Across the Universe - posters, covers, wallpapers

Lots of posters, covers and wallpapers for the movie "Across the Universe"
Across the Universe (2007)
Timing: 2:13 (133 min)
Across the Universe - TMDB rating
7.135/10
1300
Across the Universe - Kinopoisk rating
7.803/10
31405
Across the Universe - IMDB rating
7.3/10
117000

Backdrops, wallpaper

Backdrop to the movie "Across the Universe" #146326Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "Across the Universe" #1463274K UHD 2160p
Backdrop to the movie "Across the Universe" #237020Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "Across the Universe" #237021Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "Across the Universe" #237022Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "Across the Universe" #237023Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "Across the Universe" #237024HD Ready 750p
Backdrop to the movie "Across the Universe" #237025HD Ready 800p
Backdrop to the movie "Across the Universe" #237026Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "Across the Universe" #2370274K UHD 2160p
Backdrop to the movie "Across the Universe" #237028Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "Across the Universe" #237029Full HD 1080p
Backdrop to the movie "Across the Universe" #237030Full HD 1080p

Posters, covers

Poster to the movie "Across the Universe" #1463293K 2100p
Poster to the movie "Across the Universe" #1463302K 1500p
Poster to the movie "Across the Universe" #1463312K 1500p
Poster to the movie "Across the Universe" #1463325K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "Across the Universe" #1463332K 1440p
Poster to the movie "Across the Universe" #1463345K UHD 3000p
Poster to the movie "Across the Universe" #2370315K UHD 3000p

What's left behind the scenes

  • "Across the Universe" is the title of one of The Beatles' songs.
  • Bono, Eddie Izzard, Salma Hayek, Joe Cocker, Robert Clohessy, Linda Emond, Logan Marshall-Green, Harry J. Lennix, and James Urbaniak made cameo appearances.
  • To adapt the Beatles' songs to the film's plot, the screenwriters 'named' the main characters after figures from songs by the Liverpool Four.
  • The film's title, slogan, setting, and musical length were borrowed from the legendary Beatles.
  • To avoid attacks from overly curious 'Beatlemaniacs,' the film was delivered to some cinemas under the false title 'Love and Freedom.'
  • Paul McCartney and Yoko Ono readily agreed to Julie Taymor's request to help her with filming. Later, Taymor arranged a private screening for McCartney. The ex-Beatle stated that he had fallen in love with the film.
  • The film was released in wide release in America on October 9, 2007. October 9 is John Lennon's birthday.
  • Doctor Robert’s (Bono’s) painted bus and his song “I Am a Walrus” immediately reference the psychedelic bus from the Beatles’ television comedy “Magical Mystery Tour” (1967) and Ken Kesey’s Merry Pranksters with their famous bus trip across America. And when Doctor Robert arrives at Doctor Gary’s town and immediately turns back, it’s a nod to Timothy Leary, the legendary popularizer of LSD, and his well-known conflict with Ken Kesey.
  • An early script version featured a character named Sergeant Pepper – a reference to the Beatles’ album “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.” Later, the character was cut from the final script.
  • Joe Anderson auditioned for the role of Jude. But he convinced Julie Taymor that his role was Max, and he identified with him the most.
  • A total of 34 Beatles compositions were used in the film.
  • Practically everything in the film is, in one way or another, tied to The Beatles' songs. Its title is "Across the Universe," a Beatles song from 1969 that later appeared in a modified form on their final album, "Let It Be." The tagline came from another of their songs – "All You Need Is Love." Also, the names of all the characters are taken from Beatles songs – Lucy, Jude, Sadie, Mr. Kite, Doctor Robert, Prudence, Jo-Jo, Rita.
  • "Across the Universe" is Julie Taymor's third film (not counting the three initial films she made for television).
  • 90% of the songs performed by the actors in the film were recorded "live" directly on the set and were not later dubbed with studio recordings. And young Evan Rachel Wood delivered the song "If I Fell" literally on the first take.
  • Sadie introduces herself and her band as "Sadie and the Sloppy Boys." This is a reference to the Creedence Clearwater Revival album "Willie and the Poor Boys."
  • In an early script, the action unfolded over seven years, from 1963 to 1969. But in the film, it is compressed to two years.
  • In one scene, Jude and Lucy literally look like John Lennon and Yoko Ono on the famous cover of Rolling Stone magazine (issue 335, January 22, 1981). The creators of the comedy "Good Luck, Chuck!" (2007) also parodied this cover on their poster.
  • Sadie says that Max seems harmless, but who knows – maybe he killed someone with a silver hammer. Later, Max will indeed have a silver hammer in his hands, and the scene will too obviously allude to The Beatles’ song “Maxwell’s Silver Hammer.”
  • A shipyard worker tells Jude to think about what he will do when he turns 64. This is a reference to Paul McCartney’s song “When I’m Sixty-Four.”
  • Prudence gets into Sadie’s apartment by climbing through the bathroom window. The Beatles have a song called “She Came In Through the Bathroom Window.”
  • Jude’s “strawberry” technique of creating his canvases, splattering them with red paint, alludes to the work of Jackson Pollock. This is, obviously, a reference to The Beatles’ bassist Stuart Sutcliffe, who was also an artist and adored Pollock’s paintings. Sutcliffe’s story was told in Ian Softly’s film “Backbeat” (1994).
  • Sadie is, of course, Janis Joplin, incidentally Dana Fuchs’s favorite singer. Sadie even adopted Joplin’s habit of drinking “Jack Daniel’s” straight from the bottle. But the heroine’s name came from the song “Sexy Sadie” (from “The White Album”).
  • The guitarist and singer Yo-Yo, played by Martin Luther, is more than an obvious allusion to Jimi Hendrix. Like Hendrix, Yo-Yo arrives in New York with only a guitar, and it is in this city that his career begins. In addition, Sadie dresses Yo-Yo in a purple shirt and places a floral bandana on his head. Yo-Yo protests, but it is precisely this shirt and bandana that are most strongly associated with Hendrix.
  • The mass of supposedly fictional events in the film hint at similar ones that actually occurred. These include the student riot at Columbia University, the explosion in one of New York’s houses, when three radicals were blown up by their own homemade bombs, and the final scene, in which Sadie and her rock band are driven off the roof of a building by the police for an unauthorized concert – just as the police once drove the “Beatles” off a roof in London. Incidentally, this concert in the film takes place on the roof of a place numbered 9 – which alludes to the song “Revolution 9” from “The White Album”.
  • "Across the Universe" is the title of one of The Beatles' songs.
  • To adapt The Beatles' songs to the film's plot, the screenwriters "named" the main characters after names from songs by the Liverpool Four.
  • The film's title, slogan, setting, and musical runtime are borrowed from the legendary Beatles.
  • "Across the Universe" is Julie Taymor's third film (not counting three earlier works made for television).
Did you like the film?

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