Featuring the voices of    PAUL ANGELIS   JOHN CLIVE   GEOFFREY HUGHES   

and  DICK EMERY

and the singing voices of The Beatles

star in

A film by George Dunning

YELLOW SUBMARINE - THE BEATLES

"Original! Inventive! A Delight To the Eye!" - Roger Ebert

VHS - PAL - NEW - Never played!! - G-rated - Colour - 1968-release - 90-minutes - Animation, Adventure, Comedy - Original DVD release in Australia

When the music hating Blue Meanies take over Pepperland and freeze everyone within it, including the protectors, Sgt Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band Captain Fred and his Yellow Submarine recruit The Beatles to help save Pepperland. 

Along the way, they fall through the Sea of Time, Sea of Nothing, Sea of Holes and more. 

They meet Jeremy Hillary Boob Ph.D. and take him with them along the adventure. 

When at Pepperland, the Beatles "rally the land to rebellion" and take down the Blue Meanies, the four-headed Meanie dog and the Dreadful Flying Glove (with the songs "Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band", "With A Little Help From My Friends", "Hey Bulldog", "All You Need is Love"). 

In the end, we see all four live-action Beatles singing "All Together Now".

"Yellow Submarine" is a great film but it's not because of the plot or even the whimsical, non-sequitur filled dialogue. "Yellow Submarine" works best as a series of loosely connected music videos that pre-date MTV by 12 years.

If you grew up with MTV and you think that most music videos consist of 80's Hair-Metal bands "in concert" or rappers in hot tubs with women in bikinis, take a look at some of the musical numbers in "Yellow Submarine".

You have "Only a Northern Song" which is presented with Andy Warhol style pop-art images. "Nowhere Man" is a whimsical, trippy, rainbow colored cartoon. 

"When I'm Sixty Four" is illustrated by a "Sesame Street" style numerical countdown. 

Even "All Together Now", for which The Beatles themselves actually appear on screen, contains little camera tricks and quick cut edits that are common tools of more recent music videos.

The two best segments in the movie, in my opinion, are "Eleanor Rigby" and "Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds". 

"Eleanor Rigby" uses black and white still photos of what is apparently Liverpool rotoscoped with occasional splashes of color to illustrate the dreariness of the lives of "all the lonely people." 

The full-color rotoscoped images for "Lucy", such as the can-can dancing chorus line and the horse running in the field, are beautiful.

If you are a fan of The Beatles, great animation, or music video, this film is for you.