Tonite Let’s All Make Love in London is a 1967 British documentary film directed, written and produced by Peter Whitehead.
It is notable for showing footage shot inside the short-lived UFO Club, the British counter-culture night club in the basement of 31 Tottenham Court Road, and at The 14 Hour Technicolor Dream multi-artist event held in the Great Hall of the Alexandra Palace, including John Lennon.
The film also shows scenes of soldiers parading in scarlet jackets and bearskins, London street scenes, a protest march, psychedelic patterns being painted on a semi-naked girl, the arrival of Playboy Bunny girls by plane, and guests including Roman Polanski and Sharon Tate, Terence Stamp, and Jim Brown arriving at the premiere of Polanski’s film Cul-de-sac (1966).
The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote: "Peter Whitehead's fragmented look at the "swinging" London ... is in some ways a fascinating document of contemporary mores.
"[5] Variety wrote: "Subtitle for this film is "Pop Concerto for Film," and that's as good a description as any of its form and content, since it's not a documentary in any ordinary sense but rather an impressionistic view of "the land of mod" as seen by a sympathetic participant, Overture and postlude for the concerto is montage, jazzily shot, edited and scored, and in-between are seven 'movements' covering such aspects of swinging Britain as pop music and painting, political protest and love (or the local equivalent). ...