Neatorama presents a guest post from actor, comedian, and voiceover artist Eddie Deezen. Visit Eddie at his website or at Facebook.
By 1964, putting a music star in a feature film was certainly nothing new, the roster of musicians doing so included such luminaries as Frankie Avalon, Annette Funicello, Ricky Nelson, Fabian, and of course, that paradigm of the low-budget (and lousy) movie musicals, Elvis Presley himself. The problem was that with few exceptions, such films were nothing more than cheap fluff and little more than an excuse to make a few quick bucks and get some songs (usually very bad ones) on the screen and perhaps (as in Elvis’ case) to release an embarrassingly mediocre soundtrack album.
Song quality notwithstanding, this was United Artists’ idea when they signed a newly popular group called the Beatles to a three-picture deal late in 1963. Their basic plan was to put out a cheapie, hack film with the red-hot pop group, then clean up on the soundtrack album. The second half of the plan actually worked, but as for the first half of the plan, the Beatles had other ideas. "We didn’t want to make another shitty pop musical", recalled John Lennon.
The film's title A Hard Day's Night is usually attributed to a malapropism by Ringo. After a late night recording session, as the Beatles were leaving the studio, Ringo quipped, "It's been a hard day's... night."
Instead of an actual movie with a typical plot, A Hard Day's Night was a quasi-documentary, capturing a day in the life of the most popular band in the world. As screenwriter Alun Own said, "I had a couple of false starts trying to write a fantasy film, but quickly realized that nothing could compare with their own fantastic lives." To get the flavor of the four individual Beatles and their lives, Owen lived with the Fab Four for two days. When he asked John what their life was like, John replied, "It’s a train and a room, and a car and a room, and a room and a room."
According to Owen: "I had a couple of false starts trying to write a fantasy film, but quickly realized that nothing could compare with their own fantastic lives."
It was Owen who wrote them as four clear and individual characters, giving life to the four classic Beatles’ stereotypes, which in popular opinion still holds to this very day (John, the witty one, the smart ass; Paul, the cute one, the romantic Beatle, the one the girls swooned over; George, the quiet one, the sullen Beatle; and Ringo, the dumb but cute "little fellow.") Owen added: “There was never a question of writing equal shares for them- I wrote for the four of them, remembering each one as important as the others.”
A rock bottom budget of 200,000 pounds (around $500,000) was allotted as the film's budget, along with a seven-week shooting schedule: March 2 to April 24, 1964.
The film’s opening shot is of the four Beatles being chased (by actual fans) down the street. George accidentally tripped and fell down in this opening shot, tearing his pants, but somehow this glitch worked, and was left in the film as its initial scene.
The Beatles spend the first half of the film on a train. It was on the train that George, in real life, met knockout actress/model Pattie Boyd, whom he was to almost instantly fall in love with, the two getting married 18 months later. Pattie had a bit role as a girl traveling on the train. Pattie Boyd was actually engaged to another fellow when she met George Harrison, but heck, what guy could compete with a Beatle?
Veteran British funnyman Wilfred Brambell was cast as "Paul’s grandfather," who the boys have to "baby-sit" on the train. But the innocent looking grandfather is actually "a villain" and "a king mixer," who delights in causing trouble for others (especially Ringo.) Norm Rossington and John Junkin were cast as "Norm" and "Shake,v the boys’ road managers. (These two characters were based on the Beatles’ two real life road managers Neil Aspinall and Mal Evans.)
Often using a hand-held camera for spontaneous shots, director Lester created new film styles with his innovative cinematography.
A Hard Day's Night is credited with inspiring The Monkees TV show, several spy films of the '60's, as well as the music video itself, later made popular by MTV.
All four of the Beatles, when asked their favorite scene in A Hard Day's Night, singled out "the field scene.” In an incredible and surrealistic romp, director Lester had the boys run around a big open field, helter-skelter, in comedic fashion. This incredible and exhilarating scene seems to capture the freshness, the joy, the exuberance of early Beatlemania.
As an interesting sidebar, John Lennon is, in the main, absent from this scene. On the day of shooting (April 23, 1964) he was actually stuck making an appearance at a literary luncheon with his wife, Cynthia, and director Lester had to "shoot around him.” At one point in the field scene, the three other Beatles run around as we supposedly see "John" running with his coat held over his face. This was not John, but Dick Lester, holding his coat over himself, pretending to be John.
