A Hard Day’s Night

A study of The Beatles’ film A Hard Day’s Night (1964) by journalist and broadcaster Samira Ahmed, in the BFI Film Classics series.

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How did a film made to capture a pop phenomenon become an enduring cinematic classic?
With warmth, wit and precision, Samira Ahmed reveals how the Beatles' first film changed both the band themselves and pop music's relationship with the screen.

In a vivid and personal exploration, she shows how this black-and-white gem, shot in a documentary style and brimming with youthful energy, captured Britain at a moment of social transformation, with a portrayal of celebrity, camaraderie and media frenzy that still resonates today. Drawing on her own experience of first discovering the film as a child and going on to work in the television industry, Ahmed shines a spotlight on the craft behind its enduring appeal. With insights from members of the cast and crew, including her own new interviews, Ahmed highlights A Hard Day's Night's class and sexual politics, and adds a delightfully original analysis of the women in the film.

In these pages you will be transported to a time when four young men from Liverpool, via the mass medium of television, changed the way Britain saw itself and the way the world saw Britain, revealing how, and why, A Hard Day's Night has become a landmark of modern cinema.

Additional information

Dimensions 190 × 135 mm
Author

Publisher

BFI

Imprint

BFI

Cover

Paperback

Pages

128

Language

English

Edition
Dewey

791.4372 (edition:23)

Readership

College – higher education / Code: F