@@ar22s It's also accurate of the social climate before The Beatles hit. They were part of a generation sick and tired of their parents and grandparents demanding gratitude for fighting WW2 for them (embodied in that older stuffy passenger). Mark Lewisohn brings it up many times in Tune In (Beatles biography from their ancestors to 31 Jan 1962).
Is there any meaning behind "clean" in this case? Is it something that only British people would get, or is It just literally referring to this man's hygiene?
Fun fact: Irish actor Wilfrid Brambell, who played Paul McCartney's fictional grandfather John McCartney, was already well known to British audiences as co-star of the British sitcom Steptoe and Son. The recurring joke that he was so clean reflects a play on his sitcom role, where he was always referred to as a dirty old man.
I know him from the film A Night to Remember from 1958, it’s about the Titanic disaster. He played a steward who held and comforted a young boy as the ship went under, telling him that “they’ll find mommy very soon”
my grandad almost met them in 1963 as he was helping to put on a show in Manchester. he got a ticket for my Grandma just in case she wanted to go to that event. in the end she didn't as she had to stay at home to look after My mum who was a very young baby at the time. apparently he thought they all looked like they needed to have wash
Wilford Brambell who played Paul's grandfather very nearly stole the movie away from the Beatles! He was hilarious!!! So glad they added him to the script.
Turns out he "that little old man" was only 52 years old in this movie. Wilfred Brambell was only 30 years older than his "grandson" Paul. Good acting; I was always convinced he was in his 70's or 80's, but when the camera zooms in close you can see he's really only middle aged!
Later when the police are holding him to get him back to Paul, they are serving him tea and making him comfy while he shouts, Do your worst, coppers! I'm a loyal son of the Republic! I bet that raised their hackles at Scotland Yard. The British Film Board must have missed it.
The American producer Walter Shenson told everyone to release the film in July 1964 because "By August everyone will have forgotten them:" Wow. That's how disrepected the Beatles were when they first came out.
@@ML-ul2zq "No, the change isn't due for another 3 months. He's just a troublemaker. All the same, let's make it a point not to renew Susan's contract. No sense taking unnecessary chances, hm?"
And at 4:52. Him and George and Ringo are all pulling these twisted mocking faces - but all Paul can do is a kind of tilted grin. He's such a bad actor, so not-natural compared to the other three Fabs.
The guy who played the grandfather was most well known for starring in Steptoe & Son (A show they remade in America as Sanford & Son) in which he played the elder Steptoe who frequently got called a 'dirty old man' by his son. Hence it was sort of an in-joke that in A Hard Days Night everyone keeps pointing out how clean he is.
The "I fought the war" exchange with Ringo at 4:36 was scandalous at the time. Dissing war veterans wasn't the done thing in 1964. Conservatives in later decades said the cultural upheavals of the 60s had corroded social morailty. This scene was considered evidence of that.
In a documentary about this film, there is a great anecdote about Alun Owen, the Liverpool comedian who was brought in to follow the boys around and write a script. Apparently, John Lennon initially took issue. Lennon: My problem with this guy (Owen) is he's basically a professional Liverpudlian! Owen retorted: Well, it's better than being an amateur Liverpudlian! Lennon: I like this guy!
I first saw this movie at the theater in 1965 with my grandmother! Since then I’ve seen it easily 1000 times! I can recite the entire dialogue of the movie while watching it! Who else can do that?!?!
@@carolfreitag6847 Me too about reciting it. I can recite this hole scene from memory too. I saw it first when I was six, back to back twice, till probably two in the morning.
The "clean" jokes were a reference to the actor's role in the TV show "Steptoe and Son" which was later adapted to become the American show "Sanford and Son".
"You dirty old man" was a constant reference by Harold Steptoe (Harry H. Corbett) to his on-screen father Albert (Wilfred Brambell). Ironically Wilfred Brambell was just short of 13 years older than Harry.
