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Home > Listing Index > Movies > Yellow Submarine (film)

Movies - Yellow Submarine


:For the song, see Yellow Submarine (song). For the soundtrack, see Yellow Submarine (album).

Yellow Submarine is a 1968 animated film based on the music of the Beatles. It is also the title for the soundtrack album to the feature film, released as part of the Beatles' music catalogue. The film was directed by British animation producer George Dunning
, and produced by United Artists and King Features Syndicate.

Plot

Pepperland is a cheerful music-loving utopia located "80,000 leagues under the sea", and is named after and protected by Sgt. Pepper of Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band fame. It is attacked by the music-hating Blue Meanies who seal the Band inside a musicproof sphere, then turn the Pepperlanders into statues and drain the country itself of colour. Pepperland's Lord Mayor assigns the task of finding help to the inappropriately-nicknamed "Young Fred", who escapes in the titular vessal in the nick of time. Travelling to Liverpool, Fred begs for help from the depressed and aimless Ringo Starr, who agrees and rounds up his three mates: Paul McCartney, John Lennon and George Harrison. The five of them journey back to Pepperland in the submarine, passing through The Sea of Time, The Sea of Monsters and The Sea of Holes, among other exotic locales. After picking up a rather helpful "nowhere man" named Jeremy Boob, they arrive in Pepperland, imitate Sgt. Pepper's band, and "rally the land to rebellion". Color and flowers rebloom, and Pepperland is restored. In the end, the heros make peace with the Meanies, and everyone lives happily ever after.

Production

Released at the height of the psychedelic pop culture period of the 1960s, the movie Yellow Submarine was a box-office hit, drawing in crowds both for its lush, wildly creative images, and its soundtrack of Beatles songs. The original story was written by Lee Minoff, based on the song by John Lennon
and Paul McCartney, and the screenplay penned by four collaborators including Erich Segal.

As with most motion picture musicals, the music takes precedence over the actual plot, and most of the story is a series of set-pieces designed to present Beatles music set to various images, in a form reminiscent of Walt Disney
's Fantasia (and foreshadowing the rise of music videos and MTV fifteen years later). Nonetheless, the movie still presents an entertaining modern-day fairy tale that caters to the ideals of the "love generation".

The dialogue is littered with puns, double entendres, and Beatles in-jokes, many scripted by Roger McGough. "Blue Meanies" was actually a slang term for the police, although many viewers will have missed this (see List of slang terms for police officers). Additionally, the Beatles appearance in the film was actually based on their music video "Strawberry Fields Forever", with the exception of Paul without his mustache. The film also includes several references to songs not included in the soundtrack, including "A Day in the Life" where the lyrics are referenced in the "sea of holes" scene.

Animation

The movie's style contrasts greatly with the efforts of The Walt Disney Company (hence the "blue meanies" wear Mickey Mouse ears) and other animated films previously released by Hollywood up until the time. The film uses a style of limited animation that deliberately defies reality and paints a landscape that could never exist in the real world; something that appealed greatly to the escapists of the 1960s (see also Fantastic Planet
).

The animation of Yellow Submarine has sometimes falsely been attributed to the famous psychedelic pop art artist of the era Peter Max; the film's artwork was in fact overseen by Heinz Edelmann. Edelmann, along with his contemporary Milton Glaser, pioneered the psychedelic style for which Max would later become famous, but according to Edelmann and producer Al Brodax, as quoted in the book Inside the Yellow Submarine by Robert Hieronimus and Laura Cortner (2002) (ISBN 0873493605), Max had nothing to do with the production of Yellow Submarine.

Music

In addition to the existing title song "Yellow Submarine," five new songs were commissioned for the movie: "All Together Now" (a soccer-crowd favorite); "It's All Too Much" (a George Harrison
composition); "Baby You're A Rich Man", a song that made its public debut as the "All You Need Is Love" single B-side; "Only A Northern Song" a low-key Harrison track originally recorded during sessions for Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (the partial inspiration for this film); and "Hey Bulldog", a John Lennon
piano romp echoing of "Lady Madonna", which was recorded at the same time, but used as an A-Side (this song was originally included only in the European theatrical release, but restored for the U.S. theatrical reissue in 1999).

[ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Yellow Submarine (film) ]



Some related entries: Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song | Skiffy | Estudios Churubusco | The Final Season | Gianni Amelio | The Cat Concerto | Carinosa | Daffy Duck and the Dinosaur | Norman Maen | Stanley Kauffmann | Pee-wee's Big Adventure

This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Yellow Submarine (film); it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL.

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