• Latest
  • Trending
McCartney: The Hunt for the Lost Bass Review

McCartney: The Hunt for the Lost Bass Review: Beatles History Under a Detective’s Lamp

Redoubt Review

Redoubt Review: Fear Becomes Architecture

Q Review

Q Review: Hiba’s Quiet Return to Herself

Granblue Fantasy: Relink - Endless Ragnarok Review

Granblue Fantasy: Relink – Endless Ragnarok Review: Summons Make Every Fight Bigger

Being Ola Review

Being Ola Review: Kindness Without the Inspirational Packaging

Faithless Review

Faithless Review: Five Hours Expose the Story’s Central Problem

I Want to Love You Till Your Dying Day Review

I Want to Love You Till Your Dying Day Review: The School Calls Children by Number

EA SPORTS College Football 27 Review

EA SPORTS College Football 27 Review: Great Football Buried Under Busywork

Trying Season 5 Review

Trying Season 5 Review: Happiness Gets Awkward Again

Call of My Life Review

Call of My Life Review: Love Speaks Before the Relationship Is Ready

The Odyssey

Christopher Nolan Defends Modern English Dialogue in ‘The Odyssey’

10 hours ago
Jennifer Beals

Jennifer Beals Joins LL Cool J and Scott Caan in ‘NCIS: New York’

10 hours ago
Moana

‘Moana’ Tracking for $130M Global Opening, Below Earlier Forecasts

10 hours ago
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Wednesday, July 8, 2026
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    The Odyssey

    Christopher Nolan Defends Modern English Dialogue in ‘The Odyssey’

    Jennifer Beals

    Jennifer Beals Joins LL Cool J and Scott Caan in ‘NCIS: New York’

    Moana

    ‘Moana’ Tracking for $130M Global Opening, Below Earlier Forecasts

    Enola Holmes 3

    ‘Enola Holmes 3’ Opens Soft With 20.3M Views, Trails Franchise Predecessor

    Big Brother

    ‘Big Brother’ Season 28 Cast Revealed Ahead of ‘Time Trip’ Premiere

    Anne Hathaway

    Anne Hathaway Thought She Was Auditioning for Harley Quinn, Not Catwoman

    Elle

    ‘Elle’ Showrunners Break Down That Finale Love Triangle Twist

    The Odyssey

    Robert Pattinson Says His New Villain Role Is “Kind of Like Jacob in Twilight”

    Colin Woodell, KJ Apa and Diane Guerrero

    Netflix Casts Colin Woodell to Lead Harlan Coben’s ‘Myron Bolitar’

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Redoubt Review

    Redoubt Review: Fear Becomes Architecture

    Q Review

    Q Review: Hiba’s Quiet Return to Herself

    Being Ola Review

    Being Ola Review: Kindness Without the Inspirational Packaging

    McCartney: The Hunt for the Lost Bass Review

    McCartney: The Hunt for the Lost Bass Review: Beatles History Under a Detective’s Lamp

    Faithless Review

    Faithless Review: Five Hours Expose the Story’s Central Problem

    I Want to Love You Till Your Dying Day Review

    I Want to Love You Till Your Dying Day Review: The School Calls Children by Number

    Trying Season 5 Review

    Trying Season 5 Review: Happiness Gets Awkward Again

    Call of My Life Review

    Call of My Life Review: Love Speaks Before the Relationship Is Ready

    Life Support Review

    Life Support Review: Medicine at the Edge of Oblivion

  • Game Reviews
    Granblue Fantasy: Relink - Endless Ragnarok Review

    Granblue Fantasy: Relink – Endless Ragnarok Review: Summons Make Every Fight Bigger

    EA SPORTS College Football 27 Review

    EA SPORTS College Football 27 Review: Great Football Buried Under Busywork

    HYPERWIRED

    HYPERWIRED Review: Ship Rescues Give Every Run Something to Chase

    Frostpunk 2: Breach of Trust Review

    Frostpunk 2: Breach of Trust Review: The Ground Has Its Own Vote

    Moonlight Peaks Review

    Moonlight Peaks Review: Farming Feels Better After Dark

    Sonic Frontiers - Definitive Edition Review

    Sonic Frontiers – Definitive Edition Review: Sixty Frames Cannot Fix the Price

    A Storied Life: Tabitha Review

    A Storied Life: Tabitha Review: Every Keepsake Takes Up Space

    Dice A Million Review

    Dice A Million Review: Balatro’s Dice-Rolling Disciple Finds Its Own Tricks

    Unhinged Review

    Unhinged Review: Netflix Horror Gets Its Hands Dirty

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    The Odyssey

    Christopher Nolan Defends Modern English Dialogue in ‘The Odyssey’