A Hard Day's Night is a 1964 musical comedy film starring the English rock band the Beatles-John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr-during the height of Beatlemania. It was originally released in the United States on August 11, 1964 by United Artists. The film was a financial and critical success and was nominated for two Academy Awards including Best Original Screenplay. Forty years after its release, Time magazine rated it as one of the 100 all-time great films.
The idea was that George was eating rolls. It often said that his mum was always making him rolls to take with him so they picked up on that and added it to the movie. Regarding the Coke snorting. Well in those far off innocent days most of the young British public at least would not have connected what John was doing with drugs (very naive) of course later years make us all only too aware of drug taking and the damage it does to so many lives and not just the users themselves. This is not a criticism of John's play acting. Although more knowledgeable he was just as much caught up in the relatively simple view of life back then before everything became far more serious.
That man who wants the window open was an actor by the name of Richard Vernon. He was a very popular character actor in England in appeared in the Avengers and the James Bond movie Goldfinger. I actually met him a few years before he died in 1997 from Parkinsons disease and he talked exactly how he talked in Hard Days night. Same accent, everything.
For anyone interested in knowing why the Beatles captured the world's attention, watch this timeless film. Oscar-nominated screenplay by Alun Owen, groundbreaking direction by Dick Lester and fabulous music tracks. Plus, you couldn't take your eyes off of the Beatles!
john: ello grandfather grandfather: ello. john: oh he can talk can he? paul: well of course he can. Hes a human being after all isnt he? Ringo: well if hes your granfather who knows-HAHAHAHA.. John: :D
1:16. John Lennon: Hello, grandfather. Grandfather: Hello. John Lennon: He can talk then, can't he? Paul McCartney: Of course, he can talk. He's human being, isn't he? Ringo Starr: Well, if he's your grandfather who knows. (Laughs) 1:39. Shake: Hiya. Paul McCartney: Hello, Shake. George Harrison: Hello, Shake. He gives George Harrison a bottle glass of soda, which says "Pepsi." Shake: U got on alright, then? John Lennon: No. He gives John Lennon a bottle glass of soda, which says "Pepsi" too. Best wishes, this is Michael Meneses.
I can never say it enough! This is one of my FAVORITE SCENES from one of my FAVORITE FILMS!! But uuuh, just thought I'd mention that Paul's grandfather seems to be a rather very clean ol'man, ain't he???
I loved this movie w all my heart. I watched it so many times that I wore out the video tape I bought with my part time job in high school at the ceremony center. It cost me a fortune! at nearly 5,000 JPY more than 20 years from now.
A sad, lonely and depressed 13 year old boy was having another bad day. He'd heard of the Beatles and of this film but never saw it. At the end of that bad day, A Hard Day's Night comes on TV. In less than an hour, the film once called "the Citizen Kane of Rock Movies," with its wit, wisdom, humor and brilliant music has turned him into a Beatle Freak... Nearly 50 years later, the now middle aged man is still a Beatle freak. Go figure.
Nice, charming, funny movie, with lots of laughs and great music! It can also be recommended for children! My husband and I have loved the Beatles since childhood.
+Fatima Curiel That line was put in as a running gag. The actor played a character similar to Sanford on "Sanford and Son" that was always called a "dirty old man", so they put in a few lines about him being clean.
As a railway enthusiast, I like that they did most of the filming upon an actual carriage whilst in motion at full cry. Hi from Green Bay, GO PACKERS!!!!! ALSO, Quite Popular during the 1960s and the Lombardi Era with Bart Starr as Quarterback. Please note that we Both have Starr and Star in our fan bases. LOL!!!! Fri., December 3, 2021, A.D. MERRY CHRISTMAS 🎅 🎄 ❤.
That was an in joke because Wilfred Brambell (Grandfather) was the lead on the tv series Steptoe and Son and everyone was calling him dirty all the time.
"A Hard Day's Night" was a scripted film, of course, but the script was inspired by watching The Four trade gags with each other. It was probably a good way to release the stress from being "A Beatle" in 1964."
"I fought the war for your sort"
"I bet you're sorry you won"
oh ringo
This film is full of such wonderful sarcasms.
