The first official look at Sam Mendes' ambitious four-film Beatles project has landed, and the internet appears to be in rare agreement when it comes to Paul Mescal stepping into the role of Paul McCartney.
And honestly? I get the hype. It's giving less "actor playing Paul" and more "the spirit of McCartney himself briefly possessed this man," sparking the kind of collective approval that almost never happens online.
The stills offer the public its first real glimpse at Mendes' unprecedented "cinematic event," set to hit theaters in April 2028, which will tell the story of The Beatles across four interconnected films, each centered on a different member of the band — Paul Mescal as Paul McCartney, Harris Dickinson as John Lennon, Joseph Quinn as George Harrison, and Barry Keoghan as Ringo Starr.
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While anticipation has been high since the project was announced, Mescal's McCartney has quickly emerged as the early standout, fueling excitement that Mendes' high-risk, high-concept take on the most famous band in history may be striking the right chord from the very start.
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The reveal didn't just happen online. It first arrived like a scavenger hunt for fans. Ahead of the official release, the images of the Fab Four were quietly unveiled via postcards distributed on Jan. 29 at the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts, the school co-founded by McCartney himself. Then more postcards began popping up at other Beatles landmarks across the globe, from John Lennon's childhood home to Hamburg's storied club scene, New York record shops, and key spots in Tokyo.
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Sony Pictures officially released the stills to the wider public on Friday, Jan. 30, but by then fans were already dissecting blurry images of the character postcards posted online.
Now the only question left — after the hair, the posture, and the uncanny resemblance — is whether Mescal and co. have nailed the Scouse accent because Beatles fans will forgive almost anything, but they will hear it if they haven't.
Crystal Bell is the Culture Editor at Mashable. She oversees the site's coverage of the creator economy, digital spaces, and internet trends, focusing on how young people engage with others and themselves online. She is particularly interested in how social media platforms shape our online and offline identities.
She was formerly the entertainment director at MTV News, where she helped the brand expand its coverage of extremely online fan culture and K-pop across its platforms. You can find her work in Teen Vogue, PAPER, NYLON, ELLE, Glamour, NME, W, The FADER, and elsewhere on the internet.
She's exceptionally fluent in fandom and will gladly make you a K-pop playlist and/or provide anime recommendations upon request. Crystal lives in New York City with her two black cats, Howl and Sophie.