. However, amidst all the documentaries and column inches devoted to detailing how the Fab Four inspired everything from the invention of apple pie and the music industry's discovery of facial hair to the Moon landing and the end of the Cold War, there's something that's not being talked about. I don't see much about the films that the band made in their heyday.

They may have ultimately redefined the rock ‘n' roll movie, but you'd be hard pressed to say that flicks like A Hard Day's Night and Help! rank as high-quality cinematic output. There's a fun charm in those films and no doubt at the height of Beat-Hysteria they were really hip. The sad truth, though, is that they are pretty poor movies with pathetic acting (Ringo excepted) and nonsensical plots.

If you really want to see a great movie about The Beatles, watch spoof mockumentary The Rutles. For the genuine Fab Four, taking a trip on Yellow Submarine probably ranks as the most appealing and creatively outstanding of the Liverpudlian group's official cinematic excursions. It's a shame, therefore, that out of all the band's bad movies, Disney has chosen to remake the psychedelic under-the-sea adventure. The end result will most likely be an offensive child-friendly CGI splurge that expunges all the acid-fuelled imagination of the original.

Why would they want to remake Yellow Submarine? When there are mania-afflicted consumers out there desperate for more Fab Four nostalgia bits, why not? Following in the footsteps of the Beatles-inspired musical Across The Universe that was released a few years back, come Christmas we'll also be seeing the dramatisation of the band's pre-fame origins story in Nowhere Boy.

Once again, are these really the Beatle blockbusters we want to see? If we're going to flog the Fab Four to the death before the remaining two members snuff it (though, on the strength of John Lennon's performance in Help! cardboard cut-outs could be more than adequate stand-ins) could we have at least have a touch of ingenuity? The Beatles were always looking to push boundaries and with either computerised avatars or some talented, versatile actors standing in for the deceased Lennon and Harrison - say, Johnny Depp, Robert Downey, Jr., Morgan Freeman - a new Fab Four feature is feasible.

In order to save the world from a ropey Yellow Submarine do-over, take Beatlemania to unexplored territory and stop stagnation setting in, here are some pitches for new Beatle-centric motion pictures for the movie industry's consideration...

Maxwell's Silver Hammer

Offbeat splatter western that sees The Beatles stranded in the arse-end of nowhere when their Magical Mystery Campervan breaks down during the Pan-American Comeback Tour. To add to their bad luck the band find themselves plagued by the sociopathic hillbilly of the title who uses his blood-stained tool to terrorise wayward drifters in the Grand Canyon. It's thus up to the Fab Four to tame the mass-murdering hick through Native American spirit rituals and campfire sing-alongs of All You Need Is Love.

She Came In Through The Bathroom Window

Gritty psychological thriller in which poor Ringo finds himself threatened and fighting in a battle of wits against a wild stalker who won't stop sending him fan mail. In the shocking climactic twist it emerges that the haunting menace is actually three different people: his bandmates. From the very beginning they were simply trying to spook him out of the group in order to get a better drummer but, alas, the revelations come too late. After a battle royale with kitchen knives, no Beatle is left standing and Yoko Ono claims all the royalties. This is, of course, the second twist and the post-credits sequence reveals that Yoko had planned it all along.

Happiness Is A Warm Gun

The Fab Four's ultra violent men-on-a-mission movie finds them on covert ops in the jungles of South East Asia. Their target is band guru Maharishi Mahesh who's been taken captive by communist guerrillas and it's up to The Beatles to brutally terminate all the terrorists with extreme prejudice. The sequel, Back In The USSR, sees the band tracking their way through Outer Siberia and torturing every ex-KGB renegade in their way until the secret plans for the Yellow Submarine are recovered. A Beatle's work is never done...

Why Don't We Do It In The Road?

Rom-com themed around the embarrassing troubles and trials faced by over-the-hill pop stars as they play the modern dating game and attempt to return to the carefree halcyon hippy days of free love and free drugs. The far-fetched plot finds that The Beatles are not only unloved but bankrupt and so they decide to stage a mass love-in on a motorway in order to raise funds, reputations and rusty body parts whilst also reigniting that flame of youth.

I Am The Walrus

Schlocky creature feature that sees the Fab Four freak out and turn into Were-Walruses after experimenting their buddy Dr. Robert's dodgiest substances. Thought that The Frog Song was the worst thing to come out of Paul McCartney? Think again as drug horror makes The Beatles mutate into giant beasts in the goriest transformation sequences this side of The Thing and The Fly. They've got tusks, flippers and an arsenal of catchy tunes: be afraid, be very afraid...

When I'm Sixty-Four

Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr wake up in a future space age to discover that they're now grumpy old men in this sci-fi fantasy that blends Howl's Moving Castle and Blade Runner. Struggling to cope with this unusual new era, Paul dyes his hair purple and the pair use the advanced technology at their disposal to resuscitate their two dead bandmates and bring back Beatlemania to fix the hole in the utopian society that's forgotten them. Actually, this one could be done as a documentary...

James' previous column can be found here.