@@ar22s It's also accurate of the social climate before The Beatles hit. They were part of a generation sick and tired of their parents and grandparents demanding gratitude for fighting WW2 for them (embodied in that older stuffy passenger). Mark Lewisohn brings it up many times in Tune In (Beatles biography from their ancestors to 31 Jan 1962).
BlueFox94 lmao stfu no1 cares. the beatles aren’t gods relax.
@@ALTROTOPIA A lot of people did care at the time, and later.
ALVARO RUBIO are you that ignorant
i love how George is just sitting there eating bread
Very crunchy bread.
I think it’s a hard boiled egg
It is a scone.
@Janetta Martin that sounds like it could of been in the movie excellent and funny remark...LoL😄😄
I think it is a pastry but not sure
"course he can talk he's a human being ain't he?"
"well if he's your grandfather who knows?"
Hahahaha
The laugh afterward tho🤣
He's clean isn't he?
@@fritter_blue i think it suggests that he might die before he can talk or something like that
@@VincentDotZip I always thought was Ringo saying Paul wasn't a human. lol
I love the way George says "That's not your grandfather." "No I've seen your grandfather, he lives at your 'ouse."
I KNOW RIGHT? EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
i like how the concept of having two grandfathers is apparently weird lol
"Are you listening to me Lennon?" "You're a swine, Isn't he George?" " Yeah a swine ..."
-Thanks. Hey...!
-WHO'S THAT LITTLE OLD MAN?
@Pablo Asrin All the times I've seen this, I never noticed that.
They supposed to not know about drugs at the time
@@garyjones8556very clever that, shows a little ruggedness in their clean image back then
lol anyone notice he was trying to snort a coke bottle?
"Hey!"
"Who's that little old man?"
"Well, who is he?"
"He belongs to Paul"
I love that part.
Actually Paul belongs to the little old man since that's his paternal Grandfather
i assumed it was maternal cuz he said his mom wanted him to go on the trip
"Hey Mister! Can we have our ball back?!"
That's a classic line I pull out on people all the time
What does it mean tho?
@@kendrickbritto8556 I guess the room they’re in
Goal
@@kendrickbritto8556 I think they're calling him the grumpy old man.
Somehow your ball never lands in a nice person's backyard.
Come On Let’s Go Have Some Coffee And Leave The Kennel To Lassie
Love how John is "snorting" the "Coke" bottle (even though it's Pepsi) when Norm is talking 🤣
John supposed to drink it, not snort it.
And it looks like right after Paul says to John, "He's very clean." John starts to SNIFF his grandfather as he gets up to go sit next to him! 🤣👍
"He's a nice old man, ain't he?" "He's very clean"
Very clean, ain't he?
He's very clean.
He looks quite clean to me.
not saying aint
Is there any meaning behind "clean" in this case? Is it something that only British people would get, or is It just literally referring to this man's hygiene?
Fun fact: Irish actor Wilfrid Brambell, who played Paul McCartney's fictional grandfather John McCartney, was already well known to British audiences as co-star of the British sitcom Steptoe and Son. The recurring joke that he was so clean reflects a play on his sitcom role, where he was always referred to as a dirty old man.
Wow! Thank you for that bit of trivia! I did NOT know that! Very interesting, and funny! 👍 Very "clean'" humour! 😆👍
Steptoe and Son was the basis for Sanford and Son in the U.S.
The "grandfather" looks pretty similar to Vivian Stanshall. Maybe he IS the grandfather of Billy.
that is how i heard about him
I know him from the film A Night to Remember from 1958, it’s about the Titanic disaster. He played a steward who held and comforted a young boy as the ship went under, telling him that “they’ll find mommy very soon”
"Well if he's your grandfather who knows? Hahaha!"
my grandad almost met them in 1963 as he was helping to put on a show in Manchester. he got a ticket for my Grandma just in case she wanted to go to that event. in the end she didn't as she had to stay at home to look after My mum who was a very young baby at the time. apparently he thought they all looked like they needed to have wash
George's scowling look (4:13) after the older gent turns off Ringo's radio is priceless...LoL😀😀
I thought George was gonna burst after he scowled. I know he didn't but still. 😂😂😂
It's almost like he's a dog protecting his owner (Ringo) haha because the old man upset Ringo by turning off his radio lol xxx
@@Tyler_Mills26 sem dúvida George era um grande compusitor
How dare he turn off Jimmy Page!!
