Documentary Releases: The Beatles and India (2021) - Reviewed

Images courtesy of MVD Visual

While the story of legendary British rock band The Beatles and their brush with India from February to April 1968 and their Transcendental Meditation courses at the ashram of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi which led to their creation of The White Album is well documented and covered numerous times in other Beatles programs including but not limited to The Beatles Anthology, the new documentary film The Beatles and India tells the story from India’s point of view this time. 

 
Stemming from an original book by Indian journalist Ajoy Bose Across the Universe: The Beatles in India and co-directed by cultural researcher Peter Compton and the head of Silva Screen Music Group Reynold D’Silva serving as producer, The Beatles and India offers up a wealth of never-before-seen photographs, interviews, footage and audio interviews with members of The Beatles.  Though familiar territory for countless music fans and historians, The Beatles and India talks particularly about the band’s overarching cultural impact on India itself and why the country became such an important touchstone for their musical careers.
 
Going over the band’s first encounter with a sitar during the filming of Richard Lester’s Help! to George Harrison’s deep-seated friendship with Indian classical musician Ravi Shankar and the band’s eventual three-month retreat in Rishikesh where they penned much of The White Album, Ajoy Bose’s film is invested in the details of their voyage and the cumulative impact of their newfound home life away from the brick-and-mortar industry of the Western world. 

 
Featuring a bevy of interviews from historians Mark Lewisohn and Steve Turner, interviews with Indian music store owners who sold equipment to The Beatles and even includes archival interviews with KGB agent Yuri Bezmenov and his thoughts on the ashram, The Beatles and India doesn’t leave out details that contributed to the band’s eventual departure from the retreat and leaves ample room for more than one point of view on the table.  While on the one hand we get interviews singing the praises of the Maharishi’s accomplishments, on the other hand it doesn’t hide the man’s dirty laundry either.
 
Handsomely shot on digital video with archival footage interspersed throughout, the only mistake the documentary makes is near the beginning when it replays portions of George Harrison’s press conference concerning India twice.  Otherwise, this Channel 4 produced British-Indian documentary offers a unique alternative perspective to what we’ve come to know about The Beatles retreat to India and the lasting impact of their trip with the controversial spiritual teacher Maharishi. 

 
Fans who know The Beatles from top to bottom, backwards and forwards aren’t going to see or hear anything they haven’t known about previously based on all the elements already available to the public.  But still, it is rare you get to hear about it with Indian eyes and ears and moreover it speaks at length to the “most powerful band’s” ability to bridge Indian culture into the Western mainstream cultural consciousness.  While for some Beatles disciples this documentary might be a mere footnote, for others its an eye-opening look into an important transitional chapter of one of the world’s most important rock music groups.

--Andrew Kotwicki