Storyline
New York, 1972—John and Yoko are in the thick of it. The city’s buzzing with protest, wild art, political chaos, and these two are right in the middle, refusing to just exist quietly. The documentary digs deep, showing Lennon way past his Beatles days—this is the restless, post-Beatle John, still untamed, still poking at the world. There’s the legendary One to One Charity Concert, the only real full-length show Lennon pulled off after The Beatles split, all for special-needs kids. That alone’s a wild bit of music history. But what really hits are all the behind-the-scenes bits—old home videos, random phone calls, private moments where John and Yoko are just being their weird, brilliant selves. Sean Ono Lennon steps in to make sure the sound’s on point, remixing the concert audio so it feels fresh. It’s not just a music doc, it’s a slice of New York in meltdown, with two icons fighting for something bigger than themselves. You’re basically in the room with them.