{"id":13167,"date":"2011-10-12T02:29:29","date_gmt":"2011-10-12T01:29:29","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.filmdetail.com\/?p=13167"},"modified":"2011-10-12T14:53:14","modified_gmt":"2011-10-12T13:53:14","slug":"george-harrison-living-in-the-material-world-dvd-blu-ra","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.filmdetail.com\/2011\/10\/12\/george-harrison-living-in-the-material-world-dvd-blu-ra\/","title":{"rendered":"George Harrison: Living in the Material World"},"content":{"rendered":"
Martin Scorsese’s documentary about George Harrison is an absorbing and surprisingly spiritual examination of the late musician.<\/p>\n After screening at the Telluride film festival<\/a> last month, this 208 minute film recently aired on HBO in the US and has just come out on Blu-ray and DVD in the UK before a screening on BBC Two later this year.<\/p>\n Part of the realities of modern movie distribution mean that this long-form work only got a brief screening at cinemas around the UK last week, before its arrival in shops on Monday.<\/p>\n But it marks another landmark musical documentary for Scorsese after No Direction Home<\/a> (2005), his outstanding film about Bob Dylan, as it charts the cultural impact of the Beatles from the perspective of its most reflective member.<\/p>\n This not only gives the familiar subject a fresh feel, but it also goes into deep and moving areas as it charts how he dealt with the onslaught of fame and attention that came with being in the biggest band in the world.<\/p>\n Split into two parts the first deals with his childhood in Liverpool, the early days of The Beatles in Hamburg and their eventual rise to the dizzying heights of global fame, whilst the second explores how he dealt with that fame, becoming a solo artist, staging charity concerts, financing Monty Python films and his growing interest in Indian music and philosophy.<\/p>\n Scorsese has long had an interest in rock music but here he seems to have found a kindred spirit in Harrison, whose desire to transcend the surface trappings of fame provides the real fuel for this film.<\/p>\n Brilliantly assembled from a wealth of archive footage, including some vintage photography of the Fab Four and lots of material from the Harrison home movie collection, it creates a fascinating portrait of a musician who unwittingly became part of something huge.<\/p>\n For Beatles fans, it doesn’t attempt the scale of the 11-hour Anthology project from 1995 – still the definitive filmed history of the band – but gives us a different perspective outside of the Lennon-McCartney axis and provides us with unexpected pleasures as it charts his spiritual growth.<\/p>\n<\/a><\/p>\n
<\/a>Made with the full co-operation of Harrison’s family – his widow Olivia<\/a> and son Dhani<\/a> – it features interviews with them, bandmates Paul McCartney<\/a> and Ringo Starr<\/a>, plus numerous friends and acquaintances including Yoko Ono<\/a>, George Martin<\/a>, Eric Clapton<\/a>, Astrid Kirchherr<\/a>, Klaus Voormann<\/a>, Eric Idle<\/a>, Phil Spector<\/a> (before his 2009 murder conviction) and Tom Petty<\/a>.<\/p>\n