
Paul McCartney's Whirlwind Week: New Docs, Lost Bass, & Got Back Tour Buzz
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The past few days have marked a significant and eventful chapter for Paul McCartney, a period marked by headline-grabbing stories, major artistic projects, and a healthy dose of buzz across entertainment news and social media. On the film front, the world premiere of the documentary Man on the Run at the 2025 Telluride Film Festival quickly made headlines. Directed by Oscar-winner Morgan Neville, the film explores McCartney’s solo career journey after the Beatles’ breakup and into the formation of Wings. It offers unprecedented access—McCartney gave Neville seven interviews, plus his journals and never-before-seen photos from Linda McCartney. Man on the Run is part of a fresh, highly visible partnership with Amazon MGM Studios and Universal Music Group and will hit Prime Video globally in February 2026 after a brief theatrical run. Alongside the film, a new biographical book, Wings The Story of a Band on the Run, is set for release this November, promising to add layers of detail to his legacy. According to American Songwriter, fans can also look forward to new music from McCartney as part of this Amazon partnership.
A second high-profile documentary, The Beatle and the Bass, just announced by BBC Arts and Passion Pictures, dives deep into the saga of his lost and finally recovered original Höfner bass. This instrument powered many early Beatles hits and vanished mysteriously in the early ‘70s before being recovered—a story that fuels this feature-length film, complete with new McCartney interviews and a fan-driven detective narrative. Reports from Fremantle highlight not only McCartney’s emotional reflections on the instrument’s journey but the fresh, global perspective the documentary promises to bring to Beatles lore.
Rumors of another world tour aren’t just wishful thinking. McCartney will lace up again for an expanded Got Back North American tour leg, beginning September 29 in California, extending through late November. This keeps him squarely in the live music conversation—and suggests no sign of retirement.
On the music release front, McCartney appears alongside Barbra Streisand on her upcoming duets album and features in the hotly anticipated Spinal Tap II movie and soundtrack, which lands September 12. Social media lit up this week with continued fan calls for archival reissues, especially of his Wings and Back to the Egg era, and his Spotify playlist of deep track favorites prompted excited tweets over songs like Daytime Nighttime Suffering and Arrow Through Me.
In showbiz news, Paul Mescal confirmed he met McCartney in preparation to play him in Sam Mendes’ upcoming Beatles cinematic event, which has already attracted intense fan and trade magazine attention. In a lighter viral moment, Paul's cameo on a popular podcast making a humorous hospital visit, and mentions on Instagram, X, and TikTok keep his charming presence in constant online rotation.
There are no unconfirmed tabloid rumors or speculative controversies swirling at the moment—everything making waves right now is directly connected to his multifaceted new projects and his ever-expanding impact on pop culture history.
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