[3] It features interviews with Paul McCartney of the Beatles and leading underground figures connected to the International Times newspaper and Indica Bookshop, such as Barry Miles.
[4] Music critic Tim Riley describes it as one of the events of early 1967 that "punctuate an era as psychedelic pop culture took shape".
[5] Also among these was the emergence of American guitarist Jimi Hendrix on the London club circuit,[5] while Pink Floyd's performance in the documentary was one of the group's first television appearances.
[1] The People Show are seen performing a piece of experimental theatre, filmed in the basement of the shop Better Books.
This is the exact moment, historically speaking, when pop culture went from B&W and shades of gray to vivid color … it's easy to see how this film would have brought tens of thousands of young people into London seeking to find these forward-thinking cultural movers and shakers to become part of 'the happening' themselves.