'The Beatles Live!' Movie: Production Company Solicits Fans For Beatles Concert Footage

Beatles Movie Coming Soon
FILE - In this 1964 file photo, The Beatles, from left, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, John Lennon and George Harrison board a plane for England in New York. Recently discovered footage of the Fab Four's first full-length concert is the subject of a new documentary, The Beatles: The Lost Concert and it includes their entire first full-length concert in the United States. The film's World Premiere is scheduled at New York's Ziegfield Theatre on May 6 with two screenings planned. (AP Photo, file)
FILE - In this 1964 file photo, The Beatles, from left, Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, John Lennon and George Harrison board a plane for England in New York. Recently discovered footage of the Fab Four's first full-length concert is the subject of a new documentary, The Beatles: The Lost Concert and it includes their entire first full-length concert in the United States. The film's World Premiere is scheduled at New York's Ziegfield Theatre on May 6 with two screenings planned. (AP Photo, file)

Fans can start the countdown ... now. As reported by TheWrap, the production company, OVOW, has been given permission from The Beatles' Apple Corps to start work on a movie called "The Beatles Live!"

"The Beatles Live! Project is a collaborative global quest to find and reveal hidden films, sound recordings, stories, photographs, and other media artifacts that were captured during The Beatles' concert tours," OVOW says on the website for the film. "The best media and stories that we find will be showcased in a planned feature film about The Beatles’ concert tours. This project provides a one-time opportunity for the fans to collaborate with The Beatles in a planned feature film."

The project allows fans to upload digital content directly to the movie's website, as well as offering additional options for fans to submit non-digital media and write-up stories of their Beatles experiences.

"The ultimate goal: to combine footage, images, music, interviews, and stories in a definitive, emotional and visceral feature film about Beatlemania," OVOW explained in a press release. "This cultural phenomenon not only brought the world together through song, but helped usher in what is now recognized as a golden age of contemporary music."

While Beatlemania began decades ago, it is still very much alive today. On Tuesday, Sotheby's auctioned off original artwork from the band's "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" album for approximately $87,720.

[via TheWrap]

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