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| Index | 21 reviews in total |
15 out of 17 people found the following review useful:
John as human; no more, no less, 2 July 2001
Author:
brian57039
Forget the unmistakable legend of the Beatles for about two hours! This one is entirely about John! I give kudos to the producers who show how this complex and fascinating artist was also a brilliant man and a wonderful human being with strengths as well as frailties! Just listening to and watching the people from John's life (his two wives and sons especially) as they talk about him clearly shows how much they not only loved him, but that they miss him terribly. I went out and rented this film for the first time in years last December around the 20th anniversary of John's cruel and senseless murder! I loved seeing him triumph over the crooked Nixon White House in the latter's attempt to deport him. I also had to smile when the so-called "lost weekend" was over and he was back with Yoko, which only got better with Sean's birth! I found myself touched by the scene where he tells the vagrant the truth behind his songwriting, and then invites him in for a meal. I never met John personally, but after seeing this film I felt like I knew him. By the time the film got to the footage of the Lennons walking in Central Park shortly before his death, I cringed when I heard John's recorded voice saying "...until I'm dead and buried; and I hope that's a long, long time". The slowed-down footage against the background music of the crescendo coda of "A Day In The Life" leading up to the tragic event was well-edited and made its desired impact (the glasses falling and shattering on the cement). Then the newsreel footage of the mourners from around the world. As a fan of John's, I didn't have to look at that footage for very long before losing my composure and feeling the profound sense of loss I felt years ago when it happened. In short, I cried long and hard. I won't give the son of a bitch who shot him the satisfaction of mentioning his name. He is the lowest form of life on earth, and this film does John justice by not giving any mention of his name either. Those who love John will love this film. It doesn't portray him as a big shot rock star! It portrays him as I think he wanted to be seen: as a vulnerable human being, just like us!
8 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Imagine: John Lennon (1988) ***1/2, 8 December 2005
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Author:
JoeKarlosi from U.S.A.
IMAGINE: JOHN LENNON is a very personal and emotional scrapbook that
takes us right into the mind and soul of the great artist who departed
this world much to early. Largely comprised from hundreds of hours of
Lennon interviews and personal home movies, this feature is narrated in
John's own words, giving us a bird's eye view of his life and
experiences before, during, and after The Beatles. It's a candid and
close look at Lennon the musician, the husband, the father and, most
significantly of all, the Man.
The documentary begins in 1971 at Tittenhurst Park in England, where
John and Yoko lived and were then working on John's great IMAGINE album
in a studio adjoining their home. Through John's own memories we then
go backward in time to his birth, his rise to fame with the Beatles,
the breakup of the group, his key meeting with Yoko Ono, all the
exploits of John and Yoko through the late sixties and seventies,
Lennon's retirement to raise his son Sean in 1975, and ultimately his
happy comeback into the limelight in late 1980, when he was tragically
assassinated and the entire world came to a screeching hault for
millions.
For rabid Lennon fans there are very juicy segments included, such as
John recording "How Do You Sleep" (his infamous swipe at Paul
McCartney) with the assistance of George Harrison on slide guitar. We
see the very candid and human sides of John from inside the glass of
the recording studio as he swears at an engineer for not being able to
send forward the proper pre-recorded verse of "Oh Yoko" so that Lennon
can add his backing harmonies to it. A real treat is a lengthy segment
from the 1969 "Bed-In" period where we get to see a visibly perturbed
Lennon trying to maintain his peaceful stance while sparring with
ultra-conservative artist Al Capp while the man continually attacks and
insults John and Yoko right to their faces. Another key bit of business
features Lennon storming into a newspaper office to confront a
journalist who's just written a seething article denouncing the
Lennons. A real gem of a clip concerns a scruffy hippie who's camped
out at Lennon's garden overnight and tried to meet the famous
ex-Beatle. With the cameras capturing their confrontation, John tries
to explain to the far-out young man that he's just a regular guy who
writes songs, some of which don't really mean anything special, and
that he's only human. After this, John invites the hungry man into his
home to give him breakfast.
