Movie Review: 'Man on the Run' chronicles Paul McCartney's post-Beatles long and winding road
Movie Review: 'Man on the Run' chronicles Paul McCartney's post-Beatles long and winding road
JAKE COYLE Wed, February 25, 2026 at 5:00 AM UTC
0
FILE - Paul McCartney, of Paul McCartney and Wings, performs at the Nassau Coliseum in Uniondale, N.Y. on May 21, 1976. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File)
If Peter Jacksonās āThe Beatles: Get Backā was the supreme document of the Beatlesā final moments together and of their dissolution, Morgan Nevilleās āMan on the Runā is a kind of sequel.
It begins in late 1969, just months after Savile Row rooftop concert. The Beatles have broken up. Paul McCartney has seemingly disappeared. There are even rumors that heās dead. On a remote farm in Scotland, a confused and distraught McCartney wonders whether heāll write āanother note, ever.ā
But the most surprising thing about revisiting this tumultuous, tabloid-ready period of McCartneyās life is a simple fact. When the Beatles broke up, McCartney was 27 years old. To say he had lived a lifetime by then would be an understatement. By just the sheer enormity of their production and colossal cultural impact, you might easily mistakenly put McCartney in middle age by then.
āMan on the Run,ā premiering Friday on Prime Video, is the story of everything that came after. McCartney, an executive producer, is never seen sitting for an interview, but his off-camera musings mark the movie, a chronicle of self renewal. For McCartney, kept boyish by the Beatles, the band's end meant a sudden coming of age.
āI had to look inside myself and find something that wasnāt the Beatles,ā McCartney says in the film.
How you feel about McCartneyās post-Beatles career might inform how you feel about āMan on the Run.ā For Neville, the celebrated documentary filmmaker of āWonāt You Be My Neighbor,āāPiece by Pieceā and ā20 Feet From Stardom,ā itās a period that offers no neat narrative, but ā quite unlike the mythic Beatles years ā something more like the ups and down of life, with regrets and triumphs along the way.
Advertisement
It didnāt get off to a good start. McCartney, blamed for the Beatles breakup, was guilt-ridden. His first records were a disappointment. Singing with Linda McCartney, his wife, wasnāt greeted well. A 1973 TV special that included a rendition of āMary Had a Little Lambā was, to put it a mildly, a misjudgment. A curious feature of McCartneyās largely sunny disposition is a nagging self-loathing.
āIf I hear someone damning Paul McCartney, I tend to believe them,ā he says, referencing the Beatles split.
āGet Backā offered a revelatory window into the groupās dynamics that put many of the old views of McCartney to bed. Comparisons are tough ā āGet Backā is one of the greatest docs of the century ā but Jacksonās film, drawn largely from footage shot by Michael Lindsay-Hogg, was also incredibly intimate. It captured not only the bandās individual relationships but the songwriting process in real time. (The emergence of āGet Backā from McCartneyās strumming and humming stands as one of the great sequences in documentary film.)
āMan on the Runā lacks that sense of closeness. By keeping the film in archival ā the documentary is full of family photos and home movies ā and without present-day talking heads, Neville lets us experience McCartneyās post-Beatles years as he did. It comes as a sacrifice, though, to a nearness to McCartney ā and to the creation of his solo songs ā that might have deepened the film.
The real arc of āMan on the Runā is building toward the creation of McCartney's first post-Beatles band, Wings. Itās in some ways an unlikely centerpiece. In the revolving makeup of the band, Denny Laine was the only permanent member outside Paul and Linda. On the other hand, Wingsā āBand on the Runā is the best album McCartney produced after the Beatles, and the clear culmination of years of struggle. If you needed one, this is your cue to go play āJetā loud.
It turns out, to no oneās surprise, itās hard to move on after being in the Beatles ā especially for someone like McCartney who believed so sincerely in the band. Like its subject, āMan on the Runā inevitably pales next to films of the Beatles heyday. But itās a meaningful companion piece about the end of an era and the start of a long and winding road.
āMan on the Run,ā an Amazon MGM release, is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for language. Running time: 126 minutes. Two and a half stars out of four.
Source: āAOL Entertainmentā