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Power to the People: John & Yoko Live in NYC review – fascinating star-studded concert film

Footage from John Lennon’s only full-length performances after the Beatles – at Madison Square Garden, for charity, with the Plastic Ono Band – has been edited and restored

Last year we saw Kevin Macdonald’s One to One, an archive compilation documentary about John Lennon and Yoko Ono’s heady existence in New York in the early 1970s; it took its name from the two charity concerts that they mounted at Madison Square Garden to raise money for children who had been abused at New York’s notorious Willowbrook State School – a scandal to which Lennon had been alerted by watching Geraldo Rivera’s TV exposé. (We have to hope that the box office receipts fully made a difference, but the concert certainly helped change the law to underscore the civil rights of people in children’s homes.)

Now here is the live footage: an immersive split-screen film whose edit was overseen by Sean Ono Lennon. And although no amount of revisionist gallantry can conceal how terrible Yoko Ono’s vocals are, this has a historical fascination as they were Lennon’s only full-length concert performances after the Beatles’ split. And Ono’s performance of the bizarre Open Your Box is certainly arresting: “Open your box, open your box, open your trousers …” There is a heartfelt version of Imagine; a truly apocalyptic rendering of Cold Turkey; and among the old faves are Come Together (after which Lennon says he forgot some of the lyrics: “I’ll have to stop writing these daft words, man, I’m getting old”) and a raunchy Hound Dog (“Elvis I love ya!” he shouts – and perhaps Elvis was aware of this tribute, perhaps not).

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Apr 29, 2026 Film Documentary films Music documentary

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