Paul McCartney's ‘High in the Clouds' Film Adaptation to Star Celine Dion, More in A-List Cast
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience.
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience. Generate Key Takeaways
Celine Dion, Paul McCartney and Himesh Patel - Credit: ave Sandford/NHLI/Getty Images;; Karwai Tang/WireImage
High in the Clouds, the animated film derived from Paul McCartney's children's book, has enlisted a star-studded voice cast. Legendary singer Celine Dion, Himesh Patel, and Hannah Waddingham are leading the cast based on the book of the same name. Stars such as Idris Elba, Lionel Richie, Beatle bandmate Ringo Starr, Jimmy Fallon, Clémence Poésy, Pom Klementieff, and Alain Chabat will also contribute to the film.
The film is directed by Tony Genkel (of the Amazing Maurice), with a script co-crafted by Jon Crocker and Toby Genkel. The two adapted McCartney's tale of Wirral, a teenage squirrel vying to set music free amid the ban of Gretsch, a domineering owl. McCartney and Michael Giachinno will contribute original music to the 3D animation.
More from Rolling Stone
The film has been in the works for years. In 2014, McCartney told Lewis Corner that 'One of the first things in this film is a female rock star who runs this animal city – it sounds crazy – so I have to write her number. It had to be one in which she gets everyone in her power, so it needed to be a good soul number. I had fun doing that, and I'll be recording that next year with a female singer.' The next year, he recorded a song for the soundtrack with Lady Gaga.
In 2018, the song's producer Greg Kurstin told Rolling Stone, 'We spent one day live in the studio with a full band, a brass section, background singers, and everything for this song that Paul had written for an animated film. I don't know what the status of it is, but I think it was a trial for Paul and me. I think he wanted to see what it was like working with me. That was the first time.'
Variety reports that the film is produced by a slew of contributors, including Paul McCartney at MPL Communications, Robert Shaye and Michael Lynne at Unique Features, and Sidonie Dumas, Nicolas Atlan, and Terry Kalagian for Gaumont, in association with MPL Communications. The movie has been sold to distributors in many international regions, reflecting the film's demand.
Best of Rolling Stone
Sign up for RollingStone's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Complete Unseen: New Doc on History of Newport Folk Festival Announced
For anyone who saw A Complete Unknown and wondered how close it resembled the actual Newport Folk Festival where Bob Dylan amped up his music, a new documentary will help answer that question. Among the many films just announced as part of the annual Venice Film Festival in September is Newport & the Great Folk Dream, which documents the legendary (and ongoing) festival in the pivotal folk-to-rock years between 1963 and 1966. The doc includes footage of Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, and the Paul Butterfield Blues Band — some of it from the same 1965 festival where part of A Complete Unknown was set — alongside previously unseen live clips of blues, gospel and folk legends, including Dave Van Ronk, Pete Seeger, John Lee Hooker, Judy Collins, the Staple Singers, Bill Monroe, and many others. More from Rolling Stone Margo Price Pays Homage to Bob Dylan in 'Don't Wake Me Up' Video Willie Nelson's Outlaw Music Festival Tour Hits Pause After Extreme Weather Damages Gear How Many Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen Lyrics Can You Identify in This New York Writer's New Song? According to director (and writer and historian) Robert Gordon, Newport & the Great Folk Dream had already been completed before the release of A Complete Unknown, but he waited to gauge the reaction to that film first. 'I have to praise Timothée Chalamet and [director] James Mangold for expanding our audience tremendously,' Gordon tells Rolling Stone with a chuckle. 