The Beatles: Parting Ways

The Beatles: Parting Ways

By Gillian Bartlett

  • Genre: Documentary
  • Release Date: 2010-07-27
  • Advisory Rating: NR
  • Runtime: 0h 51min
  • Director: Gillian Bartlett
  • Production Company: Inception Media Group
  • Production Country: United States of America
  • iTunes Price: USD 3.99
  • iTunes Rent Price: USD 1.99
6/10
6
From 1 Ratings

Description

John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr: the four most iconic names in pop music. ‘Parting Ways: An unauthorized story on life after the Beatles’ examines the phenomenon that was Beatlemania, but also looks at the ups and downs of the fab four since their heyday. From John Lennon’s relation- ship with Yoko Ono to his untimely death; from Paul McCartney’s solo career to his knighthood; from George Harrison’s stabbing to death from cancer; and Ringo Starr’s rise above being ‘just’ a drummer. ‘Parting Ways’ treats The Beatles with the respect they deserve, and details their lives since the world’s number one band fell apart.

Trailer

Reviews

  • Good for the price, but glaring errors

    3
    By numbfar
    it's an okay documentary, covering the post-Beatles years up to 2009, but not always well-researched. As an example, they say that Ringo had three sons, and gives their names, ending with Lee. Um, Lee is his daughter; he has two sons. It's not a huge deal, but it's something that shows how there are gaps in the research. A quote that they give, supposedly from John, putting down Ringo's drumming, was actually from a comedian, years after John's death. Also something that should have been caught. Google is your friend. More problematic is the way they sweep away the fact that John had quit the Beatles months before Paul's announcement, and Paul had only told the press after it was obvious that John wasn't returning. They lump John's permanent walkout with the short, temporary walkouts of George and Ringo, putting the decision to end the Beatles entirely on Paul. Also, they make it seem like Paul was petty for not trusting Allen Klein, neglecting to mention that Klein was later proven to be cheating the Beatles, and Paul was thanked by the others later for getting them out of their contract with Klein. There's a noticeable anti-Paul bias for the section covering the 1970s. Most of the video clips can be found on YouTube. Still, it's a good price.
  • History of Post-Beatles Life

    5
    By BobDaddyO
    It is an accurate depiction of how we(as fans who grew up with them) feel about their influence on society...
  • UNAUTHORIZED Says It All

    3
    By Ron76warrenTHS
    Narrated footage with some opionated twinges.

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