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Post by imabeliever on Sept 18, 2016 7:11:12 GMT -5
Anyone see this in theaters yet? Fascinating footage of Paul along with uber-annoying narration by Faul.
A few new clues, too? Paul was a very heavy sweater during concerts. John, too, to a lesser extent, but Paul's jacket was even flecked with sweat just a few minutes into the Shea Stadium performance. Does Faul also sweat profusely during his concerts?
Paul was the only one with the gold star not on his jacket pocket, but higher and toward the center; more over his heart. Why?
The love evident among them in this film -- and absent from Sgt. Pepper onward -- is unmistakable.
Interesting, too, that it's produced by "One Voice, One World." NWO?
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Post by Deleted on Sept 18, 2016 8:17:05 GMT -5
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Post by imabeliever on Sept 18, 2016 8:27:59 GMT -5
Does anyone actually discuss things on this board, or just post images and links? SMH! I may have to keep looking.
And "body sent into outer space"? Mmm, don't think so. (maybe in the wrong forum; looking for the nearest exit)
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Post by Deleted on Sept 18, 2016 8:38:18 GMT -5
Then you saw her face? lol
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Post by B on Sept 18, 2016 8:40:16 GMT -5
What's your beef? You want us to comment on a movie we can't see yet, unless we subscribe to Hulu. It starts in the States on the 22nd, and that's IF you can find it in a theater. Lucy posts a link that explains what "One Voice, One World" is in response to your comment. You started this thread an hour ago, and you're bitching that we haven't responded quickly enough for you.
Don't let the door hit you in the arse.
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Post by imabeliever on Sept 18, 2016 8:45:45 GMT -5
The documentary's playing in theatres across the country this weekend. Just trying to get a feel for the board by looking at recent posts.
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Post by B on Sept 18, 2016 8:48:00 GMT -5
No it isn't - last I read. Maybe in England.
Can you point me to where it is showing? Where did you see it?
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Post by applepie on Sept 18, 2016 8:49:19 GMT -5
I am looking definitely looking forward to seeing the film. I don't suppose how they could "hide" clues in pre-existing archival footage, considering the footage took place prior to the rumour.
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Post by Deleted on Sept 18, 2016 8:57:54 GMT -5
What's your beef? You want us to comment on a movie we can't see yet, unless we subscribe to Hulu. It starts in the States on the 22nd, and that's IF you can find it in a theater. Lucy posts a link that explains what "One Voice, One World" is in response to your comment. You started this thread an hour ago, and you're bitching that we haven't responded quickly enough for you. Don't let the door hit you in the arse. yeah, what he said. lol
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Post by imabeliever on Sept 18, 2016 9:06:36 GMT -5
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Post by B on Sept 18, 2016 9:44:53 GMT -5
Thank you for the link. I am surprised that it is showing in Montpelier already. It hasn't officially opened in the US.
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Post by callithumpian on Sept 18, 2016 10:32:20 GMT -5
THINGS TO EXCLAIM: Clifford, Arlington, Buckingham, Ashley, and Lauderdale
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Post by B on Sept 18, 2016 12:27:16 GMT -5
The Beatles: Eight Days a Week review – moptops conquer the worldRon Howard trashes the idea that there’s nothing new to say about the Beatles with a revealing survey of the four-year odyssey that changed everythingwww.theguardian.com/film/2016/sep/15/the-beatles-eight-days-a-week-review-ron-howard-documentary"Blink and you’ll miss it, but Ron Howard’s intensely enjoyable documentary about the Beatles’ touring years has a great surreal moment at the very beginning. The moptops are getting out of the plane in New York, on their way to a date with destiny on The Ed Sullivan Show, and the newsreel camera briefly catches a couple of placards held up in the huge airport crowd. “Beatles Unfair 2 Bald Men” reads one, and another says: “England Get Out of Ireland.” The images vanish, and their atypical sentiments are in any case drowned by the global scream of unironic adulation. Yet both echo other undercurrents in Beatlemania: a fear of these weirdly attractive aliens, a hatred of youth culture and youth itself, and perhaps mixed feelings in New York and the US about this extraordinary new British invasion. Maybe Paul McCartney even saw that second placard and modified it as a song title for Wings. Is there really anything more to say