'A year ago, my friends' kids weren't really interested in Newport, and now they know all about it.' All the footage in Newport & the Great Folk Dream comes from the archives of the late documentarian Murray Lerner, who shot Newport for years. (His footage of the 1970 Isle of Wight festival has resulted in separate docs on performances there by Leonard Cohen, the Who, Jimi Hendrix, and others.) In 1967, Lerner released Festival!, a compilation of his footage from Newport between 1963 and 1966. According to Newport producer Joe Lauro, Lerner had planned to make an expanded Newport movie himself but died in 2017, by which time he'd sold his archive to Lauro's Historic Films company. Newport & the Great Folk Dream repeats only a few clips from Festival! Most of it consists of newly unearthed and restored footage, including Hooker romping through 'Boom Boom'; Joan Baez and Mary Travers of Peter, Paul and Mary singing the traditional 'Lonesome Valley'; Van Ronk doing the Reverend Gary Davis' 'Cocaine' (familiar to those who know Jackson Browne's Running on Empty); and the Staple Singers rocking out gospel with 'I Wish I Had Answered.' 'Festival! was about 95 minutes, and Murray shot about 100 hours, so an extraordinary amount of musicians and music were filmed,' says Lauro. 'It's the greatest archive of Americana music that's existed.' Although it wasn't entirely set at Newport, A Complete Unknown recreated some of its major moments during the years Dylan first played there. Newport & the Great Folk Dream allows us to see real-life- counterpart clips of Dylan and his band warming up for his going-electric moment, a different cut of his 'Maggie's Farm' that night, and performances by a gaunt-indeed Johnny Cash ('Big River') and Baez (Dylan's 'Don't Think Twice, It's All Right') from the same festivals in A Complete Unknown. One of the Mangold film's antagonists, folklorist and Newport overseer Alan Lomax, is seen and heard debating the idea of purity vs. commercialism in folk music. 'A Complete Unknown was great, but it was a Hollywood movie,' says Lauro. 'They had the fight with Lomax and [Dylan and Butterfield manager] Albert Grossman happening during 'Maggie's Farm.' It happened during Butterfield's set, so we set the story straight.' To further tie in A Complete Unknown with his doc, Gordon moved a clip of Cash to the beginning of the film. 'It worked out great, and it's a way to connect the two films,' he says. 'There's the thrill of seeing the Hollywood film come to life in a different way. There are a lot of the same tensions.' The Newport Folk Festival first launched in 1959 and soon became a destination for anyone wanting a full immersion into folk, country, bluegrass, gospel, and other vernacular genres, although rock and singer-songwriter music also crept in. This year's gathering — taking place this weekend in Newport, Rhode Island as always — was curated by Nathaniel Rateliff and is a vivid demonstration of how much the festival's scope has expanded. Its three days are scheduled to include sets by Luke Combs, MJ Lenderman, Jack Antonoff & Bleachers, Jeff Tweedy, Lukas Nelson, the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Margo Price, Bonny Light Horseman, and both Geese and Goose (the latter joined by Kenny Loggins, of all people). Future release plans for Newport & the Great Folk Dream have not yet been finalized, but Gordon feels it will have a place in today's fractured world. 'We talk about diverse groups of people, but what we see here is an extremely concerted effort to represent songs from all kinds of lifestyles, work and play,' he says. 'I know this sounds corny, but the story is about harmony.' Best of Rolling Stone Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Role Model and Laufey Fall Out of Love in ‘The Longest Goodbye' Video
Role Model and Laufey reach the end of the road in the official music video for the duet version of 'The Longest Goodbye.' In the black-and-white video, the two musicians share a microphone and the same emotional sentiments. 'Now you're changin' and movin', I'll take my ass to Houston/'Cause I don't think you love me anymore,' Role Model leans in to sing. Later, Laufey adds, 'Instead of blamin' and bruisin' and watching what I'm losin'/I don't think I lovе you anymore.' 'The Longest Goodbye' arrived earlier this year on Kansas Anymore (The Longest Goodbye), the extended edition of Role Model's second studio album, as a solo entry. 