 

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Users Comments

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By Discrespective 1 September 25, 2009 09:59:34 AM

Ahhhh Okay ... I don't know where to go with this, thing is I'm not gonna bag what you've said because some of them are sort of cool but speaking as someone who's complete pyscho for Beatles, the one thing I would love to see them do first that isn't finally releasing Let It Be on Dvd is with Magical Mystery Tour, I would like them to truely make it magic this time. Using modern technology how insanely hard would it be to change background in that movie ? Everytime that bus turns the corner it goes somewhere else, street in Rome, road in Tokyo, the Amsterdamn Tunnel in New York etc. I'm gonna get hurt saying this, still with I Am Walrus scene in that movie, why not have them transported somewhere every couple of seconds in that song ?!? John jumps up from piano and now they're gone from Penny Lane to being in middle of Piccadly Circus singing it ?!? Again it just suggestion, I know it sounds shit ... :-(

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By picknmix 1 September 25, 2009 10:27:38 AM

Personally, I think Beatlemania has missed the magical mystery bus. Quite why anyone would want to remake a very poor movie like Yellow Submarine is beyond me? Next some idiot will talk about remaking Moonwalker! Once was enough.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By ultramagic 1 September 25, 2009 11:23:35 AM

image movers digital, recent developers of 'a christmas carol' are a shoe-in for this. one of their guys just gave a talk at my uni. not to let slip or anything...

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By jfw1954 1 September 28, 2009 02:54:26 PM

"For the genuine Fab Four, taking a trip on Yellow Submarine probably ranks as the most appealing and creatively outstanding of the Liverpudlian group's official cinematic excursions." Funny thing is, the voices of The Beatles were not done by The Beatles.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By Naneek1 1 November 12, 2009 10:01:07 PM

Honey Pie The Movie. Richard Starkey (played by comedian Demetri Martin, and here an American actor will have to learn a British accent for a change) is a lonely hired car driver in the 20s who picks up the fair of his life: Honey Piechowski. She's a cute girl who looks a bit like Hetty Kelly, only a little healthier. She and he end up stranded for the night after a car accident on a lonely stretch of countryside road, and so a romance blossoms. Then, when they're rescued, Richard finds to his dismay, that Honey is headed for America to become an actress. The rest of the movie is his quest to find her, and his hope that she felt as strongly as he did that fateful night. The only problem? She actually became a success and he can't get near her.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By Naneek1 1 November 12, 2009 10:07:59 PM

Polythene Pam Directed by Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino, this movie would see the anti-heroine Pam in a post-apocalyptic world where women and children are victimized by bands of sex-maniacs. As a defiant gesture and a taunting, Pam is clothed only in Polythene, ammo belts, stiletto heels, and machine guns. And she is out to kill every last man out there. She's so good looking, but she also looks like a man, due to a beard she can't get rid of. She could be played by Jane Fonda in her prime, but Uma Thurman will do.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By Naneek1 1 November 12, 2009 10:09:34 PM

All Together Now. A movie about the invention of LSD, starring Ringo Starr as Albert Hoffman.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By Naneek1 1 November 12, 2009 10:22:52 PM

Blue Jay Way. (A Story of War and Redemption) Blue jays are aggressive birds, sometimes robbing other species nests. Blue jays often mimic the calls of hawks, and will sometimes drive other birds away from a feeder. Similarly, Jay, our protagonist is a desperate and cowardly man in World War One and resorts to profiteering on the black market. However, when his home town of Walthamstow is bombed by a zeppelin on Aug 18th 1915, he decides to use his accumulated wealth for good and helps to rebuild the town.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By Naneek1 1 November 12, 2009 10:32:33 PM

All You Need Is Love. A story about an alternate universe in which the world is populated solely by Courtney Loves. A young Paul McCartney finds a portal in his Rupert Bear Book and must save our morally decaying alternate Earth. Guest appearance by David Attenborough.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By Naneek1 1 November 12, 2009 10:36:47 PM

Taxman. A comic book superhero flick about a guy who is a mild mannered tax attorney by day and a white collar criminal nabber by night, sticking big corporations with the taxes they should be paying in the process. Starring Kevin Costner and Donald Sutherland as Mr. Corpor.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By Naneek1 1 November 12, 2009 10:39:43 PM

Curious George 2:Everybody's Got Something to Hide Except for Me and My Monkey. The long-anticipated sequel. Hey, at least the music would be better than that God-awful Jack Johnson.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By Naneek1 1 November 12, 2009 10:45:02 PM

Yer Blues. A documentary about the increase in illiteracy and poor spelling.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By Naneek1 1 November 12, 2009 10:47:02 PM

Cry Baby Cry. A fantasy about a medieval kingdom where children are subtly involved in the machinations of the state, playing upon their noble parents' superstitions.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By Naneek1 1 November 12, 2009 10:55:34 PM

Revolution 9. At a special laboratory in a hidden base in a mountain, an experiment using a Zippe-type Centrifuge to try and create the ingredients for the next generation of super-bombs goes horribly awry. It starts making a strange sound like "Awoowoowoowoowoowoo" just like John does in the "song". It's like a nuclear war movie without the war, mixed with other elements of your standard special effects-laden disaster movie.

Re: The James Clayton Column: Beatlemania is back
Posted By Naneek1 1 November 12, 2009 10:56:50 PM

If someone actually does make a movie about one of the above pitches, I will have to be bought out, and I am not cheap....
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