‘Echo of today’ Eerie parallels in film about Lennon and Ono in US
The Guardian|October 14, 2024
From sit-ins for peace to avant-garde happenings and covert surveillance of revolutionary sympathies, the world of John Lennon and Yoko Ono can seem removed from that of our own. But a new documentary about the couple exposes the eerie similarities between the 1970s and now, its Oscar-winning director has said.
Nadia Khomami
‘Echo of today’ Eerie parallels in film about Lennon and Ono in US

One to One, by Kevin Macdonald, portrays Lennon and Ono's life over an 18-month period after their move to New York in 1971, when they quickly became figureheads for the counterculture and anti-Vietnam war movements.

Showing at the London film festival, it centres around the 1972 One to One benefit concert at Madison Square Garden - Lennon's last full-length concert and his only one after the Beatles - performed in aid of children with special needs.

“What I hadn't realised until I started making this was that the period seems like an incredible echo of today, it's like a mirror image,” Macdonald said.

His film incorporates newly restored 16mm film footage of the concert, archival news clips - of the Attica prison riot, Richard Nixon, the Vietnam war and the shooting of the Alabama governor George Wallace - as well as unheard tapes of Lennon and Ono's private phone calls, recorded by them when they became concerned the FBI was tapping their communications.

Combined, it acted as a corrective to the idea that there is something uniquely divisive about contemporary politics, Macdonald said. “There was a lot of stuff about the early environmental movement and ads on TV to stop oil. I thought we were only just having these conversations.

This story is from the October 14, 2024 edition of The Guardian.

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This story is from the October 14, 2024 edition of The Guardian.

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