Showing posts with label Kelvin Harrison Jnr.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kelvin Harrison Jnr.. Show all posts

Friday, 1 July 2022

ELVIS : Tuesday 28th June 2022.

I saw the M Rated 'ELVIS' at my local multiplex this week, and this Australian and US Co-Produced biographical musical drama film is Co-Written for the screen, based on a story, Directed and Co-Produced by Baz Luhrmann whose previous film making credits take in his debut 'Strictly Ballroom' in 1992, 'Romeo + Juliet' in 1996, 'Moulin Rouge!' in 2001, 'Australia' in 2008 and 'The Great Gatsby' in 2013. The film had its World Premier screening at the Cannes Film Festival on 25th May where it received a twelve minute standing ovation. Released in Australia and worldwide last week, it was originally scheduled to be released in early October 2021, before being delayed to early November 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and then later to last week. It cost US$85M to produce, has so far grossed US$52M from its opening weekend and a further US$13M since for a worldwide total so far of US$65M, and has garnered generally positive critical acclaim.

The film opens up in 1997 with Colonel Tom Parker (Tom Hanks) on his death bed recalling his memories of how he first discovered Elvis Presley (Austin Butler) and how he led him on the path to worldwide superstardom as his manager, mentor, guardian and custodian. The film then takes us back to the late 1940's and a young Elvis (Chaydon Jay) had a largely poverty driven upbringing in Tupelo, Mississippi with his parents Vernon (Richard Roxburgh), who had served jail time, and Gladys (Helen Thomson). Elvis finds his personal means of escape and his own lifeline in music, and in particular gospel music, which he falls under the spell off as a young boy. In his late teens he is often ridiculed by his peer group because of his strong leaning towards African American music to be heard bellowing out from the clubs and bars on Memphis' Beale Street where the likes of B.B. King (Kelvin Harrison Jnr.) and Little Richard (Alton Mason) hang out at 'Club Handy'.

Parker grew up around the carnivals and travelling fair's turning a dollar on the gullibility on his audience night after night. He is also managing Hank Snow (David Wenham) and his son Jimmie Snow (Kodi Smit-McPhee) but as soon as Parker hears Elvis belting out his debut song on the radio he becomes determined to track the singer down and manage his affairs from here on in. Parker eventually meets and persuades Elvis to let him take control of his career by having Vernon and Gladys sign a contract with Vernon appointed as Elvis' Business Manager which begins a meteoric ascent. 

However, not all of the public is impressed with the young entertainer, labelling him 'Elvis the Pelvis' because of his trademark hips and legs wiggle. Many parents fear that his music is corrupting their children, especially the young and impressionable daughters, and racist politicians also attack him. He is asked to downplay the wiggle and stand up straight, not gyrate his hips, and wear a suit with tails onstage, which he does once under the guise of 'The New Elvis', but his fans rebel against this demanding they want 'The Old Elvis' back. After a violent incident at a stadium concert, Elvis finds himself facing a possible jail term because he gave the fans what they wanted to hear and see. However, it is suggested that Parker persuades the government to draft Elvis into the US Army in 1958 as a way of avoiding any further legal proceedings. During his time in the Army on a posting to Germany, Elvis learns that Gladys has died of alcoholism. He is distraught by the news and almost inconsolable. Parker comforts Elvis and Vernon in their hour of need and says to Elvis that while he is overseas seeing out his Army service that he will take care of all of his affairs and need not worry about a thing. 

While stationed in Germany, Elvis meets Priscilla Beaulieu (Olivia DeJonge), and upon his discharge, he resumes his career-making concert tours and Hollywood feature films while Parker's control of his life takes on an even stronger grip. Elvis is devastated by the assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968 and Robert Kennedy also in 1968, and wishes to become more politically outspoken in his music while Parker merely wants him to sing family friendly frivolous songs that will be No.1 best sellers. He hires Jerry Schilling (Luke Bracey) and Steve Binder (Dacre Montgomery) to resurrect his ailing career (which they described as being 'in the toilet'), much to Parker's disliking. Schilling and Binder orchestrate Elvis' 1968 Comeback Tour which has massive television success and reestablishes the singer right back to his former glory years. 

The International Hotel is set to open on the Las Vegas strip, and while Elvis has plans to tour Europe Parker has other ideas. He downplays touring Europe based on the cost involved that would heavily eat into any profits made and the security risks associated with travelling to foreign lands. Instead, Parker suggests that The International Hotel would offer Elvis a six week residency at no cost, because they need a big name act to help establish the new hotel as a gaming and entertainment destination, and quickly. Afterwards, Parker says, he can tour overseas. But afterwards never comes, as Parker who is now heavily in debt to a casino for his gambling addiction, secretly and without any consultation with Elvis commits the singer to a residency term of five years in exchange for US$5M for Elvis, plus an unlimited line of credit and the waiving of all debts owed by Parker. 