John Lennon's appeal to the true fan was that he was very honest about
who he was and what he believed in, and we could always relate to him
and feel he was as real a person as we were. This film manages to
capture the essence of John and it's a job very well done by director
Andrew Solt, who had to plow through hundreds of hours of material,
most of which must have been indispensable, to try and form a
definitive representation of Lennon's whole life. If there is a tiny
flaw in the film at all, it may be because John's life was so
extraordinary that it's virtually impossible to get it all together in
such a short space of running time; there is a sense of everything
being squeezed together rather quickly (especially the Beatle years),
where several hours would probably have been more adequate!
Yoko Ono has gotten such a bad rap over the decades, and that's a real
shame, as it's so obvious through her own observations and actual
on-film reactions here that she was as in love with John and as
respectful of him as he was toward her. It should be understood and
accepted that John wanted to be with Yoko and that she "saved him from
a kind of death" (as he once said). It may be difficult for some to
accept that Lennon drifted away from the idea of being "one of the
boys" with the Beatles and getting married and devoting his life to his
relationship with Yoko, but it's what made him feel happy and
fulfilled. As John himself said in one of his very final interviews for
PLAYBOY in 1980:
LENNON: "Listen, if somebody's gonna impress me, whether it be a
Maharishi or a Janov or a Yoko, there comes a point when the emperor
has no clothes. Because I do stupid things, I've done stupid things. I
am naive but I'm also not stupid. So there comes a point where I will
see. And nobody can pull the wool that long. So for all you folks out
there who think that I'm having the wool pulled over my eyes, well,
that's an insult to me. Not that you think less of Yoko, because that's
your problem; what I think of her is what counts! But if you think you
know me or you have some part of me because of the music I've made, and
then you think I'm being controlled like a dog on a leash because I do
things with her, then screw you, brother or sister... you don't know
what's happening. I'm not here for you. I'm here for me and her and now
the baby. Anybody who claims to have some interest in me as an
individual artist or even as part of the Beatles has absolutely
misunderstood everything I ever said if they can't see why I'm with
Yoko."
7 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Very good moving documentary, 23 August 2003
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Author:
Wayne Malin (wwaayynnee51@hotmail.com) from United States
In 1987, seven years after John Lennon's tragic murder, a book came out.
I've forgotten the title and the author, but it portrayed Lennon VERY
negatively. It showed him as a cruel, egotistical monster who abused drugs
and alcohol up to his death. The book was written by somebody who had never
talked to anybody who knew Lennon. Yoko Ono was shocked and pushed to have
this documentary made to set the record straight.
It's full of home movies, news footage, videos all narrated by John Lennon
himself (he recorded over 200 hours talking about his life and work). It's
not a whitewash of him--it does point out he was a mean drunk and he is
shown swearing and telling off Phil Spector in a recording studio when a
song was not working out. It also chronicles his remark about the Beatles
being "bigger than Jesus Christ" and totally ignores how horribly he treated
his first wife Cynthia. But, aside from that footage, there is also
interviews with Johns wives, his children and, basically, everyone who knew
him (curiously, none of the Beatles were interviewed). He comes across as a
very talented, peace-loving man--he has his dark moments but everybody does.
His confrontations with Al Capp and Gloria Emerson are just
fascinating.
I remember seeing this in a theatre in 1988 and most of the audience walked
out crying. 15 years later the ending still packs a punch. It shows people
crying at the peace rallies held after Lennon's death and ends with the
"Imagine" video him and Yoko did. Also "In My Life" plays over the closing
credits. A fascinating, very moving documentary of a great man.
Recommended.
