A large amount of the most famous images from that time were created by two crazy hippies who met each other in Cambridge: Storm Thorgerson and Aubrey "Po" Powell. In the sixties they happened to become friends with a bunch of other Cambridge hippies who later became Pink Floyd, and when the two started to design Pink Floyd's first album sleeve, it became the start of an art design studio which rocked the world: Hipgnosis.
Hipgnosis became the go-to place for crazy designs and ideas, combining photography, drawings, a wicked sense of humor and a no-holds-barred, no-budget-too-crazy attitude towards art. Travel to the Sahara desert to shoot a row of inflatable red balls for a cover shot? No problem. And the results were often stunning. Hipgnosis' work for Led Zeppelin, Paul McCartney & Wings, Peter Gabriel and (indeed) Pink Floyd is instantly recognizable.
Anton Corbijn knows most those people in a friendly professional way, and while he allows Po to tell most of the story (Storm died in 2013), Corbijn apparently had no trouble to get several super-famous artists to chime in as well. With more than forty years of hindsight, tempers have mellowed a bit and everyone has funny anecdotes.
Squaring the Circle is set up chronologically as a typical rise-and-fall story, with famous albums forming the chapters. Animation shows the actual squaring of each circular disc into its iconic sleeve art, followed by the often famous stories surrounding it. Corbijn makes a collage of his own beloved stark black-and-white footage, but archival materials he leaves in color, and the sleeve artwork is shown at its best in eye-popping, colorful detail.
It all makes for a very pleasant trip, a one-hundred-minute journey through an age past, and with the people involved, you can rest assured that the soundtrack is epic. I liked it very much and the film comes highly recommended.
But don't just take my word for it: at the Film by the Sea Festival in Vlissingen, it became an audience favorite, scoring a whopping high rating of 4.6 out of 5.