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I Wanna Hold Your Hand
In 1964, a group of New Jersey teenagers make it their mission to travel to New York City in order to catch the Beatles' very first performance on 'The Ed Sullivan Show.' Along the way, they learn new things about friendship and growing up.
12 April 1926, Somerville, Massachusetts, USA
7 November 1948, Los Angeles, California, USA
22 February 1922, Palo Alto, California, USA
22 August 1930, New York City, New York, USA
13 May 1932, Chicago, Illinois, USA
25 February 1943, Liverpool, Merseyside, England, UK
2 March 1921, Jackson, Tennessee, USA
1942, Worcester, Massachusetts, USA
September 17, 2002
Zemeckis has better in him...but this is a nice entree
October 07, 2015
The maiden voyage in Zemeckis' sarcastic time machine
June 01, 2011
I Wanna Hold Your Hand re-creates precisely the excitement the Beatles let loose 14 years ago; it transports the audience back to the eye of a phenomenal social hurricane.
November 08, 2004
The film that started Zemeckis on his rise to fame. Coo coo kachoo.
May 09, 2005
If there's a tray full of food within camera range, rest assured that somebody will knock it over. If a stuck-in-the-elevator-on-the-eve-of-an-important-event routine presents itself, rest assured that its staging will be tried and true.
October 16, 2004
Zany Beatles tale which has a lot of truth to it.
August 06, 2007
An engaging, slapstick look at the effect the Beatles had on the US when they crossed the Atlantic.
January 24, 2004
An interesting social document about a watershed media event as well as a thoroughly entertaining movie.
December 03, 2016
A film about the joy of being young and a little bit crazy, ruled by the organizing principle of all Zemeckis and Gale's early work: barely controlled chaos.
May 24, 2003
There are a few good moments (particularly for people who know the show's host and enjoy the spoof), but it seems an over heavy trip to the uninitiated.
December 07, 2006
Delightful sleeper pic about obsessed Beatles fans
February 09, 2006
In the best scenes, Zemeckis suggests how the Beatles' blend of irreverence, romance and innocence encouraged a kind of youthful rebellion that was almost completely sanctioned.

