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Yellow Submarine

Once upon a time... or maybe twice, there was an unearthly paradise called Pepperland – a place where happiness and music reigned supreme. But all that was threatened when the terrible Blue Meanies declared war and sent in their army led by a menacing Flying Glove to destroy all that was good. Enter John, Paul, George and Ringo to save the day! Armed with little more than their humour, songs, and of course, their yellow submarine, the Fab Four tackle the rough seas ahead in an effort to bring down the evil forces of bluedom.

When their spectacular feature, Yellow Submarine, debuted in 1968, it was instantly recognisable as a landmark film. By merging the visual splendour of animation with a fantasy – adventure tale filled with peace, love, hope and of course, music, Yellow Submarine captured the essence of the Sixties. And by integrating the freestyle approach of the era with innovative animation techniques, it revolutionised a genre.

“The music, let’s face it, was the inspiration for the whole film,” said Yellow Submarine line producer John Coates. Directed by George Dunning, and written by Lee Minoff, Al Brodax, Jack Medelsohn and Erich Segal, Yellow Submarine began its voyage to the screen when Brodax, who had previously produced nearly 40 episodes of ABC’s animated Beatles TV series, approached Beatles’ manager Brian Epstein, with a unique vision for a full-length animated feature.

Inspired by the generations’s new trends in art, Yellow Submarine sits aloingside the dazzling Pop Art styles of Andy Warhol, Martin Sharp, Alan Aldridge and Peter Blake.

After seeing just four of German poster artist Heinz Edelmann’s incredible drawings, they knew he was the right man for the job.

“I thought from the very beginning that the film should be a series of interconnected shorts” remembers Edelmann. “The style should vary every five minutes or so to keep the interest going until the end”. These styles included melding love-action photography with animation, 3 dimensional sequences and kaleidoscopic “rotoscoping” where film is traced frame by frame into drawings.

The entire process took nearly two years, some 14 different scripts, 40 animators and 140 technical artists, but achieved its aims in producing a ground breaking piece of animation.

This visual feast is combined with a brilliant soundtrack of Beatles’ music including “Eleanor Rigby”, “When I’m 64”, “Lucy in the Sky With Diamonds” and “All You Need Is Love” creating a masterpiece that can be enjoyed by all.

Facts

Comments

  • Laura

    Laura on 25th Jul 10:

    My Favorate because it was the first Beatles movie I ever saw. Love the music and the animation together. Very PSYCODELIC.

  • EGarcia08

    EGarcia08 on 20th Jul 10:

    LoL :^)

  • mbw

    mbw on 16th Jul 10:

    is the most weird movie i seen b

  • MarthamyDear98

    MarthamyDear98 on 14th Jul 10:

    I love when paul says getting better all the time.With a sigh

  • hadeslikesbeatles

    hadeslikesbeatles on 8th Jul 10:

    I watched the film on youtube

    It was so funny and immense

  • GeogreHarrisonrocks

    GeogreHarrisonrocks on 8th Jul 10:

    I WANT IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • ILoveRingo1310

    ILoveRingo1310 on 8th Jul 10:

    Man I cannot believe I have not seen this yet!

  • ILoveYouRingo101

    ILoveYouRingo101 on 5th Jul 10:

    lol I agree Starrtime!!

  • Starrtime

    Starrtime on 1st Jul 10:

    I swear... If Disney ruins this.... grrrrr. They better not change it! The better put the Hey Bulldog and the Baby your a rich man part in this!!!! I will be so mad if they make it another CRAP FILLED DISNEY CHANNEL CREATION!

    sorry I flipped out there <3 peace and love! :)

  • RetroChick101

    RetroChick101 on 30th Jun 10:

    "Don't worry, I'm a born Liver-pooler" classic Ringo

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