Elvis (2022) stars Austin Butler in the leading role of Presley, Oscar winner Tom Hanks as his mysterious, scheming manager, Colonel Tom Parker, and Australian actress Olivia DeJonge as wife Priscilla Presley.
The film follows his rise to fame in the mid 1950s to his tragic end in 1977, but largely focuses on the tense and often explosive and complicated relationship between the king of rock 'n roll and his manager.
Told ostensibly from Parker's point of view in old age, the film by director Baz Luhrmann paints Parker as the villain, following the narrative of several books written about him since his death in 1997, exposing his financial abuse of the rock star - sadly, only the first of many such stories in the entertainment industry.
The film makes quick work of the childhood of Elvis, shorthanding his twin influences of black jazz and religion by showing the boy eavesdropping on a carnival tent and then running to a Pentecostal religious revival tent, all on the same day on the same fairgrounds.
He's shown in later scenes as an adult hanging with well-known jazz musicians, including B.B.King, a major influence on his music.
Parker is portrayed as a carnival dweller who hears of Elvis's singing talents before he even knows he is a white singer, and not an African-American as he sounded to many. Parker is shown witnessing the hypnotic effect Elvis had on women in his audience, even very early on in his performing career.
Which makes it curious that he would later demand that Elvis stop wiggling his hips during performances, ostensibly under blackmail from those who knew his sordid past (he had illegally emigrated to the United States from the Netherlands at the age of 20.) Hanks affects a Dutch accent throughout the film, in an Oscar-worthy performance by the veteran actor, who should get a best supporting actor nomination.
The entire "New Elvis" portion of the film is the least plausible. It seems to me that a promoter like Parker would surely understand what was causing the women to scream and shout and not try to squelch that magic, despite the real societal objections to the entertainer's hip gyrations, objections that were certainly historical.
The costumes and sets are lavish here, and costumes by Prada for both Elvis and Priscilla Presley add to the colorful atmosphere of the mid- '50s through the 1970s, including his somewhat tasteless and brash Vegas years.
Those Vegas years are among the most heart-wrenching of the entire film, because it's painfully aware to viewers where his career and life are headed. It is here where Parker looks the worst, selling out Elvis for unlimited poker chips to a casino.
The director's use of a few minutes of actual footage of Elvis at the end of his career and a historical verbal tribute from Pres. Jimmy Carter upon the star's death were moving, unexpected, and unique in film history.
Both Butler (who had a minor role in Once Upon a Time in Hollywood) and Hanks both deserve Oscars for their performances, with Butler channeling the King's accent and mannerisms and even recreating Elvis's songs beautifully and Hanks performing his role as the shady Parker in a "fat suit" throughout the film (Butler only showing prosthetic-induced weight gain for a scene portraying the superstar's last performance in Vegas, just before his death.)
This film is well worth seeing in theaters, where the full impact of the music and costumes can be felt.
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