about the Beatles? Well, Howard gives us a movie conceived on similar lines to his non-fiction features such as Apollo 13 or Frost/Nixon, real people tested in the fire of publicity, with the same classic narrative arc of personal growth. Yet he persuades you that there might be something new to say, in a film that includes interviews with the two surviving members McCartney and Ringo Starr, archive material with Harrison and Lennon, and intriguing conversations with present-day fans such as Elvis Costello, Whoopi Goldberg and Malcolm Gladwell (whose 2008 book Outliers brings the Beatles’ Hamburg years into his theory that greatness takes 10,000 hours of practice). Howard’s film has a different emphasis from, say, Ian MacDonald’s critical classic Revolution in the Head, which was explicitly about the Beatles’ recordings. This is about the Beatles as live phenomenon, and the fact that their music was all the more remarkable because it had to be heard above the scream – that ambient sound of sex, excitement and modernity, mixed in with a thin chirrup of press envy. The scream was an important part of it. There are many familiar scenes of the Beatles being unsure, in venues such as Shea Stadium, as to whether they could even be heard at all. And the film demonstrates that the sound system, such as it was, was just the stadium’s PA speakers. What the fans heard was a thin and tinny travesty. But that was hardly the point. Eight Days a Week is about what amounted to an almost unbroken four-year, semi-improvised multimedia performance for which there was no pre-existing template – not simply the music but the giant public spectacle and public scrutiny, the theatre of arriving at airports, hotels, posing for incessant photographs, and most challengingly of all, talking to journalists. With wit and good humour far in advance of anything being shown by the press corps, the Beatles came up with snappy but good-natured replies to the questions. Eddie Izzard interestingly comments on their style. All too clearly, with pointed questions about how long the group expected all this to go on, the press was waiting for a comeuppance. Eventually it came, with John Lennon’s remarks about the Beatles being bigger than Christianity. Not in the US Bible belt they weren’t. (A more accurate blasphemy would be to say they were bigger than Shakespeare.) The row soured the exhausted Beatles’ already darkening mood and it was time to quit touring. In an age before social media, the Beatles could do and say almost anything they wanted to without it rebounding. A wave of euphoria and happiness pours from the screen, and Howard’s movie surfs that wave. If there is a flaw in the film, it is that it somehow fails to notice the Beatles’ wives. Three of them were married or got married in this period, and Linda Eastman met Paul towards the end of this time. Surely their domestic lives were part of what complicated their brotherhood and made their eternal boyhood on the road untenable. There is a lot of simple, moment-by-moment pleasure to be had here. Howard dishes up familiar archive footage but new material as well: in particular, their final performance in Candlestick Park, San Francisco. The Beatles’ cherubic faces are strangely compelling: they did indeed look like intergalactic creatures who found a home on our planet. "
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Post by B on Sept 18, 2016 12:38:31 GMT -5
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Post by imabeliever on Sept 19, 2016 7:39:13 GMT -5
I inquired, FYI, at one theatre that is showing it and got this response:
"You are correct that it was a very limited opening. There were approximately 100 locations nationally to premiere this. The distributors were primarily targeting the #1 art houses in the markets they wanted, in addition to being covered in important university towns."
www.kentuckytheater.com/2016/07/13/the-beatels-eight-days-a-week/
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Post by imabeliever on Sept 19, 2016 7:41:15 GMT -5
"I don't suppose how they could 'hide' clues in pre-existing archival footage, considering the footage took place prior to the rumour."
By clue, I didn't mean a hidden cryptic intentional message, but rather evidence of the replacement and cover-up theory. At any rate, does anyone happen to know if Faul -- either in Wings or his solo career -- sweats profusely onstage? It's just that it's a characteristic not everyone shares, so I was curious...
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Post by numbernine on Sept 23, 2016 0:05:37 GMT -5
I mostly believe he was replaced but I just can't get over when Paul talks about remembering those times touring with Ringo...How can he talk like that if it really wasn't him? I just couldn't imagine lying like that so many years later...You would think he would dodge the questions or change the subject or something...What do other people think?