Elvis puts his all into his sell out stage shows at The International Hotel, but eventually grows tired of Parker and attempts to fire him, only to be sued by the latter for more than US$8M for expenses incurred since day one of their relationship. Elvis chides Vernon as his Business Manager saying that he was supposed to oversee all of his finances, but Vernon only responds with the fact that he will have to sell Graceland and that sum will leave him broke and destitute. A vicious argument ensues between Elvis and Parker as he is about to leave for the airport and embark on a European Tour, but afterwards Elvis has to concede that he has no choice but to maintain his management from Parker, and instead embark on a fifteen city tour of the US instead. Ultimately, they grow apart and rarely see each other afterwards.

Following this, Elvis's life spirals on a seemingly ever downward trajectory as Priscilla takes their daughter Lisa Marie and leaves him over his prescription drug addiction, which grows even stronger after she is gone. They divorce in 1973. Later, as Elvis is about to board his private plane and bidding farewell to Lisa Marie at the airport, Priscilla jumps in the back of the limo and the pair share a private and tender moment. Elvis says to his former wife that he is approaching his fortieth birthday and that no one will remember him when he is gone. As the pair part company and Elvis boards his plane he mouths the words 'I will always love you' to Priscilla. Elvis died from a heart attack on 16th August 1977 at the age of 42. 

The final scene is one of Elvis's last shows which depicts him as being bloated and pale looking, while singing 'Unchained Melody' at the piano, with real footage from the concert as key moments from his life are shown, with Parker passing away old and alone in 1997. The closing credits reveal that Parker's financial and contractual abuse of Elvis was the subject of litigation by the Presley Estate after Elvis' death. Parker spent his last years gambling away his money on casino slot machines, while Elvis remains the best-selling solo artist of all-time and one of the most beloved entertainers in music history.

I sat in a packed out cinema theatre half full of baby boomers who would have been around in the '60's and '70's to see the real events unfold, with the other half being millennials who would have been there for the entertainment and education factors and to see the legendary King of Rock 'n' Roll writ large on the silver screen. What was unusual was the applause this film garnered from the gathered audience when the end credits rolled, which is telling in its own right! Unlike his previous 'The Great Gatsby' which for me was all style with little substance, in 'Elvis' Luhrmann has delivered an extravagant spectacular biopic that has style and substance in equal measure and that will keep you glued to the screen for all of its 160 minute run time. Austin Butler lives and breathes EP and his performance is near perfect in terms of his looks, his singing, his gyrating, his dancing and his persona in a role that we are unlikely to find as convincing this year. As for Tom Hanks in his fat suit and prosthetic face and nose made up to resemble Col. Tom Parker in all his manipulative, controlling illegal alien personality, it was at times hard for me to see behind the Mr. Nice Guy image that Hanks more often than not portrays in his film roles. That said though, I learned a lot about EP's Manager and their 20+ year relationship that turned toxic towards the end, even though Elvis kept coming back to him time after time like a lost puppy no matter how harshly he was treated. 'Elvis' is a brash film that will keep you pondering the King's life, and all of its twists and turns, ups and downs long after the credits have rolled. It's memorable for a whole bunch of reasons and has Luhrmann's trademark glitz and glamour written all over it while attempting to explain how a little kid growing up poor in Tupelo came to become the most successful solo music artist of all time and as popular still today some 45 years after his death, as he was when he was alive. 

'ELVIS' merits four claps of the Odeon Online clapperboard from a possible five claps. 
-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Monday, 24 July 2017

IT COMES AT NIGHT : Tuesday 18th July 2017

'IT COMES AT NIGHT' is a post-apocalyptic psychological horror film made by Director, Producer, Writer and Actor Trey Edward Shults and was made for about US$5M and has so far grossed US$17M, was released in the US in early June and has received generally positive Reviews from critics and audiences alike.

The film opens with a death. That of an older gent, Bud (David Pendleton) who has clearly contracted some contagious disease with open seeping black welts on his body, dark sunken eyes, dramatic weight loss and barely alive when we are first introduced to him. His daughter Sarah (Carmen Ejogo), breathing through an oxygen mask, wearing rubber gloves tends to the frail man, with another masked man Paul (Joel Edgerton), Sarah's husband, looking on. He is loaded into a wheelbarrow, wrapped in a blanket and carted outside to a shallow grave, wherein he is placed face up. Paul, places a cushion over the mans head, unloads his pistol into it, and then douses the now dead body with an accelerant and throws in a lighted match. The body catches alight instantly and sends a plume of blackened smoke up through the trees of the forest where they live.

This sets the scene, where there has clearly been some devastating viral outbreak of seemingly global proportions whereby a deadly contagion is transferable from human to human by both airborne means and by touch - hence the gas mask and the gloves. To save themselves from the inevitable, Sarah and Paul, with their teenage son Travis (Kelvin Harrison Jnr.) and trusted dog Stanley, have sought refuge deep within a forest lodge dwelling in the middle of nowhere, cut off from the rest of the world and living a solitary life fending for themselves. It's a meagre existence, but they are alive and relatively safe, albeit constantly on edge and on the look out for fear of attack from the now menacingly outside world.

