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Joe Massot
Joe Massot
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Joe Massot (1933 – April 4, 2002) was an American writer and film director who was known for the film Wonderwall (1968) which featured a soundtrack by George Harrison,[1] and the Led Zeppelin concert film The Song Remains The Same (1976). The latter was not finished by Massot, being completed by Peter Clifton after the producer was unhappy with progress and removed Massot from the project.[citation needed] Massot's only other concert film was the 1980s ska film Dance Craze.[2]

Key Information

Other films Massot directed include Space Riders and Reflections on Love (1966), which was nominated as the best short film at the Cannes Film Festival. He is given writing credit on Space Riders, co-writing credit with The Firesign Theatre on Zachariah,[3] and the George Lazenby film Universal Soldier.

Around Christmas 1985, Massot produced Slim Gaillard's Latin album Siboney, recorded at Gateway Studios in Battersea, London.[4]

References

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from Grokipedia
Joe Massot was an American film director and writer known for his contributions to psychedelic cinema and rock documentaries in the 1960s and 1970s, most notably directing Wonderwall (1968), which featured George Harrison's first solo soundtrack, and initiating the Led Zeppelin concert film The Song Remains the Same (1976). Born in 1933 in New York to Cuban parents, Massot participated in the Cuban revolution before moving to London in the early 1960s amid the height of Beatlemania and the Swinging London era. There, he integrated into the city's interconnected circle of musicians, artists, and filmmakers, beginning his career with short films such as Reflections on Love (1966) and television work before making his feature debut with Wonderwall, a psychedelic comedy-drama starring Jane Birkin and Jack MacGowran that captured the brief, colorful cultural shift of the late 1960s. The film included Harrison's innovative score—his first outside the Beatles and the inaugural release on Apple Records—and art design by The Fool collective. Massot went on to contribute to other rock-influenced projects, including co-writing the rock western Zachariah (1971) and directing the ska and reggae concert documentary Dance Craze (1981), which captured the UK two-tone scene with performances by bands such as Madness and The Specials. He also directed Space Riders (1984) and had a brief, difficult stint on The Song Remains the Same before being replaced during production, though portions of his footage remained in the final film. In the late 1990s, he prepared a restored director's cut of Wonderwall, rediscovering and incorporating previously unreleased George Harrison material, which renewed interest in the film. Massot died on April 4, 2002, in London after a short illness.

Early life

Family background

Joe Massot was born in 1933 in New York City to parents of Cuban descent. His Cuban family heritage later influenced his travels to Cuba.

Experiences in Cuba and Africa

Joe Massot, born in New York to Cuban parents, gained firsthand experience with communism during his time in Cuba shortly after the success of the Cuban Revolution. In May 1959, he began studying cinematography at the Instituto Cubano del Arte e Industria Cinematográficos (ICAIC) in Havana. Massot worked on films for the Castro government, including serving as assistant director on the short documentary Carnaval (1960), co-directed with Fausto Canel, which documented Havana's Carnival celebrations. During this period in Cuba, he collaborated with writer Guillermo Cabrera Infante on writing projects and shot documentaries for the government. According to a biographical account by artist Marijke Koger, who knew Massot personally, he had earlier participated in a CIA mission in Angola and the Congo during the period of Patrice Lumumba and Moïse Tshombe, and through an "Angolan connection" in the early 1960s began making films in Cuba for the Castro government about the Havana Carnival celebrations in collaboration with Guillermo Cabrera Infante; this claim of CIA involvement lacks independent verification from other sources. Massot left Cuba before the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962, with one personal account stating he barely escaped on a Canadian cargo plane a few days before the crisis intensified. Other reports place his arrival in London in the early 1960s or as late as 1964.

Move to London and 1960s career

Arrival and early projects

Joe Massot arrived in London in the early 1960s, during the height of Beatlemania. Born in New York in 1933 to Cuban parents, he had fought in the Cuban revolution prior to relocating to England, bringing an international perspective to his emerging career in British filmmaking. His early projects in London focused on television. In 1964, Massot wrote and directed the episode "Don't I Look Like a Lord's Son?" for the BBC anthology series Six, a collection of six short films shot on 35mm and broadcast between December 1964 and January 1965. The following year, in 1965, he met the Beatles on the set of their film Help!.

Reflections on Love

Joe Massot directed the short film Reflections on Love in 1966. The United Kingdom-produced work was selected for the short films competition at the 1966 Cannes Film Festival, where it competed for the Palme d'Or for Best Short Film. The film blends documentary-style interviews with young people discussing the meaning of love—including segments featuring John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr of the Beatles—with abstract, psychedelic color sequences that shift from initial black-and-white footage. This transition reflects the era's emerging Swinging London aesthetic and experimental approach to visual storytelling. Contemporary reception details remain limited, as the short received attention primarily through its festival selection and association with the Beatles rather than widespread release. It has occasionally been paired with Massot's later feature Wonderwall in archival or retrospective screenings.

Wonderwall

Wonderwall, Joe Massot's 1968 psychedelic feature film, starred Jack MacGowran as the reclusive professor Oscar Collins, Jane Birkin as the model Penny Lane, and Iain Quarrier. The story was written by Gérard Brach, with the screenplay by Guillermo Cabrera Infante. The soundtrack was composed by George Harrison, marking his first solo project and the inaugural release on Apple Records. Harrison personally spent £15,000 of his own money on the soundtrack, far exceeding the £600 allocated for music. Production design was handled by the Dutch design collective The Fool, whose members, including Marijke Koger, also made appearances in the film. The film was shot at Twickenham Studios and premiered at the Cannes Film Festival on May 17, 1968. Wonderwall employed black-and-white cinematography for scenes depicting the "normal" world and color for the psychedelic fantasy sequences, reflecting its exploration of perception and reality. The film has since attained cult status among enthusiasts of 1960s psychedelia and Beatles-related cinema.