    Jennifer Beals

    Jennifer Beals Joins LL Cool J and Scott Caan in ‘NCIS: New York’

    Moana

    ‘Moana’ Tracking for $130M Global Opening, Below Earlier Forecasts

    Enola Holmes 3

    ‘Enola Holmes 3’ Opens Soft With 20.3M Views, Trails Franchise Predecessor

    Big Brother

    ‘Big Brother’ Season 28 Cast Revealed Ahead of ‘Time Trip’ Premiere

    Anne Hathaway

    Anne Hathaway Thought She Was Auditioning for Harley Quinn, Not Catwoman

    Elle

    ‘Elle’ Showrunners Break Down That Finale Love Triangle Twist

    The Odyssey

    Robert Pattinson Says His New Villain Role Is “Kind of Like Jacob in Twilight”

    Colin Woodell, KJ Apa and Diane Guerrero

    Netflix Casts Colin Woodell to Lead Harlan Coben’s ‘Myron Bolitar’

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Redoubt Review

    Redoubt Review: Fear Becomes Architecture

    Q Review

    Q Review: Hiba’s Quiet Return to Herself

    Being Ola Review

    Being Ola Review: Kindness Without the Inspirational Packaging

    McCartney: The Hunt for the Lost Bass Review

    McCartney: The Hunt for the Lost Bass Review: Beatles History Under a Detective’s Lamp

    Faithless Review

    Faithless Review: Five Hours Expose the Story’s Central Problem

    I Want to Love You Till Your Dying Day Review

    I Want to Love You Till Your Dying Day Review: The School Calls Children by Number

    Trying Season 5 Review

    Trying Season 5 Review: Happiness Gets Awkward Again

    Call of My Life Review

    Call of My Life Review: Love Speaks Before the Relationship Is Ready

    Life Support Review

    Life Support Review: Medicine at the Edge of Oblivion

  • Game Reviews
    Granblue Fantasy: Relink - Endless Ragnarok Review

    Granblue Fantasy: Relink – Endless Ragnarok Review: Summons Make Every Fight Bigger

    EA SPORTS College Football 27 Review

    EA SPORTS College Football 27 Review: Great Football Buried Under Busywork

    HYPERWIRED

    HYPERWIRED Review: Ship Rescues Give Every Run Something to Chase

    Frostpunk 2: Breach of Trust Review

    Frostpunk 2: Breach of Trust Review: The Ground Has Its Own Vote

    Moonlight Peaks Review

    Moonlight Peaks Review: Farming Feels Better After Dark

    Sonic Frontiers - Definitive Edition Review

    Sonic Frontiers – Definitive Edition Review: Sixty Frames Cannot Fix the Price

    A Storied Life: Tabitha Review

    A Storied Life: Tabitha Review: Every Keepsake Takes Up Space

    Dice A Million Review

    Dice A Million Review: Balatro’s Dice-Rolling Disciple Finds Its Own Tricks

    Unhinged Review

    Unhinged Review: Netflix Horror Gets Its Hands Dirty

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
McCartney: The Hunt for the Lost Bass Review

Faithless Review: Five Hours Expose the Story's Central Problem

Being Ola Review: Kindness Without the Inspirational Packaging

Home Entertainment Movies

McCartney: The Hunt for the Lost Bass Review: Beatles History Under a Detective’s Lamp

Marcus Thorne by Marcus Thorne
2 hours ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on TelegramSummarize with ChatGPTSummarize with Perplexity

Paul McCartney once left a bass associated with the Beatles leaning beside amplifiers, carried it through the early Wings years, and reacted to its disappearance with something close to a shrug. He had another one. History had not yet placed museum glass around every object he touched.

Arthur Cary builds McCartney: The Hunt for the Lost Bass around that temporal distortion. The 1961 Höfner violin bass, bought in Hamburg for roughly £30 after Stuart Sutcliffe left the Beatles, now has the aura of a relic. The documentary treats its fifty-year absence like a cold case: talking heads offer fragments, archive footage fixes geography, and each new name enters like a suspect beneath an interrogation lamp. The stakes stay modest. Nobody is dead. The victim is German, hollow-bodied, and four-stringed.

That choice gives Cary’s 90-minute film an agreeable tension. McCartney appears amused by his own mythology, yet the investigation belongs to people who care far more urgently about the bass than he did. Obsession changes ownership here. The instrument may be McCartney’s, but the mystery belongs to everyone else.

