In the fall of 1963, in order to make money from the popular Beatles, United Artists of the United States signed up with the Beatles to make a film in order to release the soundtrack of the film in the United States. They found Walter Shenson as a producer, directed by Richard Lester, and shot the movie A Hard Day's Night in 1964. Shenson contacted them before the Beatles left for the United States in the autumn of 1963 and asked them to write six songs for the film-no matter the subject matter, but two lyric songs, two fast-paced dance songs, and so on. During their vacation in the Caribbean, they wrote eight or nine songs, and Dick Lester chose six of them for use in the movies: You Can't Do That, And I Love Her, I Should Have Known Better, Tell Me Why, If I Fell, I'm Happy Just to Dance with You. March 2.