|
Get a good look at the King through photos: In Focus: Elvis Presley | Elvis in Film
More on Elvis from MSNBC: Roots and Influences
With the death of Elvis Presley marking its 30th anniversary Aug. 16, the
long shadow of rock 'n' roll's most enduring icon is only lengthening: This
summer brings a wave of reissued DVDs, a new album of Presley's Las Vegas
performances and a gala Elvis Week planned in Memphis, Tenn. To provide a
fitting look at the artist, we asked MSN's DVD maven and confessed King
loyalist, Sean Axmaker, to sift through Presley's long list of theatrical movies
and available live performance sets to give us the best of Elvis.
On Film
Elvis Presley made more than 30 feature films between 1956's
"Love Me Tender" (playing support to second-rate leading man
Richard Egan) and 1969's "Change of Habit" (playing a hip inner-city doctor who teams
up with nun Mary Tyler Moore). He became one of the biggest Hollywood
moneymakers, and then became increasingly irrelevant as the '60s wore on and he
wore out in increasingly vapid vehicles cranked out with a simple formula:
colorful locations, pretty co-stars, a handful of subrate songs. That formula
made hits out of "G.I. Blues" and "Blue Hawaii," and Elvis' manager, Tom "the
Colonel" Parker, wasn't about to let Elvis' ambitions -- he adored Marlon Brando and wanted to be a new James Dean -- get in the way of profits. But that's not to
say Elvis didn't have his moments or his triumphs. Here are his five best
films.
5. "Loving You" For his
sophomore film, producer Hal Wallis and the Colonel brought Elvis out of the
supporting cast and into an upscale production. The show-biz musical about a
country boy with a unique sound, swiveling hips and rocking guitar style so
forceful that he breaks strings on every guitar he attacks, is a streamlined and
sanitized retake on the story of Elvis, with Lizabeth Scott taking over management duties from Parker
with cold cunning and cool sex appeal. The national furor over his immoral music
and suggestive moves is overcome in a manner that could only happen in the
movies: a spirited reprise of "Got a Lot O' Livin' to Do." It's his first color
film and the best set of songs of any of his films, from "Teddy Bear" and the
bluesy "Mean Woman Blues" to the Leiber and Stoller numbers "Hot Dog" and the
title ballad "Loving You."
4. "Viva Las Vegas" The
barely literate script, where down-on-his-luck race car driver Elvis loses his
bankroll in a swimming pool stunt and is lured off course to pursue a girl, is
as inconsequential as any of his nonsensical featherweight musicals. But with
MGM musical specialist George Sidney at the helm, giving even the silliest numbers
a dynamic missing from his other '60s songfests, and Ann-Margret sparring with the King as his greatest spitfire
of a romantic co-star ever, it's easily the masterpiece of those disposable
productions he knocked out with alarming speed. It's all color and glamour and
sexy fun. Elvis sings "Come On, Everybody" and makes Ray Charles' "What'd I Say" all his own while sex kitten
Ann-Margret whips up a storm with her TNT-packed go-go moves. "Colonel" Tom
Parker made sure a co-star never again made Elvis work for the spotlight in one
of his movies.
3. "Jailhouse Rock" Elvis
delivered his definitive screen appearance in this budget-minded black-and-white
production, a dark reflection of the "Loving You" rise to fame. This time
around, Elvis' working-class character lands in stir after a bar fight gone bad
and emerges surly, hardened and quick-tempered, but with a newfound gift for
rocking cultivated by his cell mate (Mickey Shaughnessy), a jailbird version of the
Colonel who manipulates the kid into signing an exclusive contract before he's
sprung. "It's just the beast in me," he explains to his idealistic new manager
and love interest (Judy Tyler). The "Jailhouse Rock" set piece was Elvis'
favorite production number and remains his greatest big-screen moment, a dynamic
melding of modern dance, Broadway showpiece and choreography designed around
Elvis' gyrating energy. He may not be much of an actor, but his attitude and
surly anger do the job just fine.
2. "Flaming Star" Less an
"Elvis film" than a Western starring young Presley in a surprisingly well-cast
role, this lean frontier drama about race, identity, loyalty and the bonds of
family offers one of his most impressive performances. Playing the mixed-race
son of a white rancher (John McIntire) and a Kiowa mother (Dolores Del Rio), his fraternal chemistry with Steve Forrest (playing his elder half brother) is so
understated it feels natural, and his director, Don Siegel, brings out his character through body language
and action, letting his angry silences and physical reactions carry his
performance and his character. For the fans, he greases his hair back and flips
up his collar for a few scenes and takes his shirt off in the third act, but
otherwise the persona is absorbed into his character -- his one song is
essentially a family sing-along -- for a quietly effective performance.
1. "King Creole" With a
bold script, a powerful cast (Dean Jagger as his servile father, Walter Matthau as a New Orleans gangster, the surly Vic Morrow as a punk and pre-"Addams Family" Carolyn Jones
as a reluctant femme fatale), and one of Hollywood's greatest veterans, Michael Curtiz, to guide him, Elvis rises to the occasion of
his fourth feature. He's a natural, more attitude and impulse than complexity
and nuance, as he burns through the role of a restless waterfront rebel who
finds success playing the Bourbon Street clubs. Elvis is all focus and intent,
but he loosens up as he belts out numbers such as "Hard Headed Woman," "Trouble"
and the theme song, while his opening tune, a bluesy, lazy duet with a
street-seller hawking "Crawfish," sets his character perfectly. Elvis gave his
all in his final film before reporting for induction into the Army and it's the
singer's own favorite picture. Who am I to argue?
In Performance
Colonel Tom Parker (the colonel rank
was not even honorary, merely self-proclaimed) was a cagey promoter when it came
to Elvis, launching him as a national phenomenon largely through television
appearances and relaunching him more than a decade later (after squandering his
talent on increasingly soggy, silly films) in the same medium. His TV
performances remain among his definitive appearances.
More Elvis on page 2 >>> |