Film festivals London Film Festival 2024

One to One: John & Yoko

London Film Festival 2024: One to One: John & Yoko | Review

No gossip or auteur speculations. Instead, it’s a historical rollercoaster where the truth and only the truth matters. One to One: John & Yoko feels like this poetic documentary where something that once used to be personal (here, John Lennon’s and Yoko Ono’s privacy), thanks to the film’s magic, suddenly becomes public, available to the audience within the eye’s reach. Kevin Macdonald’s and Sam Rice-Edwards’s collaborative project is quite similar to a time machine, which sends us back to 1972, one of the very first years of Lennon’s and Ono’s residency in New York.

Indeed, it sounds like only a small, hermetic chapter, a story that seems to fit only the expectations of pure Beatles fans. But, there is something more to it. Rather than getting a classical biopic with a slightly expired take on the extraordinary life of two specific artists, the directors present us with a compelling, narrative tour de force of the US history from that particular year. All of Lennon’s political statements, protest songs and public appearances are contextualised through various investigative-like chapters that can be called “little explorers” of what really happened around that time in America.

Although we feel like voyeurs watching the couple’s private life (for instance, the directors gave us an insight into what exactly their apartment looked like back then), the film pretty quickly makes it clear that no privacy was ever violated. Even the Lennon/Ono conversations with their agents and fellow artists aren’t AI-generated, but were intentionally recorded by Lennon as an ironic response to the beginning of the 1970s, which used to be an era of bugging and wiretapping. Besides, the directors made use of thousands of old footage, including Lennon’s concert, TV advertisements, some 1970s TV programmes (with Lennon and Ono as the main guests), older documentaries and anything else that one can imagine. 

It’s an art to do a documentary on one of the more transformative periods from Lennon’s and Ono’s lives without getting too sentimental or only portraying them in a positive light. Contrarily, we witness something that aims to be as close to the “objective truth” as it can only be possible. It’s like listening to Lennon’s lyrics with the addition of a well-made visualiser. For each sentence from a song, we get an image that expresses more than a thousand words. “Isn’t art still beautiful?” we might find ourselves asking this question after the documentary’s closing credits. The answer is, of course, “yes.”

Jan Tracz

One to One: John & Yoko does not have a release date yet.

Read more reviews from our London Film Festival coverage here.

For further information about the event visit the London Film Festival website here.

Watch the trailer for One to One: John & Yoko here:

More in Film festivals

“It’s really complicated. It’s really hard if you put yourself in his shoes”: Nawaf Al Dhufairi, Raghad Bokhari and Lana Komsany on Hijra at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“Why didn’t I raise my voice for the Rohingya people?”: Akio Fujimoto on Lost Land at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“When you live with someone with a harsh mental illness, you can really sink with them”: Zain Duraie and Alaa Alasad on Sink at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“It felt quite absurd to be part of that social jungle”: Sara Balghonaim on Irtizaz at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

Red Sea International Film Festival 2025: Highlights and interviews with Juliette Binoche, Shigeru Umebayashi, Sir Anthony Hopkins, Idris Elba, and More

Laura Della Corte

“All that matters, I think, is the partnership”: Amira Diab on Wedding Rehearsal at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“Modern love – it’s a bit dark”: Anas Ba Tahaf and Sarah Taibah on A Matter of Life and Death at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte

“I believe inside each human being there is an artist”: Mohamed Jabarah Al-Daradji, Hussein Raad Zuwayr and Samar Kazem Jawad on Irkalla – Gilgamesh Dream

Laura Della Corte

“When you try to forget the trauma without fixing it, it will never leave”: Yanis Koussim on Roqia at Red Sea International Film Festival 2025

Laura Della Corte