Two Basses, One Missing Memory

Klaus Voormann’s recollections and artwork carry the film back to Hamburg, where the Höfner entered McCartney’s life before the Beatles became themselves. McCartney speaks about picking up guitar after his mother’s death, calling the instrument a cheap psychiatrist. Cary lets the remark breathe rather than smothering it with solemn music, a sensible piece of tonal restraint. The bass first appears as a tool before history turns it into evidence.

The central confusion is wonderfully mundane. There were two Höfners. McCartney bought the original in 1961 and another in 1963, and the latter gradually displaced the former. Once the Beatles split and Wings began touring Britain by bus and roadie van, the 1961 instrument lost its practical primacy. It waited backstage. It sat near amplifiers. Then it vanished from a van parked in Ladbroke Grove in the early 1970s.

Cary’s editing finds comedy in McCartney supplying this useful detail late. Nick Wass, the former Höfner employee driving the search, has already begun chasing the instrument when McCartney’s memory finally identifies the site of the theft. Every detective loves a witness who remembers the crime scene after the investigation starts.

Also Read

  • Best Christmas Movies
    30 Best Christmas Movies to Watch This Holiday Season
  • Best 2025 Movies
    Gazettely's 30 Best Movies of 2025
  • best 2025 games
    Gazettely's 30 Best Video Games of 2025
  • Cecil: The Lion and the Dentist Review
    Cecil: The Lion and the Dentist Review: Bridging the…
  • best 2025 tv shows
    Gazettely's 30 Best TV Shows of 2025
  • The Beatles Anthology Review
    The Beatles Anthology Review: The Intimacy of a…

Yet the lapse matters. Modern viewers see an icon stolen from rock history; McCartney saw an old bass he had replaced. The documentary’s most interesting historical trick is exposing the gap between an object’s life and its later legend. Value arrived late.

Suspects in Ladbroke Grove

Wass and his wife, Cathy Harrison, turn the legend into the Lost Bass Project and #tracethebass campaign. Journalists Scott and Naomi Jones help widen the investigation, and Cary arranges their discoveries with the patient escalation of a procedural. A location is fixed. A social world emerges. Suspects acquire shape.

McCartney: The Hunt for the Lost Bass Review

Ladbroke Grove provides perfect noir geography, if a sunlit documentary is permitted such a thing. Its early-1970s mixture of squatters, dealers, anarchists, insecure housing, and counterculture lets suspicion spread according to reputation. Michael “DikMik” Davies, the Hawkwind keyboardist and drug dealer who lived nearby, is almost too picturesque a suspect. Hawkwind stealing McCartney’s bass would satisfy the narrative gods. Reality, displaying its usual lack of showmanship, has other plans.

The film’s sharpest suspense arrives through ambulance worker Steve Glenister. He hints to Beatles-obsessed colleague Andy that he knows something, then withholds enough to make each pause feel incriminating. Cary uses reaction shots and delayed disclosure rather than aggressive scoring. A glance lasts. A sentence stops. Information becomes pressure.

Steve’s father, George, was the thief. An occasional burglar, he took the Höfner from the van and discovered the fatal problem with stealing something famous: possession can become its own prison. Unable to sell it safely, he passed it to a pub landlord. The bass eventually travelled into private hands and ended up in Sussex, absurdly close to McCartney’s East Sussex home.

The grand conspiracy collapses into proximity, chance, and an ordinary crime. Noir has always known this joke. We imagine masterminds because the banal truth is harder to romanticise.

The Shadow Behind the Happy Ending

The recovered bass returns to McCartney in 2024, is restored, then reaches the stage again with Ronnie Wood for “Get Back.” Cary could hardly ask for a cleaner final image. The title becomes instruction, punchline, and emotional cue in one neat stroke.

McCartney himself complicates the moral framing. He speaks without fury about George and admits opportunistic theft was hardly unimaginable among young men from his background before the Beatles redirected his life. Luck, in his account, is the unseen key light. It falls on one person and leaves another face in shade.

Here the documentary briefly becomes a darker film than Cary seems prepared to make. George is remembered as a decent father, a capable footballer, and a sometime robber. His children inherit an act they did not commit, yet family memory makes poor distinctions between guilt and shame. The bass can be restored. A surname is less cooperative.

