翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ I Wanna Get Lost with You
・ I Wanna Get Next to You
・ I Wanna Go
・ I Wanna Go Back
・ I Wanna Go Backwards
・ I Wanna Go Crazy
・ I Wanna Go on You
・ I Wanna Go There
・ I Wanna Go Too Far
・ I Wanna Go Where the People Go
・ I Wanna Have Some Fun
・ I Wanna Have Some Fun (song)
・ I Wanna Have Your Babies
・ I Wanna Hear It from You
・ I Wanna Hold You
I Wanna Hold Your Hand (film)
・ I Wanna Know
・ I Wanna Know (Ai song)
・ I Wanna Know You
・ I Wanna Live
・ I Wanna Love Somebody
・ I Wanna Love You
・ I Wanna Love You (Akon song)
・ I Wanna Love You (Jade song)
・ I Wanna Love You Forever
・ I Wanna Make You Close Your Eyes
・ I Wanna Make You Cry
・ I Wanna Make You Feel Good
・ I Wanna Marry "Harry"
・ I Wanna Pick You Up


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I Wanna Hold Your Hand (film) : ウィキペディア英語版
I Wanna Hold Your Hand (film)

''I Wanna Hold Your Hand'' is a 1978 comedy film directed and co-written by Robert Zemeckis, which takes its name from the 1963 song "I Want to Hold Your Hand" by The Beatles. It was produced and co-written by Bob Gale.
The film is about "Beatlemania" and is a fictionalized account of the day of the Beatles' first appearance on ''The Ed Sullivan Show'' (February 9, 1964). It was released in 1978 by Universal Studios.
The film is the feature film directorial debut of Robert Zemeckis and also the first film that Steven Spielberg executive produced. Even though modestly budgeted, in order to convince Universal to bankroll it, Spielberg had to promise studio executives that, if Zemeckis was seen to be doing a markedly poor job, he would step in and direct the film himself.〔Shone, Tom. ''Blockbuster: How Hollywood Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Summer''. New York: Free Press, 2004. p. 125. ISBN 0-7432-3568-1〕
Despite positive previews and critical response (''The New York Times'' wrote that "the whole film sparkles with a boisterous lunacy" and called its plot "positively dazzling"), the film was not a financial success and was considered a flop, unable to recoup its rather modest $2.8 million budget. Zemeckis later said, "One of the great memories in my life is going to the preview. I didn't know what to expect () the audience just went wild. They were laughing and cheering. It was just great. Then we learned a really sad lesson....just because a movie worked with a preview audience didn't mean anyone wanted to go see it."〔Emery, Robert J. ''The Directors: Take Two''. New York: Allworth, 2002. p. 68. ISBN 1-58115-219-1〕
Over a year later, in December 1979, four of the film's stars—Bobby DiCicco, Wendie Jo Sperber, Nancy Allen and Eddie Deezen—appeared in the Spielberg-directed comedy film ''1941'', which was also written by Gale and Zemeckis. Susan Kendall Newman, who played Janis Goldman, is Paul Newman's daughter.
== Plot==

Ed Sullivan prepares the ushers for the Beatles' performance on his show. In Maplewood, New Jersey, Rosie and Pam visit the record shop. Janis, the owner’s daughter hates the Beatles. Grace wants to rent a limo, so they can pull up to the Beatles hotel, and get exclusive photos of the band. The girls recruit shy Larry DuBois, the local undertaker’s son as he has access to limos. They leave for New York City and on the way pick up Tony a brash, streetwise guy. After driving all night, they arrive in New York early on the morning of February 9, 1964. When they pull up at the hotel, Grace, Rosie and Pam sneak in, while Larry pulls the limo with Tony and Janis in it to the side of the building. Once inside, Grace and Rosie sneak into a service elevator, while Pam is left in the basement in a storage closet. Pam (who was they only one not really interested in seeing the Beatles, as she is engaged) sees them leave the hotel as they go to rehearse. Meanwhile, Grace gets off on the 11th floor. Rosie rides up to the 12th, where the Beatles’ room is located. She is caught, escapes and meets Richard Klaus, a fellow Beatles fan who is hiding out in a room in the hotel. Pam hides in a food cart and is taken to the Beatles’ room, where she handles all their stuff and hides under John’s bed. Grace is caught too, so she goes to the CBS studio, where a guard tells her that for 50 dollars he will let her in backstage while the show is on. Richard and Rosie are tossed from the hotel. Janis meet Peter, a kid whose dad will give him three tickets to ''The Ed Sullivan Show'' if he will get his Beatles style hair cut into a crew cut. She recruits Tony to steal the dad’s wallet and get the tickets. Larry asks Grace to the Valentine’s Day dance at school, but she brushes him off.
Grace decides to take the place of a prostitute who has an encounter at the hotel to get the 50 dollars she needs. Rosie knows the question on the radio call in to win tickets, so she uses the room key she still has, goes to the room, calls in and wins two tickets. Richard then strands them in the elevator. Pam is caught, but interviewed by the press. Her fiancé arrives to get her, but she uses the ticket she was given by the Beatles roadie Neil Aspinall to see the show. Once in the john’s room, Grace can’t go through with it and hides, but takes photos of the john and the hooker and blackmails him into giving her 50 dollars. He attacks her, but Larry saves her. Tony lifts the dad’s wallet. It’s empty, but they get the tickets anyway. Richard and Rosie escape from the elevator and get to the show. Tony’s effort to sabotage the show fails. Larry parks the limo beside CBS in an alley and is about to be arrested for improper parking and driving without a license, but Grace uses the 50 dollars to bribe the cop in to letting him go, but now she can’t get backstage and get her photos. Grace accepts Larry’s invitation to the dance. On leaving the show the Beatles take a wrong turn and end up in Larry’s limo. They drive away, pursued by a mob of screaming fans, while Grace snaps away.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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