1970s career

Screenwriting projects

In the early 1970s, Joe Massot pursued screenwriting projects distinct from his directing efforts. He conceived and co-wrote the screenplay for Zachariah (1971), a psychedelic rock western that blended elements of the genre with rock music and countercultural themes. The film's concept originated during Massot's time in India with the Beatles in 1968, where he witnessed a "meditation duel" between George Harrison and John Lennon, inspiring a narrative about two friends engaged in a desert duel for spiritual supremacy. Massot's original script drew inspiration from Hermann Hesse's novel Siddhartha and emphasized visual psychedelia over dialogue. After initial development discussions with the Beatles' Apple Films, the project was optioned by ABC Pictures, which brought in the comedy group The Firesign Theatre (Philip Austin, Peter Bergman, David Ossman, and Phil Proctor) to rewrite the script in 1969, incorporating more gags and dialogue. Massot, who disliked dialogue-driven content, quit the project following these changes, though he retained co-writing credit alongside The Firesign Theatre members. The Firesign Theatre's revisions notably shifted the ending from Massot's original violent climax to a pacifist resolution where the protagonists embrace instead of fighting. Massot also received original story credit for Universal Soldier (1971), a film directed by Cy Endfield and starring George Lazenby. He shared the story credit with Derek Marlowe, while Endfield handled the screenplay. The film proved to be a box-office flop.

The Song Remains the Same

Joe Massot served as the initial director of the Led Zeppelin concert film The Song Remains the Same, which captured the band's performances at New York's Madison Square Garden over three nights in July 1973. He assembled a crew and filmed the concerts on 35mm with 24-track sound after being hired by manager Peter Grant. Following review of the initial footage, Led Zeppelin determined that significant gaps existed in the coverage, including failure to film essential verses and other basic elements of certain songs. Jimmy Page later explained that "we quickly realised there were huge gaps in the filming. The crew hadn’t covered the basic things like filming the verses to certain songs," and added that "we surmised that some of them were probably stoned — simple as that." Massot was subsequently removed from the project, and Australian director Peter Clifton was brought in to complete the film. Clifton addressed the shortcomings by directing new performance footage on a soundstage and incorporating fantasy sequences. The finished film, co-credited to both Massot and Clifton, was released in 1976. Massot later described the time following his departure from the project as a "bad period" in his career.

Later career

Dance Craze

Dance Craze is a 1981 concert documentary directed by Joe Massot that captures the explosive energy and cultural significance of the British 2 Tone ska revival. Shot throughout 1980, the film presents live performances by leading bands of the movement, including The Specials, Madness, The Selecter, The Beat, Bad Manners, and The Bodysnatchers, showcasing their high-energy stage presence and the multiracial crowds that defined the scene. More than a straightforward concert film, Dance Craze serves as an important social document of early 1980s Britain, highlighting the 2 Tone movement's role in promoting racial unity amid economic recession, Thatcherite policies, and rising nationalist tensions. The film captures the raw, DIY vibrancy of the performances—marked by sweaty, frantic enthusiasm and irreverent joy—and serves as a vivid historical record of the era's youth culture. Released in February 1981, Dance Craze remains a vivid record of the 2 Tone phenomenon, celebrating its musical fusion of ska, reggae, and punk influences alongside its commitment to social commentary and inclusivity.

Space Riders and other work

In 1984, Joe Massot directed and contributed to the story of Space Riders, a low-budget British sports drama centered on Grand Prix motorcycle racing. The film starred three-time 500cc world champion Barry Sheene as a semi-fictionalized version of himself, alongside actors like Gavan O'Herlihy and Stephanie Lawrence, depicting the competitive world of professional motorcycle racers. Massot later described the production as severely underfunded and ultimately unsuccessful, reflecting on the challenges that hindered its execution and reception. Following Space Riders, Massot's work shifted away from major feature directing projects.

Music production and Wonderwall revival

In the mid-1980s, Joe Massot produced the Latin jazz album Siboney by Slim Gaillard. The album was recorded around Christmas 1985 at Gateway Studios in Battersea, London, with Massot serving as producer and providing the sleeve notes. In the late 1990s, the success of Oasis' song "Wonderwall" prompted Massot to revive his 1968 film of the same name. He created a director's cut, working with George Harrison to locate and recover original soundtrack recordings, with replacements provided for any missing tracks. This restored version incorporated the previously unreleased 1968 track "In the First Place" by The Remo Four (produced by Harrison), which had been recorded for the original soundtrack but not used and was rediscovered in the master tapes during restoration. The director's cut generated renewed interest in the film, leading to screenings in U.S. theaters—where it had seen limited prior exposure—and requests for showings in U.K. theaters.

Personal life and death

Family

Joe Massot was married to Claire Massot beginning in 1971, and the couple had one child. His daughter, Gemma Massot, is an actress.

Death

Joe Massot died on 4 April 2002 after a short illness at his home on Flood Street in London, England. He was aged 68–69 at the time of his death.

References

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