That was cute.
"Give us a kiss."
John was such a card. 😂 ❤
He flirted aggressively with every woman and man in this movie lmao
John is so sarcastic. I love it.
Proper Liverpudlian
Colin.
Wilford Brambell who played Paul's grandfather very nearly stole the movie away from the Beatles! He was hilarious!!! So glad they added him to the script.
Turns out he "that little old man" was only 52 years old in this movie. Wilfred Brambell was only 30 years older than his "grandson" Paul. Good acting; I was always convinced he was in his 70's or 80's, but when the camera zooms in close you can see he's really only middle aged!
@@uebergeek i noticed he's wearing a very smart looking flat cap
Shame he turned out to be a nonce.. not very clean now, eh?
Later when the police are holding him to get him back to Paul, they are serving him tea and making him comfy while he shouts, Do your worst, coppers! I'm a loyal son of the Republic! I bet that raised their hackles at Scotland Yard. The British Film Board must have missed it.
He was very clean.
They thought they would get a silly Elvis-type movie. They wound up with a masterpiece.
The American producer Walter Shenson told everyone to release the film in July 1964 because "By August everyone will have forgotten them:" Wow. That's how disrepected the Beatles were when they first came out.
@@ML-ul2zq "No, the change isn't due for another 3 months. He's just a troublemaker. All the same, let's make it a point not to renew Susan's contract. No sense taking unnecessary chances, hm?"
Masterpiece?...
@@ElgriegodepompeyaAbsolutely.
So Incredibly true! 👍
Say it all together: WHO'S THAT LITTLE OLD MAN?
+Alexander Hammond man
Correction: ALL TOGETHER NOW.
... man.
It belongs to Paul
WHO’S THAT LITTLE OLD MAN?
Ringo's sarcastic laugh 😂😂😂
Why can that not be a Thomas sound that he recorded for the show
The Beatles are great actors as they are musicians!
They really were, and funny! Now you see why everyone fell in love with them. It wasn't just the music, they were just so lovable for so many reasons.
WillCarr 91 you are so right about that! 😉 They're talented singers on stage and hilarious actors on screen! 😄
And all they had to do is act naturallyyyy.
John's face at 3:49 ugh I love these boys
And at 4:52. Him and George and Ringo are all pulling these twisted mocking faces - but all Paul can do is a kind of tilted grin. He's such a bad actor, so not-natural compared to the other three Fabs.
@@morganfisherart don’t do paul like that 🥺
@Janetta Martin well Paul is God 🤨
@@bil2340 hes a human being like everybody else
And at 0:45 looking at the camera before saying his line
John: “give us a kiss”
Is my favourite line of his here
Aww, George is soo cute while eating that bread😍:-)
Lol
In the words of a true Beatlemanic.
Norm: Hey! *points*
All: WHO'S THAT LITTLE OLD MAN?
Max Power more like "WHO'S THAT LITTLE OLD MAN man' ahahah
He belongs to Paul...
At 4:02 when Ringo turns on the radio its actually Jimmy Page playing the guitar. The things you learn.
I've heard elsewhere that it was them jamming.
Led Zeppelin didn't even exist at the time. It's Jimmy Page playing in The Yardbirds.
@@finckel2682 What song
@@valeriapretell7517 I don't know.
@@finckel2682 Page didn't join the Yardbirds until 66 though.
Boy, to think, that 20 years later Ringo would be the narrator of an animated series about trains... :D
Ringo was the narrator for Thomas the tank engine?
@@Analogmemories245 Yes, in the early episodes.
*It was time for Thomas to leave. He had seen everything.*
The Beatles. One of the best rock bands in the 1960s.
