It is a cold January morning in 1969, and three of the four Beatles are assembled in a cavernous film studio in London, with cameras rolling and microphones everywhere. "Lennon's late again," Paul McCartney says matter-of-factly as he plugs in his bass guitar.
With Ringo Starr and George Harrison sitting groggily before him, a tray of toast and jam by their side, McCartney starts to strum and sing, searching for inspiration. Within minutes, a midtempo groove takes shape, and a familiar vocal melody emerges. "Get back," he sings in a faint howl. "Get back to where you once belonged." Almost like magic, a Beatles classic begins to form out of nothing.
Later that same day, after John Lennon arrives, the four rock deities gather in a circle and bicker. They have loose plans for a concert TV special featuring brand-new songs, but most of the men appear to be dreading it — and may be dreading one another, too. Lennon, who seems to space out for much of the meeting, declares vaguely that "communication" with an audience is his only aim, while an impatient McCartney challenges his bandmates to show some enthusiasm for the project or abandon it.
Harrison blurts out what they may all be thinking: "Maybe we should have a divorce?"
Those back-to-back scenes in Peter Jackson's documentary series "The Beatles: Get Back," a seven-hour-plus project that will be shown in three parts on Disney Plus from Nov. 25-27, encapsulate the twin sides of the most contested period in Beatles history — the glory of artistic creation by the world's most beloved and influential rock band, and the grueling conflicts that led to its breakup, announced a year later.
For Beatles fans or any student of 20th-century pop culture, these are astonishing glimpses into the band's working life and the tensions that surrounded them.
"It's sort of that one impossible fan dream," Jackson said in a video interview from Wellington, New Zealand, where he has spent much of the past four years in a darkened editing suite surrounded by Beatles memorabilia. "'I wish I could go in a time machine and sit in the corner of the stage while they were working,'" he said, describing a lifelong dream like a child praying for the ultimate Christmas present. "'Just for one day, just watch them, and I'll be really quiet and sit there.'
"Well, guess what?" he continued. "The time machine's here now."