The “Compleat” Beatles 1982

This is what Beatle fans had until the Anthology came out in 1995 and turned a new generation onto the Beatles. I wore out the recorded VHS copy my cousin gave me. It is a two hour documentary of the Beatles. It was narrated by actor Malcolm McDowell (Clockwork Orange) and was well done. I remember watching this and “The Kids Are Alright” in the 80s. It was nice seeing the footage that was not as available as today.

I do remember some small frustrating parts of it. I think it was  “Hey Jude” about to begin (David Frost Show) and whoever cut the film placed a George Martin voice over during some of the performance. Remember this was a time when you couldn’t just go on youtube and see performances. Overall it was very well made. I still have a copy of it somewhere. Paul McCartney bought out the negative rights to the film in the 1990s to clear the way for Anthology and below is that story from Wikipedia.

The Compleat Beatles was initially released as a PBS documentary in the United States, and then on VHS, Betamax, CED and Laserdisc that same year on the MGM/UA Home Video label. The 1982 Laserdisc was released in both Analogue and Stereo versions, as well as being released in Japan and England (in PAL format) in 1983.[3]

The film did very well, and in 1984 Delilah Films and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer arranged for it to be released theatrically in the U.S. by a small distributor named Teleculture. This contributed to its continuing to be a best seller on VHS. Some years later, when Paul McCartney was preparing The Beatles Anthology, he bought the negative and all the rights to the film from Delilah to get it off of the market and clear the way for his production. That, according to the film’s director Patrick Montgomery, is why it is not available on DVD or any newer formats and “probably never will be.”

If you find a copy somewhere buy it…it is worth it. Even if you already have Anthology. The Beatles Anthology is far superior but it does make a good companion piece.

This is from Rolling Stone magazine. It went over the other documentaries of the band. They make a good case for The Compleat Beatles. The link to the page is:

Again nothing has compared to the Anthology but The Compleat Beatles was very well done.

https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/the-compleat-beatles-10-takeaways-from-great-overlooked-fab-four-doc-121193/

But one Beatles doc you might not know – and its cause has not been helped by not having an authorized DVD release yet – is 1982’s The Compleat Beatles, written by David Silver, directed by Patrick Montgomery, and narrated by Malcolm McDowell, chief droog from Stanley Kubrick’s A Clockwork Orange. Clocking in at two hours – and titled in the spirit of The Compleat Angler, England’s definitive book on fishing, from 1653 – The Compleat Beatles tells the band’s entire story, from pre-fame days, with checkpoints at each album, right up through the breakup. It’s brimming with keen musical analysis, and a coterie of voices you normally don’t get with a Beatles documentary.

For a long time, in the VHS era, it was a staple of high-school music teachers, starting 35 years ago in the summer and fall of ’82. If you were lucky enough to have had the TV set wheeled in by a Beatles-mad instructor, you know this is a special film.

Here are 10 reasons to check out this overlooked masterwork of the Beatles’ cinematic canon.

1. Writer David Silver had a pitch-perfect understanding of the Beatles’ career arc – and importance in their time and beyond.
“Poets of a generation, heroes of an era,” The Compleat Beatles begins, with Malcolm McDowell reciting Silver’s lines with Shakespearean gravity. This is to be a proper assessment of a band that was so much more than a rock & roll collective, something we’re made to feel immediately. “Like all poets and heroes, they reflected the spirt of their times.” The early sequences in the film present footage of a bygone Liverpool, which looks pretty grim, as if nothing mercurial could emerge from this seaport. When the opening chords of the Beatles’ cover of Chuck Berry’s “Rock and Roll Music” kick in, the film itself seems to pop with possibility, as if infused with Beatle-esque spirit. There was nothing the band couldn’t do, and now there will be nothing this movie can’t do.

2. Gerry Marsden was an ace witness to what the Beatles were doing.
The leader of Gerry and the Pacemakers, perpetual Liverpudlian also-rans, Gerry Marsden was always broad-spirited when it came to talking about the band that so outpaced his own, but you don’t get to hear him very much on film. Here he explains how the Liverpool acts were able to transform skiffle into something far grittier from what he terms the “ackky dacky” sounds of Lonnie Donegan. First he whips out a guitar to show how Donegan would play “Jambalaya,” before remarking “we’d get the record and we’d rock it up a little bit,” entering forth into a cool little demonstration. It’s a great primer for how the Northern bands were able to develop their own sound from what was a reductive, chipper genre in skiffle.