THE best.
And not just in the 60’s, they’re the best band ever
**of all time
"One of"? Of course, they weren't in the same league as, umm, Gerry and The Pacemakers, right?
They're more than a band. They're icons. Without them and their creativity rock and roll wouldn't be what it is today.
The guy who played the grandfather was most well known for starring in Steptoe & Son (A show they remade in America as Sanford & Son) in which he played the elder Steptoe who frequently got called a 'dirty old man' by his son. Hence it was sort of an in-joke that in A Hard Days Night everyone keeps pointing out how clean he is.
“You’re a swine. Isn’t he, George?”
“Yeah, a swine.”
“thanks.”
I love this movie
Me too.
@@mariadanielaoliveracalvo7040 me too
We all do.
The "I fought the war" exchange with Ringo at 4:36 was scandalous at the time. Dissing war veterans wasn't the done thing in 1964. Conservatives in later decades said the cultural upheavals of the 60s had corroded social morailty. This scene was considered evidence of that.
Damn, and we are supposed to be a "sensitive" generation? Lol
The way John just says “Give Us a Kiss” 😂
In a documentary about this film, there is a great anecdote about Alun Owen, the Liverpool comedian who was brought in to follow the boys around and write a script. Apparently, John Lennon initially took issue.
Lennon: My problem with this guy (Owen) is he's basically a professional Liverpudlian!
Owen retorted: Well, it's better than being an amateur Liverpudlian!
Lennon: I like this guy!
I've just discovered this film and from this scene it's already my favourite film.
I first saw this movie at the theater in 1965 with my grandmother! Since then I’ve seen it easily 1000 times! I can recite the entire dialogue of the movie while watching it! Who else can do that?!?!
@@carolfreitag6847 Me too about reciting it. I can recite this hole scene from memory too. I saw it first when I was six, back to back twice, till probably two in the morning.
RINGOS LAUGHXDDDDDD
l was thinking the same thing!
They still make me laugh, those 4 funny guys 😂
4:08...love how Paul looks at the passenger and his eyes scan up and down..
did anyone else notice john pickpocketing the dude at 2:08
Tanner Knight Woow, I didn't notice that! So lovely!
Holy crap
I did.
Never noticed until now
The "clean" jokes were a reference to the actor's role in the TV show "Steptoe and Son" which was later adapted to become the American show "Sanford and Son".
"You dirty old man" was a constant reference by Harold Steptoe (Harry H. Corbett) to his on-screen father Albert (Wilfred Brambell).
Ironically Wilfred Brambell was just short of 13 years older than Harry.
@@allenjenkins7947 Which, coincidentally enough, was the age difference between Prince Charles & Princess Diana.
Ringo says he belongs to Paul !!!
No shit !!!
Paul belongs to him.
A Hard Day's Night is a 1964 musical comedy film starring the English rock band the Beatles-John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr-during the height of Beatlemania. It was originally released in the United States on August 11, 1964 by United Artists. The film was a financial and critical success and was nominated for two Academy Awards including Best Original Screenplay. Forty years after its release, Time magazine rated it as one of the 100 all-time great films.
The idea was that George was eating rolls. It often said that his mum was always making him rolls to take with him so they picked up on that and added it to the movie. Regarding the Coke snorting. Well in those far off innocent days most of the young British public at least would not have connected what John was doing with drugs (very naive) of course later years make us all only too aware of drug taking and the damage it does to so many lives and not just the users themselves. This is not a criticism of John's play acting. Although more knowledgeable he was just as much caught up in the relatively simple view of life back then before everything became far more serious.
But it wasn't Coke. It was Pepsi.
Mister can we have our ball back
That's my favorite line.
@@marisaledesmaml mine too! 😂😂😂
I watched this with my dad who was a huge Beatles fan I thought I wouldn't be into it, but omg loved it. Everytime I watch it now I think of my dad
That man who wants the window open was an actor by the name of Richard Vernon. He was a very popular character actor in England in appeared in the Avengers and the James Bond movie Goldfinger. I actually met him a few years before he died in 1997 from Parkinsons disease and he talked exactly how he talked in Hard Days night. Same accent, everything.
