This is a book worth picking up for Christmas – fancy a chance at winning a copy?
Scroll down to find out how you can!
We’ve reached that seasonal time of year, and so my Critical Popcorn Gift Guides return!
This year we’re celebrating the best films of the year (old and new) to Stream or 4K UHD, the best affordable and impressive all-in-one Music Systems, or even something to make that Home Cinema better with speakers and soundbars from Majority, a UK-based tech company with a lot to offer. And that’s not all, we also enjoy a selection of festive Funko Pops! to get your geek on, plus a selection of giveaways!

Like many, I grew up with the sound of The Beatles. During one family summer, we had one album in the car and it was those hits that means I know what’s the next song before the previous has finished. The Beatles were etched into my brain, and have been embraced ever since. John, Paul, George and Ringo are everlasting and one of the greatest bands of all-time – set in modern history because they were at the precipice, and unknowingly bang in the middle of the squall of change, plus the first band to straddle that moment in time and move forward with it – and that for me, is a magnificent thing.

Paul McCartney’s 1964: Eyes of the Storm, from Allen Lane (part of Penguin Random House), is a deep look into that unique Beatle journey. It features a brilliantly in-depth introduction before his photography and in this, McCartney talks about how he always knew these photos existed somewhere from that early 60s era but had never felt the need to actively seek them out, with somehow just knowing that they “would just surface at the right time” – and time was 2020, when nearly a thousand photographs taken by McCartney, plus others captured by his ‘bandmates, roadies, and managers’, resurfaced from his archive and the Pentax 35mm captures returned, and then he endeavoured to organise them into a specific, smaller collection with the help of Curator Rosie Broadley.
Over time and deliberation, they repackaged the snaps – taken from the end of 1963 through to the start of 1964 – down to 275 photographs, which covers the iconic, and historic, Beatles tour beginning in Liverpool, before heading off to London, Paris (with a story of how the hair came to ‘be’), New York, Washington DC, and Miami – with the American leg being a particular shift in their popularity forever more – culminating in that The Ed Sullivan Show appearance which broadcast to approximately 73 million Americans across the States. After this, the book concludes with a Coda but, you’ll read, the reasons why by that point.

But, on top of all that, the most vital thing for this book is of course the photography – and it’s wonderful, exceptional insight into John, Paul, George, and Ringo’s journey into the unknown at the time. While McCartney admits this was a trajectory had been building before the American explosion of Beatlemania, it’s clear the sheer volume of everyday people at Airports, venues and in the cities was still overwhelming but mainly exciting. He talks of how much he loved it then, and still does, and that the band felt ready and this was because they always tried to centre themselves in real life, and a vital part was the connection to their working-class backgrounds and understanding the enthusiasm for people who were just ‘normal’, every day folks living their 9 to 5, as the boys lived it before success.
Some of Paul’s favourite photographs are of non-famous people, of mechanics waiting at the airport to do their job, to the unknown man with his shovel, stood in front of a Pennsylvania freight train, to that feeling-fuelled New York front cover shot, taken by Paul as the band escaped fans chasing them from outside the Plaza, and how moments like that were the realisation of things to come. I also loved the initially unplanned shift from black and white film to colour, the latter coincided with their trip to Miami, something Paul appreciated as he remembers that it was a time to “take some time off… actually sit down… and have a drink and a cigarette by the pool.” – you feel that intimacy in the photos, and I admired those images, and especially the image looking down onto a beach, where fans are inviting them to join them.


1964: Eyes of the Storm gave McCartney the opportunity to take stock of what happened all those years ago, to resurface wonderful – virtually innocent – memories of the time that the band had together, away from the main spotlight and their personal time together. There’s a pause for a poignant comment for two shots of George and John, so it’s clear how grateful he remains, and where they’ve been. With that approach in mind, McCartney also highlights those other people there at the time including the likes of Cilla Black, The Ronettes, Jane Asher, Sylvie Vartan, Johnny Hallyday, Billy J. Kramer, Jackie DeShannon, and Sophie Hardy, plus photographers Dezo Hoffman, Harry Benson, and Robert Freeman – and I think it’s fair to say, they all inspired each other on their travels.
1964: Eyes of the Storm offers us all an excellently candid insider’s look of the view they were receiving at the moment. McCartney also revels in the memories of the band relaxing, some of his favourite moments, and you can understand why because wouldn’t they be for all of us? The art of spending time with your friends and family is bigger than everything, and when you merge into their navigation of Beatlemania in America itself, alongside the sheer joy and privilege of being the eyes of that journey itself, this is so distinct.
Overall, it’s a remarkable insight, an exceptional collection of photos and one to embrace and enjoy, as if you were there with them, being another set of the ‘eyes of the storm’ collectively.

1964: Eyes of the Storm by Paul McCartney – Order here: https://amzn.to/3CGixdH

COMPETITION CLOSED
Terms & Conditions
-Open to UK participants only.
-Competition closes on 30th December 2023 and the winner will be picked at random and emailed directly.
-If we do not hear from the winner within 3 days, a new winner shall be picked and the original winner will automatically forfeit their prize.
-One entry per household, multiple entries will not be counted.
-There is no cash alternative to Prizes which are subject to availability, non-transferable, non-negotiable and non-refundable.
-Prizes may not be used in connection with any other competition or promotion by the Prize winner.




![Unquiet Guests review – Edited by Dan Coxon [Dead Ink Books]](https://criticalpopcorn.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/ug-reddit-ad-e1761690427755.jpg?w=895)

![Martyrs 4K UHD review: Dir. Pascal Laugier [Masters Of Cinema]](https://criticalpopcorn.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/image-1-e1761586395456.png?w=895)




![Why I Love… Steve Martin’s Roxanne [1987]](https://criticalpopcorn.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/roxanne.jpg?w=460)



Leave a reply to Claire C Cancel reply