Cary keeps the music warm and the rhythm buoyant, pressing towards reunion rather than lingering with George’s family or the harsher Ladbroke Grove that produced the theft. The decision preserves the film’s charm, but it also flattens its most morally charged material. A documentary shaped like a detective story finally finds its culprit, then discovers culpability is the least interesting thing about him.

The British musical investigative documentary McCartney: The Hunt for the Lost Bass premiered in select UK cinemas on April 2, 2026, before making its broadcast and streaming debut on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer on April 11, 2026. Audiences in the United Kingdom can stream the film for free on BBC iPlayer, while international viewers can watch for regional broadcast rollouts and upcoming physical Blu-ray releases. Utilizing vintage archive material and forensic interviews, the production traces the amateur fan-led search and eventual recovery of Paul McCartney’s legendary stolen Höfner 500/1 violin bass guitar over fifty years after its sudden disappearance in 1972.

Full Credits

  • Title: McCartney: The Hunt for the Lost Bass

  • Distributor: BBC Two, BBC iPlayer, Passion Pictures

  • Release date: April 2, 2026 (United Kingdom Cinema Release), April 11, 2026 (BBC Two Television Premiere)

  • Rating: 12A

  • Running time: 90 minutes

  • Director: Arthur Cary

  • Writers: Scott Jones, Naomi Jones

  • Producers and Executive Producers: Scott Jones, Naomi Jones, Mark Bell, Hamish Fergusson, Andrew Ruhemann, David Collins

  • Cast: Paul McCartney, Mike McCartney, Klaus Voormann, Elvis Costello, Scott Jones, Naomi Jones, Nick Wass

  • Director of Photography (Cinematographer): Johann Perry

  • Editors: Hamish Fergusson

  • Composer: Tim Atack

The Review

McCartney: The Hunt for the Lost Bass

7 Score

Arthur Cary frames a missing Höfner like evidence under a desk lamp, and the forensic playfulness works until George enters the picture. The cheerful cold-case rhythm suddenly encounters poverty, opportunistic theft, and inherited embarrassment, yet the film keeps humming towards its “Get Back” encore. McCartney’s sympathy gives those shadows room to exist, if briefly. As Beatles archaeology, this is warm, precise, and slyly entertaining. As a moral portrait of the hands through which history passes, it looks away a little too quickly.

PROS

  • Clever cold-case structure
  • Engaging amateur sleuths
  • McCartney's candid reflections
  • Rich Ladbroke Grove context

CONS

  • Uneasy tonal shift
  • George's story lacks depth
  • Sentiment softens darker implications

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: Arthur CaryBBC TwoDocumentaryElvis CostelloFeaturedKlaus VoormannMcCartney: The Hunt for the Lost BassMike McCartneyMusicNaomi JonesPaul McCartneyScott Jones
Previous Post

Faithless Review: Five Hours Expose the Story’s Central Problem

Next Post

Being Ola Review: Kindness Without the Inspirational Packaging

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Connect with
Login
I allow to create an account
When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings. We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.
DisagreeAgree
Notify of
guest
Connect with
I allow to create an account
When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings. We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.
DisagreeAgree
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Is This Seat Taken? Review

    Is This Seat Taken? Review: A Satisfying Mental Workout

    1189 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Trust Review: Squandered Potential and an Incoherent Plot

    6 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Black Box Review: Flight 298 Loses Contact With Reason

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Summer of ’36 Review: Murder Checks Into the Riviera

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Proud Review: Ignacy Liss Shines in HBO Max’s Striking New Series

    7 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Citizen Vigilante Review: Uwe Boll Mistakes Vengeance for Justice

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Human Vapor Review: Toho’s Cult Monster Gets a Streaming Pulse

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

EA SPORTS College Football 27 Review
Reviews Games

EA SPORTS College Football 27 Review: Great Football Buried Under Busywork

9 hours ago
The Five-Star Weekend Review
TV Shows

The Five-Star Weekend Review: Jennifer Garner Plates Grief Beautifully

2 days ago
House of the Dragon Season 3 Episode 3 Review
TV Shows

House of the Dragon Season 3 Episode 3 Review: The Loneliest Winning Hand in Westeros

2 days ago
Enola Holmes 3 Review
Movies

Enola Holmes 3 Review: Malta Gives the Sleuth a Brighter Trap

1 week ago
Star Trek: Voyager - Across the Unknown Review
Reviews Games

Star Trek: Voyager – Across the Unknown Review: Janeway’s Hardest Numbers Game

1 week ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Which of Alfred Hitchcock's 1960s thrillers is your all-time favorite?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2026 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

wpDiscuz
0
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
| Reply