8 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Sadly Overlooked, 24 October 2003
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Author:
J. Wellington Peevis from Malltown
This was my bad, I mistook this as a Yoko exploitation vehicle when it was released and really deprived myself of an excellent biography. John Lennon, The Beatles still loom very large in pop culture and may for quite some time. But as a fan, I find most film documentaries generally are either too lengthy and even preachy or too segmented and incomplete; with nothing really doing the trick. So much so, that I think their music or silly Hollywood movies are still the best and most candid contact we have available. Having said that, by concentrating on John Lennon only, I think this film is able to rise above the rest of whats out there. It cleverly makes use of interviews and sound bytes by John so that he's almost narrating the entire film. It does not dwell too much on his time after the Beatles and with Yoko. Instead its a pleasant balance on all phases of his most fascinating life. There's a ton of stuff I had never seen before and even better, some complete takes of the familiar stuff we know too well. For instance, there is a comprehensive bit involving John and Yoko's bed in for peace that includes a nasty exchange with a pompous cartoonist. Also a terrific scene in a recording studio. The real stuff baby. I think its interesting that as time has passed, John's ideas just don't sound so ridiculous and drug induced as they once did. He instead really comes across as a visionary trying to make dullards and dimwits understand what are now extremely sane concepts. Very odd I must say.
6 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
"I don't believe in the Beatles, I just believe in me.", 21 November 2005
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Author:
patf128 from United States
There are rock musicians, rock stars, rock gods and than there is John
Lennon, the man who embodies Rock and Roll and changed the world with
his heartfelt and joyous words. Now we are given the privilege to see
this genius and former Beatle as the human he was in the documentary
Imagine: John Lennon.
The movie's main focus is on, of course, John Lennon. Not the critics,
not the fans, not the Beatles and not the walrus...John Lennon, a human
being. The movie is filled with home videos of Lennon and friends
working on the Imagine album and videos of Lennon and his family
enjoying life away from his hectic life as a musician. There is even a
video of Lennon inviting an obsessed fan into his house for breakfast.
Still, even with the videos of a simple Englishman goofing off with
friends there are many clips of the music itself. It includes Lennon's
Elvis inspired rock genesis in Liverpool and Hamburg with the Beatles
that launched their successful career. The movie moves on to Lennon's
tour of America that took him away from the wife and kids, and then
onto the unbelievable Sgt. Pepper album that is still critically
acclaimed as the greatest album of all time.
Yet you can't fit everything about a legend like Lennon into a one
hundred minute documentary, so all of the other Beatles albums were
cut. Instead there is again more of the man behind the legend, such as
him spending time with his newborn son Sean and instead of showing the
breakup of the Beatles, it shows him sailing on a boat smoking a
cigarette. Workingman's hero.
Now if you want a movie that explores the many dimensions of this rock
icon than this isn't it. No this movie doesn't go into his
spirituality, his thoughts on music, his influences and the Beatles nor
does it even mention the name of the person who killed him. Yet this
movie shows what John Lennon truly was: a father, a friend, a man.
Just like Lennon said, "I don't believe in Jesus....I don't believe in
Elvis....I don't believe in the Beatles...I just believe in me, Yoko
and me, and that's reality."
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Really fascinating footage, 15 June 2004
Author:
MovieMan0283 from New York
As a big Beatles fan, I've seen lots of documentaries and shows about them; but this one has a lot of stuff I've never seen before, mostly because it focuses on John. The music of course is fantastic as always but what's most valuable is the candid looks we get at Lennon. A vagrant, probably stoned, confronts Lennon at his home in England, asking what the different lyrics mean and the ex-Beatle tries to talk some sense, comforting the confused man, and inviting him inside for a meal. It's even eerier considering what a later confused fan was to do. And some of the strongest parts of the film are long sequences of John confronting someone over his antiwar politics and tactics. Particularly Al Capp, famous cartoonist of "L'il Abner" who proves to be a royal a**hole here, insulting Yoko and John stays surprisingly level-headed throughout. It's a really dynamic scene. He actually loses his temper more when confronted by a NY Times reporter who tells him how immature it was for him to send back the MBE; he shouts back that maybe she liked the old him, the mop-tops and A Hard Day's Night but she needs to grow up. And finally, there's some footage taken not long before Lennon's death when a young man is thrilled to meet him, asking inevitably "When are you guys gonna get back together?" Little did he know that in a few days (or weeks, I'm not sure when this was taken) that dream would be shattered once in for all.
