The Hours and Times (1992)

The Hours and Times (1992)
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The relationship between John Lennon and Brian Epstein, the manager of The Beatles, is fictionalized in writer-director Christopher Munch's acclaimed The Hours and Times. The basis of the film is a real-life event from 1963, when Epstein and Lennon left the rest of the Beatles behind to spend an extended weekend together in Barcelona, seeking rest and relaxation. Munch builds his film around conjectures about what may have happened that weekend just before the breaking of Beatlemania in America, portraying the bonding, conflicts, and sexual tension between the two men. As the trip begins, the homosexual Epstein has already been nursing a frustrating crush upon the young singer, which Lennon -- recently married -- has neither fully acknowledged nor discouraged, as he alternately questions Epstein with intrigued curiosity and flirts with stewardesses. Munch's film, winner of a special award at the Sundance Film Festival, as well as acclaim from numerous critics, presents Lennon and Epstein's exchanges in crisp, rich black-and-white images, framing the pair against various Barcelona backdrops. Ian Hart, who portrays John Lennon in the film, would soon afterwards reprise the role -- with intriguing, subtle variation -- in the 1994 feature Backbeat. ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi

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Starring:
David AngusIan Hart, (more)
Director(s):
Christopher Munch
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of The Hours and Times

The relationship between John Lennon and Brian Epstein, the manager of The Beatles, is fictionalized in writer-director Christopher Munch's acclaimed The Hours and Times. The basis of the film is a real-life event from 1963, when Epstein and Lennon left the rest of the Beatles behind to spend an extended weekend together in Barcelona, seeking rest and relaxation. Munch builds his film around conjectures about what may have happened that weekend just before the breaking of Beatlemania in America, portraying the bonding, conflicts, and sexual tension between the two men. As the trip begins, the homosexual Epstein has already been nursing a frustrating crush upon the young singer, which Lennon -- recently married -- has neither fully acknowledged nor discouraged, as he alternately questions Epstein with intrigued curiosity and flirts with stewardesses. Munch's film, winner of a special award at the Sundance Film Festival, as well as acclaim from numerous critics, presents Lennon and Epstein's exchanges in crisp, rich black-and-white images, framing the pair against various Barcelona backdrops. Ian Hart, who portrays John Lennon in the film, would soon afterwards reprise the role -- with intriguing, subtle variation -- in the 1994 feature Backbeat. ~ Judd Blaise, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
60 mins

Complete Cast of The Hours and Times


Director(s):
Christopher Munch
Writer(s):
Christopher Munch
Producer(s):
Christopher Munch
The Hours and Times Awards:
  • 1992 - Berlin International Film Festival - Wolfgang Staudte Prize
  • 1991 - Sundance Film Festival - Special Jury Prize
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    Daniel C.

    According to Yoko Ono, the suicide death of Beatles image-maker and manager Brian Epstein was the most traumatic experience in John Lennon's adult life. The Hours and Times is an exceptionally well acted independent film speculating on what COULD have transpired during a conspicuously intimate holiday John and Brian took together in Barcelona, Spain. A lifelong friend of John Lennon reported John told him that he once offered himself sexually to Brian, although the discreetly gay Epstein declined the invitation. When a London disc jockey reported that John and Brian had been lovers, John reacted wildly by beating him up. These anecdotes lend plausibility to the idea that a young John Lennon who deeply admired the man who made him a commercial success may have taken that relationship to the point of sexual experimentation. By the time this engrossing 60-minute film zooms by, it leaves you wishing it would continue. An outstanding companion film to the underrated "Backbeat."

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    Edward M.

    This movie was so compelling that I watched it three times, once with commentary by the movie maker. The tension between the characters was portrayed in the most realistic way, this is an experience often lived out between two men--straight and gay. Whether it's factual is not so important. It took great skill of acting and directing to make this film. Hats off to all involved. Edward M

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    James S.

    Director Christopher Munch's first and probably best known film, "The Hours and Times" establishes the theme and sets the tone of his following films. Munch's examines the relationship of John Lennon and manager Brian Epstein during a weekend holiday they took in Barcelona before the Beatles' first American tour. Epstein, a cultured homosexual who later commited suicide, and the admiring Lennon, newly but not happily married, tetter on the sexual brink for the film's handsomely photographed sixty minutes, as Munch sensitively explores the contours of sexual and emotional longing and lost love, just as he does in his later films. I suspect some will find the film a bore, as it moves slowly and leads to no explosive revelation. Patient viewers will enjoy its observations, not just about Epstein and Lennon, but all relationships that somehow end unfulfilled.

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