![]() Yet it’s puzzling that what is supposedly revealed during the almost eight-hour bath of material in “Get Back” was already well known to anyone who was paying attention. That year, Bruce Springsteen wrote in his recent memoir, “there were no more magical words in the English language” than “the Beatles”-and his sidekick Steve Van Zandt, in his book, compared their cultural impact to a “spaceship landing in Central Park”-the transformative moment in countless musical lives. The arrival of the Beatles was a deep breath and a restart, as Billy Joel once said. ![]() This return comes just as we begin to emerge from the similar-sized shock of the pandemic-the assassination obviously much smaller in scale but significantly alike in its emotional panic, the sense of what couldn’t happen happening. The entire phenomenon, fifty years on, is an unexpected echo of the original Beatlemania in America, when their appearance on “The Ed Sullivan Show” in February of 1964, just months after the tragedy of J.F.K.’s assassination, lifted a depressed American mood. But the documentary works and, apparently, has been an astonishing success both in the numbers of people who have watched it and the number of responses it has provoked. ![]() I suspect that no one-truly, no one-could have imagined the success of the new Beatles documentary, “Get Back,” the director Peter Jackson’s recut of the footage shot in January of 1969 that produced the dim documentary “Let It Be.” After having taken on the task of reshaping our entire conception of the First World War in his previous “updated” documentary, “ They Shall Not Grow Old,” Jackson has now taken on the harder task of reconstructing our view of Paul’s quarrel with George over the guitar riffs in “Two of Us.” Even so: nearly eight hours of guys making desultory passes at old songs, painfully constructing new ones through hours of repetition and the testing of tentative lyrics-“Is Tucson in Arizona?” John checks with Paul as they write “Get Back”-all the while mildly bickering and talking past one another in a family broth of warm memories and clouded quarrels? Really? Only the remaining coterie of grizzled Beatles fans, surely, would respond.
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