★★★★1/2 If the great audiovisual event of last year was Get Back, the documentary with unpublished material by the Beatles, we can also say that McCartney 3, 2,1 is an extraordinary companion where Sir Paul, without ceasing to be a young man (beyond his chronological age) kindly reviews in dialogue with Rick Rubin a career that, when analyzed, takes your breath away. The best thing about this six-episode series consists of the everyday, in the far from any divisive way in which the two talk. And how, from there and also without any underlining, McCartney’s genius emerges, what he knows about music, even the amazement that draws him to have been, nothing more and nothing less, a Beatle. And, for many, the quintessential Beatle. A series about something that is part of the (best) world cultural heritage.