'This is a great day because 'The Longest Goodbye' just got longer,' Laufey wrote on Instagram. More from Rolling Stone Role Model Hits the Two-Step in 'Sally, When the Wine Runs Out' MTV Push Live Performance Role Model Drops Out of Several Gracie Abrams Shows to Film Netflix's 'Good Sex' Conan Gray Kisses Role Model at Governors Ball During 'Sally, When the Wine Runs Out' 'The video is actually us recording the take that we put out,' Role Model said in an Instagram Story. 'Ain't no lip-syncing, no match cutting. We put two cameras in there, because we recorded the original version in Noah's living room with that mic. Miss Laufey was kind enough to come in and do that. Nothing fake about it, because that's just super vulnerable and raw and honest of us. That's what music is about.' The pair previously performed 'The Longest Goodbye' together during Role Model's recent headlining tour. 'I asked her to come sing it onstage during my L.A. show, and as soon as I heard her sing the first line of the second verse I was like, 'Oh, we need to record this,'' Role Model told V Man. 'I couldn't think of a better voice to sing that song. Her voice is timeless, and that was kind of the word of the day when I was originally writing that song last year. I wanted to end the album with a very sonically timeless and classic song, and her voice brought it there for me.' Speaking about Kansas Anymore, Role Model recently told Rolling Stone, 'the one thing I wanted to prove when I first put it out was my growth — my songwriting and my taste in music had matured, and I had also matured as a person. It felt like a big shift in the way I would talk about things and write about them, and a big part of that was just me getting to a place on guitar where I could play well enough that I could write songs by myself on it.' Best of Rolling Stone Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Lizzo Gives SZA Her ‘Public Flowers': ‘The Light Always Shines on You'
Lizzo celebrated her friend and Grammy-winning artist SZA in a heartfelt post on Tuesday, declaring that the SOS star is the 'most beautiful, talented and incredible woman, artist & friend I know.' Taking to Instagram, Lizzo shared a photo of the two embracing on stage and wrote, 'SZA, I absolutely love you and hope you know how loved and appreciated you are by the world. You are beautiful from the inside all the way to ur fine ass outside.' She continued, 'You are an icon & I tell u this all the time in person & on the phone but I wanna give you ur public flowers as well because you beyond deserve. I ride for u forever.' More from Rolling Stone Lizzo's Lawyers Call Stylist 'Brazen Liar,' Seek Full Dismissal of Discrimination Suit See SZA and Lizzo Perform 'IRL' for the First Time in Paris SZA Calls Out Destructive AI Usage: 'Environmental Racism' Is the 'Price for Convenience' The 'Juice' singer ended her note with: 'The light always shines on you !' Earlier this month, Lizzo joined SZA onstage during her Grand National Tour stop in Paris. The duo performed 'IRL' from her My Face Hurts From Smiling EP for the first time. In May, SZA brought out Lizzo during her show in Los Angeles. The duo performed SZA's remix of Lizzo's single 'Special,' off her 2022 album of the same name. In matching black outfits, the best friends delivered an uplifting performance of the track on the SoFi Stadium stage in front of thousands. Following the show, Lizzo took to her Instagram and posted the caption 'BABYS FIRST STADIUM PERFORMANCE — I love u @sza u r THEE DIVA !' Lizzo's upcoming studio album, titled Love in Real Life, will be previewed in Los Angeles, New York, and Minneapolis in March. This will be her first LP since she was accused of sexual assault and a hostile work environment by her former dancers. Lizzo opened up about her longtime friendship with SZA in a June interview with Billboard, calling her 'one of the only people that I can text at 3 in the morning when I'm crashing out.' 'I really appreciate her, because she understands — and I think it's really hard for you to have someone in your life who actually fucks with you and who's known you for a long time who also understand the world that you're in,' Lizzo said. 'I think that's what I cherish the most about her. She gets me.'Best of Rolling Stone Sly and the Family Stone: 20 Essential Songs The 50 Greatest Eminem Songs All 274 of Taylor Swift's Songs, Ranked Solve the daily Crossword