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  • Steven Soderbergh brings us John Lennon’s Last Interview Gregorio Belinchón Yagüe
    On December 8, 1980, John Lennon and Yoko Ono sat down to talk to a small crew from San Francisco’s KFRC radio station in their Dakota Building apartment in New York. It was the only radio interview they gave to promote their album Double Fantasy, released three weeks earlier. For two hours and 45 minutes they spoke calmly, optimistically and, in Lennon’s case, in an almost messianic voice, about life. That night, returning home, Lennon would be shot dead by Mark David Chapman. Given the circums
     

Steven Soderbergh brings us John Lennon’s Last Interview

On December 8, 1980, John Lennon and Yoko Ono sat down to talk to a small crew from San Francisco’s KFRC radio station in their Dakota Building apartment in New York. It was the only radio interview they gave to promote their album Double Fantasy, released three weeks earlier. For two hours and 45 minutes they spoke calmly, optimistically and, in Lennon’s case, in an almost messianic voice, about life. That night, returning home, Lennon would be shot dead by Mark David Chapman. Given the circumstances, the interview could be viewed as prophetic, which is Steven Soderbergh’s angle in his documentary John Lennon: The Last Interview, presented at Cannes in a special session.

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John Lennon, Yoko Ono and Sean Lennon, in one of the images from the family album used in the documentary 'John Lennon: The Last Interview.'

The interview, recorded before he was shot and killed, is depicted in 'John…

The interview, recorded before he was shot and killed, is depicted in 'John Lennon: The Last Interview,' which premiered at Cannes

© <p>Vinnie Zuffante/Getty </p>

John Lennon Spoke About Being ‘Dead and Buried’ in His Final Interview, Hours Before He Was Murdered

The interview, recorded before he was shot and killed, is depicted in ‘John Lennon: The Last Interview,’ which premiered at Cannes

© <p>Vinnie Zuffante/Getty </p>

The Beatles In Cannes: All The Times John, Paul, George And Ringo Had A Groovy Time At The Festival, But Never As The Fab Four…

16 May 2026 at 08:00
Picture yourself in a boat on the Riviera… Most rock superstars have been seduced by the glamor of the Cannes Film Festival at some point in their career. The Rolling Stones went twice, first with Gimme Shelter in 1971 and then with Stones in Exile in 2010. The Who closed the festival in 1975 with […]

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