EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert review – Baz Luhrmann’s electric yet avoidant documentary
<p><strong>Toronto film festival:</strong> the bombastic director’s second film about the music legend shows the singer at his most mesmerizing but the picture remains incomplete</p><p>Baz Luhrmann now has two Elvis movies under his bedazzled belt. The first is his epic biopic starring Austin Butler and now he has unleashed another called EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert, remixing archival material with never-before-seen footage from the singer’s residency in Las Vegas. What’s remarkable about them both, apart from the director’s obvious affinity for his subject’s showmanship, is his refusal across so many hours of jiggling and swivelling to meaningfully hold Elvis to account.</p><p>Luhrmann’s Oscar-nominated 2022 film acknowledged Elvis’s cultural appropriation: how his phenomenal success owed so much to the R&B, gospel and rock he grew up around and the racist institutions that put him on a pedestal while holding down the Black artists that birthed and gave that music its soul. The movie also painted Elvis as a bleeding heart for the Black community, projecting so much torment on the crooner over the injustices he witnessed, despite his refusal to say anything publicly – for the community he benefitted from – during the civil rights era. It was all the craven and exploitative Colonel Tom Parker’s fault, according to Luhrmann’s Elvis, depicting the leery and controlling manager (played by Tom Hanks) as the reason for the singer’s strict silence, and the root of so many sins.</p><p>EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert is screening at the Toronto Film Festival and will be released at a later date</p> <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/film/2025/sep/07/epic-elvis-presley-in-concert-review">Continue reading...</a>
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The Guardian