| The Oscar winner will work with some 55 hours 
				of never-released video of John, Paul, George and Ringo as they 
				worked on their "Let It Be" album in January 1969.
 The footage, plus 140 hours of audio, "ensures this movie will 
				be the ultimate 'fly on the wall' experience that Beatles fans 
				have long dreamt about," Jackson said in a statement.
 
 "It's like a time machine transports us back to 1969, and we get 
				to sit in the studio watching these four friends make great 
				music together."
 
 Jackson last year released a World War One documentary using 
				decades-old frontline footage, to rave reviews.
 
 The "Let It Be" album and film were released in May 1970, after 
				The Beatles broke up, and the unseen footage had originally be 
				planned for a television program.
 
 "Sure, there's moments of drama - but none of the discord this 
				project has long been associated with," said Jackson, whose 
				WingNut Films Ltd announced the project in a statement with the 
				Beatles' Apple Corps Ltd.
 
 "Watching (them)... work together, creating now classic songs 
				from scratch, is not only fascinating - it's funny, uplifting 
				and surprisingly intimate."
 
 The band performed live together for the last time on Apple's 
				offices London rooftop on Jan. 30, 1969. They officially split a 
				year later.
 
 (Reporting By Marie-Louise Gumuchian; editing by John 
				Stonestreet)
 
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