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Another 8th of December....., 8 December 2006
Author:
dbdumonteil
..... and I'm still thinking of what we lost twenty -six years ago.When
I think of all the great songs that never were...
The film begins with the wistful tuneful "real love" which the three
other Beatles reworked on the second volume of the anthologies . It's a
pretty good documentary although it does not really do the great artist
justice.The most interesting moment is the argument with cartoonist Al
Capp -who had already made a satirical comic strip about Joan Baez
(Joanie Phonie) and was not probably exactly what people called
"liberal" - But there are also interesting scenes during the "imagine"
album sessions.
Released at the same time as the obnoxious Goldman's trashy book -which
I also read and found disgusting-,"Imagine' is a must for any Lennon
fan.But once again,THE film about the working class hero remains to be
made.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
An insightful look at the life of a complex entertainer., 14 June 2000
Author:
Michael O'Keefe from Muskogee OK
This is a well done Andrew Solt documentary made up with some wonderful never-before-seen home movies. The late musician's own narration makes for an eerie portrait of the former Beatle. You will see John Lennon as being witty, sarcastic, determined and loyal; but also childish, bawdy, and irreverent. This multi-talented musician will be loved and remembered for generations to come. Over 30 songs make up the soundtrack. Very worthwhile and musically historic.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Two Decades in the Life, 16 August 2001
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Author:
Oscar85 from USA
I can't say enough about how much John Lennon's death still hurts me when I think about it, and I wasn't even alive when that terrible date (8 Dec 1980) transpired. But through the duration of "Imagine: John Lennon," I felt at ease with his death. I felt that Lennon was sitting there next to me telling me that he's fine, and that he will never be dead as long as his music live forever in the minds of his fans. Lennon's life was captured brilliantly in this documentary. His brilliance, his unique spirit, and his controversial opinions about the crooked elements of the world are reverently presented. I thanks the makers of this film for omitting the name of the eternally damned soul who selfishly brought the end to the physical life of Lennon. Lennon lives on, but the scars left by his passing will remain. For those who do not know Lennon's life very well, this film is perfect for them. Together, you, me, and Lennon can imagine a world free of hatred in our lives and the lives of future generations. It is possible if we just give peace a chance. I love this movie and it's portrayal of the life of the most influential entertainer of the past couple centuries. What more can be said about such an amazing life?
Very well done, 12 July 2010
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Author:
blanche-2 from United States
"Imagine" is an excellent look at John Lennon, as a young boy, a
rocker, a Beatle, an advocate, a husband, a father, and finally, as a
legend.
For those (like my sister) who dislike Yoko Ono and blame her for
breaking up the Beatles, Yoko is present, but there is plenty else
here.
John Lennon isn't an easy man to figure out, and I don't think this
documentary tried to. Rather, it attempted to show all sides of him -
the Beatle, the drug side, the sketch artist, his attempt to distance
himself from the Beatles, stating that he had grown up, his musical
journey, his hard-headedness, demands as a musician - the whole thing.
One of the nicest scenes is one in which he speaks with a vagrant about
his music and then has him come in for a meal. So with all his
preaching about peace and being one in the world, he walked the talk.
Lennon provides a lot of the narration, which is taken from hundreds of
interviews. There are also interviews with Yoko, Sean, Julian, his
ex-wife Cynthia, and others.
If you grew up with the Beatles as I did and mourn the death of John
Lennon as I do, or even if you just like his contribution to music,
this is a very good look at the Beatles' most off-beat and possibly
most brilliant member - a man who continually searched for an identity
that kept changing.
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