3. Early manager Allan Williams was quite the character.
Williams liked his tall tales, and the Beatles basically screwed the guy over after he hooked them up with Hamburg and they jumped ship for Brian Epstein, but Williams clearly loved reminiscing about his relationship with the band, which would continue on for a while still. (And resurface later when the legality of the Hamburg Star Club tapes was in dispute.) He describes a letter from Howie Casey of Derry and the Seniors begging him not to send “that bum group the Beatles” over to Hamburg, for fear that this would mess up everyone else’s good thing. Williams then goes on to (accurately) describe the style of then-drummer Pete Best as not very clever. Hardly a feeling-sparer, which is probably why the likes of John Lennon liked him – at least for a while.

4. George Harrison’s mom deserves serious props. The Compleat Beatles does an excellent job of synthesizing how the Beatles came together in their pre-fame years (complete with an image of John Lennon’s report card decrying his “insolence”), with a clear, concise chronology, and valuable insight directed towards the subject of George Harrison and his mother. Most Beatles studies focus, in terms of maternal subjects, on Lennon and his mother, Julia, and Paul McCartney and his late mother, Mary, but Mrs. Harrison knew a thing or two about rocking out. “To his classmates, George Harrison was the boy whose father drove the bus they all rode to school,” McDowell states. “His mother sat up with him night after night as he taught himself how to play Buddy Holly songs,” with his inclusion in the Quarrymen assured because “his mother could tolerate their noisy rehearsals.” Way to go, Mrs. H.

5. Reeperbahn mainstay Horst Fascher was one badass MF.
The Compleat Beatlesmakes commendable use of the underrated Star Club material to soundtrack several scenes, and it’s a delight when self-professed Beatles protector Horst Fascher turns up on camera. He made sure that they didn’t get in too much distress on their first Reeperbahn forays, or, as he puts it in the film, “If you are in trouble with some girls who are prostitutes, and you don’t know the girls are prostitutes, and the pimps find out, you can get in a lot of trouble,” which made Horst the guy to seek out to cure your ills and keep your ass intact, given that he was a former boxer who had been booted from competition for killing a sailor in a street fight. Ah, Hamburg.

6. The Litherland Town Hall show from December 27th, 1960, was the watershed gig of the Beatles’ career.The film also features a number of segments with Bill Harry, a friend of the band who was instrumental in spreading the good word about them in Liverpool – even before they deserved it – with his Mersey Beatmagazine, which documented the comings and goings of life on the local beat scene. Harry gives the backstory for the gig that would change the Beatles’ career. “They came back from Hamburg still as an unknown band,” Harry remembers, but he promoted they hell out of them, “because they were close friends of mine.” This got a promoter to book them at Litherland Town Hall, shortly following Christmas in 1960. Allan Williams was there, too. “The moment the Beatles struck up and did their stomping, every kid froze, and then they ran to the stage and started screaming.” That would be the gist of a lot of what was to follow.

7. According to George Martin, “Yesterday” was the crucial pivot point for the band’s sonic development.
Martin is eloquent throughout The Compleat Beatles: erudite, dapper, utterly sure of himself, being interviewed in a recording studio by his console, with no Beatles intruding with misremembered bits of info, something that dogged the Anthology. It’s just Martin, holding a master class in what it was like from his end to work with these guys. “They always wanted to have new ideas and sounds coming through. I found that they were almost more inquisitive than I was. In fact, in the end, it kind of exhausted me. Sometimes they knew what they wanted to do, but more often than not, they didn’t,” coming across like Yoda both frustrated and blown away by the gifts of Luke Skywalker. Regarding “Yesterday”: “It isn’t really a Beatles song,” Martin remembers saying to McCartney, then goes through how he made his pitch for the Beatles to forsake their standard drum-bass-guitar attack, which would become, through various methods, the mode of the future.