The next night, while sleeping they are awakened by someone attempting to break into their house. They capture a lone man, Will (Christopher Abbott), and determine that he is not infected, but tie him to a tree, hooded, overnight. The next day Paul questions Will while still secured, and Will advises that he thought the house was abandoned and he was just searching for food and water to sustain his family some fifty miles away. Will offers to trade some of his supplies - chickens, goats etc. in exchange for essential foods and clean water.

Sarah suggests that Will should bring back his family to the safety of their home on the basis of safety in numbers. Paul agrees, reluctantly, and the pair head off in a pick-up truck to collect Will's wife Kim (Riley Keough) and young son Andrew (Griffin Robert Faulkner) and their supplies and livestock. En route they are ambushed by two men, which Paul manages to dispense with but accuses Will of setting him up. Will convinces Paul that this was not so, on the basis that he too tried to fend them off. A couple of days later Paul and Will return with Kim, Andrew and a trailer loaded with supplies and belongings, ready to move into their new shared home.

Later that evening over dinner, Paul establishes the ground rules about living in the house, and that no one must go out at night, that they always venture outdoors in pairs, and that the only way in and out of the house is via the red door, to which he has the only key and it is kept locked and bolted every night without question. The red door leads to another room, a sort of plastic sheeted quarantine room, which leads outside. Over time the two families begin to bond, an element of trust is forged and a degree of normalcy sets in. They eat together, play games by candlelight in the evening, and co-exist in relative harmony.

One day, Stanley the dog begins barking uncontrollably at some unseen presence in the woods. Travis follows Stanley deeper into the woods, but looses sight of him but still hears his barking . . . until it stops abruptly. Paul arrives bringing up the rear, and Travis insisted that he heard something in the woods, but saw nothing. Paul derides Travis for being careless, and they decide to return home, saying that Stanley knows the woods and will return home safe by the next morning.





Later that night Travis is awakened by a nightmare he has about his grandfather Bud. He walks through the house to discover Andrew lying asleep on the floor in Bud's old bedroom, apparently also suffering a nightmare. He leads the young lad back into his parents room where Will and Kim are sleeping. Shortly afterwards he hears a sound coming from downstairs. Creeping down to investigate he discovers the red door to be ajar and a sound coming from the room beyond. He quickly wakens Paul and Will who panicked, investigate to find a sick and bloodied Stanley lying on the floor.


They shoot and burn the dog. Sarah suggests that a sleepwalking Andrew may have opened the door, but given that Paul has the only key, how is that possible? At this point tensions between the two families start to rise, and Paul suggests that the two families should isolate themselves from each other in separate parts of the house to cool off for a few days, and to ensure that they are all free from infection.

The next morning Travis overhears a conversation between Will and Kim, that they should leave and straight away. Travis lets his parents know what he has heard and how Andrew may in fact be infected, and therefore by default, so would he be too. Paul and Sarah confront Will and Kim about their potentially infected son, but they staunchly deny this, but refuse to let the others see Andrew. A power struggle breaks out resulting in Will taking Paul captive and demanding food and water provisions and that they be allowed to leave immediately with their 'healthy' son. Paul and Sarah manage to overwhelm Will and lead the family out of the house, where the two men get into a brutal fight. Sarah shoots and kills Will in the back while he is beating Paul with a rock. Kim tries to flee with her son but stumbles to the ground. Paul shoots and kills Andrew leaving a distraught mother wailing uncontrollably. Paul shoots her dead too. The film ends with Paul, Sarah and Travis's worst nightmare coming true as they learn of their fate bestowed upon them by the family they tried to help, and an unseen force.

Critics have been generally positive in their Reviews of 'It Comes At Night', but for me the film just didn't click. Sure, this is atmospheric, moody and creepy at times, but there are none of the usual horror tropes we have come to expect from end of the world post-apocalyptic virus infected fare, and this is a welcome redeeming feature it must said. But equally there are no jump scares in this film, little by way of suspense and the premise is a little too predictable, if remotely plausible. The horror here does not come from flesh eating rampaging zombies, or from some other outwardly force, but from some unseen viral infection that is never really explained except that it is airborne or transmitted by touch, and takes hold of its victims within a day. I also struggled to determine exactly what comes at night - other than fear, anxiety, distrust and paranoia under the cloak of night-time darkness with the real enemy coming from within! But, I guess that's what the Director intended, thinking that somethings gotta give when you throw two desperate fighting for survival families together unexpectedly under one roof. There are also several plot holes and unanswered questions which just leave you guessing. You can save yourself the price of a cinema ticket and catch this on BluRay, DVD or digital download soon and watch it from the comfort of your own lounge room.
-Steve, at Odeon Online-