Ron Howard has mirrored on his expertise directing The Beatles documentary Eight Days A Week – The Touring Years, together with assembly Paul McCartney.

The 2016 documentary movie charted the band’s touring years from 1962 to 1966, together with their ultimate full public live performance at San Francisco’s Candlestick Park.

Chatting with NME throughout an unique Absolute Scenes interview in regards to the undertaking (proven above), Howard stated: “I actually associated to and revered Paul McCartney. What a piece ethic. He loves it.

“I really feel that approach about directing. I really feel that approach about telling tales.”

Whereas making the documentary, Howard defined that he gained an additional appreciation of the band’s songwriting.

Paul McCartney
Paul McCartney performs at Glastonbury Competition 2022 CREDIT: Samir Hussein/Wireimage

“In beginning to work on a documentary about their touring years which is what Eight Days A Week was, from the vantage level of getting been a director and a storyteller for many years, I used to be so blown away by the writing,” Howard added.

“There’s the presence that I fell in love with, beginning with The Ed Sullivan Present. Of those guys with a special haircut and an awesome sound and women going loopy for them, however completely infectious information that you just simply would play again and again.

“However what I started to grasp was, even in these early information, these first hits, the writing is simply good. As they developed, it turned clear to me [that[ you could be in any frame of mind possible within the framework of the human experience and there’s a song they wrote that will speak to you very, very directly.

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“I don’t care what mood, or what you’re going through, that’s the genius of the band and why their music is as relevant, in many ways, as it’s ever been.”

Elsewhere in the interview, Howard discussed his collaborations with Tom Hanks and why it’s unlikely that we’ll see a sequel to Solo: A Star Wars Story.

Howard’s latest film is Thirteen Lives, which tells the true story of the 2018 mission to rescue twelve boys and their football coach from Thailand’s Tham Luang cave. The film is available to stream now on Amazon Prime Video.



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