8. The doc features the coolest, trippiest, most cost-effective visual evocation of “Tomorrow Never Knows” ever filmed.
McDowell’s narration intones that “Two of John’s songs ‘She Said She Said’ and ‘Tomorrow Never Knows’ were the results of his recent experiments with drugs” – fair enough – as a quick tour of Revolver begins, but what follows is brilliant: Using only the cover of the album, director Montgomery, through a series of sweeps, pans and fast dissolves, gives us something of a visual acid trip, as “Tomorrow Never Knows” blasts from the soundtrack. Once you see the effect, it’s hard to disgorge it from your mind each time going forward that you hear that mindblower of a track.

9. The band’s final world tour was pure terror, and no film better evokes it.With a collage of on-the-street interviews, footage from Beatles record burnings and people getting hurt at shows as frantic MCs plead for calm, The Compleat Beatlesprovides a strong sense of why touring had to stop for the band. As the footage unfurls, there’s a low droning figure in the soundtrack, sort of like the protracted hum of the final chord on the Sgt. Pepperalbum stretched out for several minutes. We also get a self-righteous cop in Minneapolis who goes on at some length about how much he hates the Beatles: “As far as Beatle music, I could care about it not one bit personally … one of their group, with the British accent, told us they would never come back to Minneapolis, and I told him that would be too soon for me.”

 10. In Martin’s view, the Beatles were fated to become huge. George Martin has a lot of key lines regarding his four upstarts and their career. At one point he states, “Without Brian Epstein, the Beatles wouldn’t have existed,” by which he means that success would not have come to them and they would not be the galvanic entity we all know. But Martin is in downright Socratic mode, though, when he ventures towards a larger explanation for that success. “I think that the great thing about the Beatles was that they were of their time, their timing was right. They didn’t choose it – someone chose it for them. But the timing was right, and they left their mark in history because of it.”

Author: Badfinger (Max)

Power Pop fan, Baseball, Beatles, old movies, and tv show fan. Also anything to do with pop culture in the 60s and 70s... I'm also a songwriter, bass and guitar player.

32 thoughts on “The “Compleat” Beatles 1982”

  1. I haven’t seen this in years but remember it being quite good. Maybe since Paul owns it he will eventually re-release it on DVD?… I would like to see someone put together a documentary with the scope that Mark Lewisohn is doing in his three part biography. Something like a Ken Burns Civil War- on The Beatles- without their coloring the picture. I love the Anthology but it is their version of events. Give me a mammoth independent version.

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    1. You would think he would release it…I wonder if it is something in it they don’t like?
      Speaking of Ken Burns he would be a great choice to do it.

      Off topic kind of…Did you ever watch “The Birth of the Beatles?” by Dick Clark Productions? It was very Pete Best sided because he was the technical adviser… The actors were good. I know none of Beatles including John agreed with it. Nothing about George Martin not liking Pete’s drumming.

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      1. The acting is really good but full of untruth but as you know at that time…we didnt have much at all…

        No it’s only on those dvd sites that are bootlegged because there is not an official release.
        I remember it was the one Beatles show my father watched with me…and he said they were not very fair to Pete Best…I told him no that is not what I read…but they show a lot about Stu Sutcliffe.
        The only reason I have some these videos is because of a Dylan bootleg collector I knew that would pass things to me… The Hamburg section looks great.
        I would love to have a cleaned up version. He gave me something I’ve never watched yet either…Anthology “Directors Cut” so to speak…before they made cuts to it. Again you cannot get anywhere.

        I wish the artists would release a lot of these things. There is a want for it or it would not be bootlegged.

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      2. I can’t recall who said it but someone said as long as Paul and Ringo is alive we will never see Let It Be released again. Protecting the legacy. I don’t know we’ve seen it- millions have- ok they were fighting at the end. You don’t have to pretend that didn’t happen. It’s been 50 years so much has come to light in those years…. yes why not release these things and make money off of them- and give the fans what they want…

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      3. I totally agree. It’s a pet peeve of mine that all of this historical video exists and it’s just sitting there. Paul even said he wasn’t the hold up and he comes off the worse according to him… Glyn Johns said the Klein cut the movie to pieces… he said that there are hours and hours of film.