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Post by beatlas231 on Sept 23, 2016 5:08:38 GMT -5
I mostly believe he was replaced but I just can't get over when Paul talks about remembering those times touring with Ringo...How can he talk like that if it really wasn't him? I just couldn't imagine lying like that so many years later...You would think he would dodge the questions or change the subject or something...What do other people think? Judging from your questions I'd say you're insider aching to tell us something. Please, go ahead! That's one gold star for me lol I wouldn't say an insider perhaps.. But when there was that Federal Beast countdown, I projected all of the hype on myself with the image of "this is not here" aswell as saying Billy Shears and Number 9 on certain websites Wait hold the press and get the President in here, my Kryptonite is sensing the bad self eater person talking in the video I know he's a stong believer in God, and I know what it's like to see God in places aswell If it is (you) then don't take the negativity on your video to heart, and you're not being condemned for it. Surely you might have traumatized some children watching like it was a movie intro.. I know your video let down lots of people but you were justified with everything you said That is of course, my imaginary letter to Bad Self Eater, Thank you for reading the following case file as a copyright You may present your wedding Vows, at this time. No, wait! Wait! I'm being told that we're being told to cut to commercial, we'll be back after a short break
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Post by beatlas231 on Sept 23, 2016 5:25:17 GMT -5
I mostly believe he was replaced but I just can't get over when Paul talks about remembering those times touring with Ringo...How can he talk like that if it really wasn't him? I just couldn't imagine lying like that so many years later...You would think he would dodge the questions or change the subject or something...What do other people think? Judging from your questions I'd say you're insider aching to tell us something. Please, go ahead! Oh maaaaa We Geb and Nuit together.. I got them mixed up.. Imabeliever now too Bad self eater, This is the spokesman for the Iamaphoney fortress.. Let's all have some Tea!
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Post by beatlas231 on Sept 23, 2016 5:37:55 GMT -5
Then you saw her face? lol LOL he saw my face and then did some digging and now he's trying to figure out if we're the same person LOL (oh the clues all the clues) IM DEAD that's too funny He thinks you're me, LMFAOOOOOOOOOO An artist never quite loses their touch no matter how many times they've come and gone for hundreds and thousands of years Speaking of which im exhausted I'm so tired, I haven't slept a week I'm literally having to wear glasses all the time now.. AGAIN next I'll be talking about the Walrus and Me Man, you know how we're as close as can be man
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Post by beatlas231 on Sept 23, 2016 6:46:59 GMT -5
Anyone see this in theaters yet? Fascinating footage of Paul along with uber-annoying narration by Faul.
A few new clues, too? Paul was a very heavy sweater during concerts. John, too, to a lesser extent, but Paul's jacket was even flecked with sweat just a few minutes into the Shea Stadium performance. Does Faul also sweat profusely during his concerts?
Paul was the only one with the gold star not on his jacket pocket, but higher and toward the center; more over his heart. Why?
The love evident among them in this film -- and absent from Sgt. Pepper onward -- is unmistakable.
Interesting, too, that it's produced by "One Voice, One World." NWO? It's too funny to delete!! I can't, We'd have to unban Hillary then (Believe me, B and Michelle have some stories) And then she goes out to a concert under an alias Pour me a glass of sour milk, I think I'm gonna have to smile *sheswithme great moment in time, speaks the words but so many different versions of it. And the kids today are gonna love each version we think of Drinking the sour milk after actually trying to smile Each time you hear about Hillary collapsing, just think of it as Fauling. She's also Fauling behind in the polls now aswell
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Post by Deleted on Sept 23, 2016 10:27:56 GMT -5
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Post by delysid on Nov 14, 2016 17:55:59 GMT -5
Here's another clue for you all: It would seem that some PIDers, possibly a LOT of PIDers don't actually spend any time with The Beatles but simply jump on some of the wilder (and much more recent) PID tropes, like 'He was killed by the Illuminati' as a way to confirm their general world-view. I say this because there's so much live Faul on YouTube that finding out if he sweats or not during a gig shouldn't be a matter of posting a question here and waiting days or weeks to get an answer. Or am I just an Illuminati shill?
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