The film's threadbare plot has them rushing around, trying to find Ringo, who has disappeared, in time to make a television appearance. According to most sources, the Beatles ad-libbed frequently, although Owen disagrees, maintaining that it was only John who actually ad-libbed. Ringo agrees with this, stating that the percentage of ad-libs by them was only "about two percent."
The Beatles enjoyed the filmmaking experience, although after being up drinking at clubs until two or three in the morning made their 6AM calls to the set most difficult. The four would be driven to the film set, looking over their scripts and learning their lines on the drive.
Ringo's big scene in A Hard Day's Night, where he walks along the seaside, chatting with a ten-year-old boy, was filmed while Ringo admittedly had a huge hangover from the previous night.
The film's big finale has the three Beatles finding Ringo, who has been arrested by the police, and making to to La Scala theater on time for the big show. The concert at La Scala ends the film, with the Beatles belting out half a dozen songs. Interestingly, future pop star Phil Collins was in the crowd as a 12-year-old extra. Unfortunately for Phil, he was to end up on the cutting room floor.
As the film ends, the boys run for a waiting helicopter to whisk them away to a late night concert. Alas, poor George had another unplanned glitch. During the film's final scene, he loses his shoe running for the chopper.
A few day's before the film shoot ended, producer Walter Shenson was desperate for a title song. He had already decided A Hard Day's Night was a perfect title and knew the film was to open with the boys being chased to the train, but had no music to overlap the scene. Shenson kept bugging John, and asking him to write a song, knowing the film's title would be A Hard Day's Night.
Finally one day, John said, "You've given me food for thought." John scribbled some lyrics on a handy matchbook cover in the car, as he was being driven home. The next day, John and Paul played the song John had hastily composed the previous night for Shenson. After they finished, John sharply said, "Now stop bothering me!"
Interestingly, when asked to rate who was the best actor of the four Beatles, Dick Lester was to choose George. Lester said George never gave too much or too little, but was always right on the mark.
He rated Paul's performance as slightly too theatrical. At the time, Paul was living with his girlfriend Jane Asher, a distinguished stage, film and television actress. Lester thought perhaps Paul was trying a bit too hard.
A Hard Day's Night premiered on July 6, 1964 in London, with the Queen Mother in attendance. It was a surprise smash hit at the box office, while garnering rave reviews from all quarters. Notably, Andrew Sarris of The Village Voice dubbed it "The Citizen Kane of jukebox musicals."
Of A Hard Day's Night, John was to recall: "That was a comic-strip version of what was actually going on. The pressure was far heavier than that." But John Lennon, notorious for being critical, cutting and harsh about almost every subject under the sun, also said: "I dug A Hard Day's Night."
The film was nominated for two Academy Awards: George Martin was nominated for Best Film Score and Alun Owen got a nomination for Best Screenplay (neither won).
Beatles biographer Julius Fast summed up A Hard Day's Night: "The picture took everyone, critics and fans alike, by surprise. The boys clowned their way through it, and brought to the film their own particular brand of insanity and mockery... in the end, the picture became a means of projecting their own image, four boys in adult bodies thumbing their noses at the world."
The next year, the Beatles made their second film Help! Of the two, A Hard Day's Night remains the classic.
Last bit of A Hard Day's Night trivia: interestingly, by design or not, the word "Beatles" is never used or mentioned once in the entire film.
And one of John's ad libs was in the scene when they first perform the song "If I Fell". As the 4 Beatles are making their way to the stage, they pass by a woman sitting wearing a hat with feathers. John noticed it and said "Look...it's a bird."
Years later, when I got to see what they looked like and see their movies, I warmed up to them a bit - but Thurston never did - he called them "hooligans".
I agree with Eddie - this is their best film.
The train sequence ends at the 16 min 30 second mark of an 87 minute film.
"Veteran British funnyman Wilfred Brambell "
Although best known for his role in the situation comedy 'Steptoe and Son' which had been airing on Television commencing in 1962, Brambell was was a serious dramatic actor with much stage work behind him when he appeared in a 'Hard Days Night'. He would not have been amused to called a 'veteran funnyman'. (He was also aged only 52 at the time.)
"the word "Beatles" is never used or mentioned once in the entire film."
"The Beatles" can be seen on the bass drum of Ringo's drum kit during rehearsals in the TV studio and during the final television performance.