        You know something else? What scares me is when Paul and Ringo are passed… will we see Burger King ads with Beatle music or whatever? I hope not…

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      4. you know the 50th anniversary of the end is coming- If the movie is ever going to be re-released that would be the time to do it. Maybe they re do the film- I don’t know… who will the control fall to when they pass? The children? As far as John goes- Yoko isn’t getting any younger- It could be a legal mess.

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      5. I would say the kids would. I just hope they treat the catalog with respect…. I don’t trust Yoko…. you would think they would release it at the 50th anniversary like you said

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      6. Yoko is what 85 now? I would hope the kids would make the right decisions and I think so far they have handled being the children of the greatest men in history- rather well. I see Yoko has a new album coming out. Paul in September- Yoko in October I think it is.

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      7. I really respect George Harrison‘s son. He put in a lot of work on those reissues of George’s albums. You are right they have handled it well.
        Julian got the short end of the stick to me.
        I guess Yoko has a cult following

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      8. I am not a fan-but I have never been one to put the full blame on her for The Beatles breaking up. A lot of factors and it was for the best…. we will never know but if John lived I think he would have ended up ditching her.

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      9. I would not blame only her no… Brian dying, Klein, growing apart, not touring anymore, Apple, and etc….
        She played a part but just one of many. It was for the best in the long run. They didn’t have a chance to decay… that is what separates them from the stones and Elvis

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      10. and just the human factor- you are around the same group of people for such a long period of time- they can start to annoy you. the stones only lasted 55 years or so because of the Charlie Watts quote you had earlier in the week. Had they been with each other day in and day out Keith would have killed Mick for sure.

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      11. I laughed when I read your last line…You are dead on though. The Beatles were more like brothers… according to Keith him and Mick hasnt been close since 70 or so.

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      12. I just went through that book again. I would like your opinion if you think the author was going out of his way to make him look better… I don’t really think so. He tells the bad about him also. Brian and the Stones had a friend called “Stash” and he interviewed him for some inside info.
        Some more info when Keith left with Anita.

        The Harpo book is addicting… it’s just too short lol.

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      13. I love how Harpo is so positive about everything- even when the market crashed and he lost all that money no one in the book is a bad guy. I love his outlook to life.

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      14. Off topic I asked introgroove this…. after talking about Let It Be and The Compleat Beatles have you or do you own a laser disc player? I’ve thought about getting one because a lot of things were released on it…. The quality is supposedly really good

        Liked by 1 person

      15. I have seen them on eBay and I have seen a couple at secondhand stores. We have a secondhand record shop called the great escape that had one. I never did own one. I have found discs at estate sales and other places… 5 bucks each

        Liked by 1 person

      16. The funny thing is they had two of them for two dollars apiece Woody Allen bananas and Benji so I got them just for the cover art for my music room. I just wondered if they’re a pain or tear up easy… I’ll look into it. I just don’t like vhs

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  2. Wow, I know I saw the Compleat Beatles way back then, but I don’t specifically remember anything from it. I’ll definitely be watching the bits that are on Youtube. I love the kudos to Mrs. Harrison. I didn’t know, or had forgotten, all of the ways she helped them get going. I’ve read that she came up with the best line in ‘Piggies’–“What they need’s a damn good whacking.” She’s a gem.

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    1. The Harrison‘s seem like the most supportive family of all of them. I last watched it a year ago. It holds up really well

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  3. I had this and stupidly let it go (who needs VHS, right??). Let it Be – I’m pretty sure it’s remastered and ready to go, but someone is holding it up. In my opinion, John comes off looking the worst so maybe it’s Yoko, I dunno. Frankly, if they’re going to release it I might not even bother unless they add some of the other footage that isn’t so bleak.

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    1. I am sure Neil had everything preserved to digital. Paul thought he came off the worse but who knows. Just give us extra footage of them playing.

      You can still get the documentary off of eBay

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    2. If you don’t mind me asking you a question…Do you or have you ever owned a laser disc player? I know that Let It Be is on it and the Compleat Beatles also I believe… I see discs in second hand shops… I’ve actually thought about getting one… they are not high at all. I heard the quality is great. I don’t know much about them.

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