And BTW, he was only 39 when he filmed this scene with the Beatles.
Georgie Thumbs Really? Looks more like 55 or so than 39. 😂
I also remember him in some horror classics like Roger Corman's "The Tomb of Ligeia" and Hammer Films' "The Satanic Rites of Dracula"
He was also Slartibartfast in the Radio and TV versions of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.
The window open? Seems he wanted it closed to me
I travel on this train regularly - twice a week.
John is so John in this Scene i Love It 😭
"Give us a kiss."
2:27 To me, George's face and the way he says that sounds as if he just doesn't care and is like "just let me eat me bloody sandwich, John".
I'm from Liverpool just like the beatles. They make my city so proud
All absolute legends, naturals, the best of my youth. Thanks, Fab Four!
For anyone interested in knowing why the Beatles captured the world's attention, watch this timeless film. Oscar-nominated screenplay by Alun Owen, groundbreaking direction by Dick Lester and fabulous music tracks. Plus, you couldn't take your eyes off of the Beatles!
Ringo: Well if he's your Grandfather, who knows?
Man speaks in run on sentences.
"Wellifhe'syourgrandfatherwhoknowsHÆÆÆÆ"
John was such a cheeky chap and gorgeous !
john: ello grandfather
grandfather: ello.
john: oh he can talk can he?
paul: well of course he can. Hes a human being after all isnt he?
Ringo: well if hes your granfather who knows-HAHAHAHA..
John: :D
Colton Choate I’ve always found Ringo’s laugh hilarious
Untitled Unknown I find Ringo’s laughing weird.
And grandfather was like 😐
paul: >:(
1:16.
John Lennon: Hello, grandfather.
Grandfather: Hello.
John Lennon: He can talk then, can't he?
Paul McCartney: Of course, he can talk. He's human being, isn't he?
Ringo Starr: Well, if he's your grandfather who knows. (Laughs)
1:39.
Shake: Hiya.
Paul McCartney: Hello, Shake.
George Harrison: Hello, Shake.
He gives George Harrison a bottle glass of soda, which says "Pepsi."
Shake: U got on alright, then?
John Lennon: No.
He gives John Lennon a bottle glass of soda, which says "Pepsi" too.
Best wishes, this is Michael Meneses.
Wonderful film,thank God this is on u tube!
I can never say it enough! This is one of my FAVORITE SCENES from one of my FAVORITE FILMS!! But uuuh, just thought I'd mention that Paul's grandfather seems to be a rather very clean ol'man, ain't he???
Leave the kennel to Lassie! Love it.😊
4:09 omg I died with Paul's face
He's being such a weirdo at that moment.
Love it😂.
Imagine having him that close to your face 🥵🥵🥵🥵
"Hey Mister can we have our ball back?"
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Their faces they make are so funny!. 😄😄😄😄😄😄😄😄
Yeah! The way Paul says that is adorable and hysterical
The best comment section ever since it helped me, a guy that use English as a second language & don't understand nearly 90% their "Booh wa'er" accent.
*shake comes in*
paul, startled??: ʰᵉˡˡᵒ ˢʰᵃᵏᵉ
george: *H E L L O S H A K E*
" i shall call the guard"
"Ah but what, they don't take too kindly to insults" 😄😄😄
I loved this movie w all my heart.
I watched it so many times that I wore out the video tape I bought with my part time job in high school at the ceremony center. It cost me a fortune! at nearly 5,000 JPY more than 20 years from now.
Best rock and roll movie ever!
Having Ringo on a train is very fitting because 20 years after this he narrated the first two seasons of Thomas and friends
A sad, lonely and depressed 13 year old boy was having another bad day. He'd heard of the Beatles and of this film but never saw it. At the end of that bad day, A Hard Day's Night comes on TV. In less than an hour, the film once called "the Citizen Kane of Rock Movies," with its wit, wisdom, humor and brilliant music has turned him into a Beatle Freak... Nearly 50 years later, the now middle aged man is still a Beatle freak. Go figure.
