3:23 PM Hey Jude Full Album - The Beatles | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hey Jude Full Album - The Beatles
============================================================== Remember hearing this on Ed Sullivan, but they cut out "Chrst". Heard it uncut swimming in a hotel pool in Spain, over and over again. I was 10 years old and always thought, why the "edit". It's just a word, Christ!
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FULL ALBUM
This was my first Beatles album!! I inherited this along with "Meet the Beatles" back in 1978 when my grandparents passed away. It wasn't until the 2009 re-masters that I discovered my two Beatles albums were AMERICAN Beatles albums. I had no idea the England and American albums were different! This is still the quintessential Beatles album to me.
Δ______>>>>>>>>>>>>>>17 Σεπ 2014 Documentary-style drama showing the events that led up to the tragic incident on January 30, 1972 in the Northern Ireland town of Derry when a protest march led by civil rights activist Ivan Cooper was fired upon by British troops, killing 13 protesters and wounding 14 more. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Not to be confused with Sunday Bloody Sunday (film).
Bloody Sunday is a 2002 film about the 1972 "Bloody Sunday" shootings in Derry, Northern Ireland. Although produced by Granada Television as a TV film, it premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on 16 January, a few days before its screening on ITV on 20 January, and then in selected London cinemas from 25 January. The production was written and directed by Paul Greengrass. Though set in Derry city, the film was actually shot in Ballymun in North Dublin. However, some location scenes were shot in Derry City, in Guildhall Square and in Creggan on the actual route of the march 1972. Contents
ContentThe movie was inspired by Don Mullan's politically influential book Eyewitness Bloody Sunday (Wolfhound Press, 1997). The drama shows the events of the day through the eyes of Ivan Cooper, a SDLP Member of the Parliament of Northern Ireland who was a central organiser of the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association march in Derry on 30 January 1972. The march ended when British Army paratroopers fired on the demonstrators, killing thirteen instantly and wounding another person who died 4½ months later. The soundtrack contains only one piece of music, a live version of "Sunday Bloody Sunday" by U2 which plays over the closing credits. Casting and productionCooper is played by James Nesbitt, himself a Protestant from Northern Ireland. In recognition of the role his book played in achieving the new Bloody Sunday Inquiry, headed by Lord Saville, and its inspiration for the movie, and the fact that he was a schoolboy witness to the tragedy, director Paul Greengrass asked Mullan to appear in the film as a Bogside Priest. A number of the military characters were played by ex-members of the British Army, including Simon Mann. Gerry Donaghy was played by Declan Duddy, nephew of Jackie Duddy, one of those killed on Bloody Sunday. Big Brother 2007 (UK) housemate Seány O'Kane was in the film also.[1] Notable actors
ResponsesThe film was critically acclaimed.[2] It won the Audience Award at Sundance and the Golden Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival (tied with Spirited Away), in addition to the Hitchcock d'Or best film prize at the Dinard Festival of British Cinema.[3] Bloody Sunday appeared a week before Jimmy McGovern's TV film on the same subject, entitled Sunday (shown by Channel 4). McGovern subsequently criticised Greengrass's film for concentrating on the leadership of the march, and not the perspective of those who joined it.[4] It holds a 92% approval rating on aggregate review site Rotten Tomatoes, based on 102 collected reviews, with an average score of 7.9\10. The sites consensus reads: "Bloody Sunday powerfully recreates the events of that day with startling immediacy."[5] References
Further reading
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