"I'll bind him to me with promises". Ha! These guys were SO hip for the times.
The beatles dished out witty comments left and right
Some of the best 5 mins committed to film.
Nice, charming, funny movie, with lots of laughs and great music! It can also be recommended for children!
My husband and I have loved the Beatles since childhood.
"Give us a kiss." 🤣
“You got on alright then?”
“No”
"Elllo Grandfather!" kinda sounds like "Ello Gov'nor!"
Equivalent!
1:19
"he can talk then, cant he?"
"course he can talk hes a human bein isnt he?"
"wellifhesyourgradnfatherwhoknowshehahaha"
my favorite line ahahaha
*All 3: Who’s that little old man*
Ringo, 1 second after: Man
I just finished watching this on tcm network it was good to see this again love it classic
OH YES,AND RINGO TURNING THE RADIO AT FULL BLAST 🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🙏💖😂😂😂😂🔥💥
he's very clean
So's Paul these days.
+Fatima Curiel That line was put in as a running gag. The actor played a character similar to Sanford on "Sanford and Son" that was always called a "dirty old man", so they put in a few lines about him being clean.
Lauren Montera yes I know. Thank you :)
Very clean
Also, on Steptoe & Son, they always dressed Brambell rather raggedly, while in this film, he really is dressed rather cleanly.
Innocent rebelliousness. A time LONG gone. And missed.
omg bless Ringo's laugh at 1:24
"It belongs to Paul"
I died
Saw this amazing film on telly early Sunday x singing along to every song, man I wanna be born in the 60s x they don't make "em like that no more x
2:29
shake: hey!
the rest of the three beatles in unison: WHO THATS LITTLE OLD MAN??
george: ...man
Que epoca 😮 ahora son grandfsder ellos 😮 Inaudito pasa el maldito tiempo 😢
John sniffing the coke bottle is subtly hilarious
This scene is the cutest thing since Nyan cat. Only this cuteness came first
“Hey Mister can we have our ball back” I say that to everyone when they take something I want 😂😂
do you know what that line means tho? I don't understand it
@@warmachine6880 it is a reference to the classic "kids play ball game, ball lands in yard of grumpy old neighbor" situation.
@@childrenofminervaofficial4316 thank you!
Best scene of the entire film
George’s face at 4:13😭😭
HEY MISTER CAN WE HAVE OUR BALL BACK!?!
sydney McCartney Hey mister, can we have young Paul back!?!
As a railway enthusiast, I like that they did most of the filming upon an actual carriage whilst in motion at full cry. Hi from Green Bay, GO PACKERS!!!!! ALSO, Quite Popular during the 1960s and the Lombardi Era with Bart Starr as Quarterback. Please note that we Both have Starr and Star in our fan bases. LOL!!!! Fri., December 3, 2021, A.D. MERRY CHRISTMAS 🎅 🎄 ❤.
This scene was done on an actual train ride?
Very clean, isn't he?
Yes. Very clean.
Yes indeed very clean
He’s a very clean one
That was an in joke because Wilfred Brambell (Grandfather) was the lead on the tv series Steptoe and Son and everyone was calling him dirty all the time.
"A Hard Day's Night" was a scripted film, of course, but the script was inspired by watching The Four trade gags with each other. It was probably a good way to release the stress from being "A Beatle" in 1964."
2:19 Lennon sniffing coke
4:51-4:58. Hey mister, can we have our ball back?!! 😂😂😂
Happy 58 years of A Hard Days Night, July 10th 1964
Hahaha!! The intro scene! I played this movie so many times as a teen. I could recite the script almost word for word up until 1:45! Ha!! 😅
This has the same feeling as a 2010 RUclips skit
thats the beauty of the beatles
The master James Patrick Page played guitar on the radio at 4.02.
4:12
Ringo: 🥺
George: 😠
Love how it feels as if the beatles took out a smartphone and started recording fooling around while on a train.