Current:Home > ContactIn 'Priscilla,' we see what 'Elvis' left out -文件: temp/data/webname/news/nam2.txt
In 'Priscilla,' we see what 'Elvis' left out
View
Date:2025-04-16 12:23:45
It's hard to imagine many viewers going into Sofia Coppola's Priscilla completely cold, with no preconceived notions about Elvis Presley or at least a vague awareness of his marriage to Priscilla Beaulieu. That marriage, like nearly every other facet of the superstar entertainer's life, has become the stuff of legend, kept lingering in the cultural ether by Priscilla herself and countless Elvis biographies and biopics.
And if one knows even the slightest bit about this relationship – that it was initially sparked when she met him at a house party in 1959 during his military stint in Germany; he was 24, and she was just 14 at the time – then the premise of Priscilla may suggest a taboo minefield, albeit an intriguing one. There's the danger of falling into a romanticizing trap, of downplaying just how stark the age difference was, of giving Elvis a pass because they were in love, or something like it.
There's no need to worry about that, mercifully. Coppola's glistening and brooding dissection of Priscilla's life with Elvis reveals a clear-eyed vision for depicting the intoxication of fame and how easily it's wielded upon the young and impressionable. The filmmaker's script, adapted from Priscilla Presley's 1985 memoir Elvis and Me, immerses its audience in the perspective of its subject as a young girl, played here with emotional resonance by Cailee Spaeny. (Presley is also an executive producer on the film.) The casting is spot-on: Spaeny may be in her mid-20s, but she's impressively (and eerily) convincing in the role of adolescent Priscilla, possessing a youthful and almost cherubic face and a winsome, awestruck energy. Her performance, too, is striking in its ability to convey the in-betweenness of that age, of lacking? self-confidence while striving for even a whiff of independence.
As Priscilla meets and falls in love with the biggest star in the world at the time (Jacob Elordi, reprising his wounded-and-corrosive Euphoria vibes), the experience takes off like a '50s-era white girl's teenage dream. (Frequent Coppola collaborator Philippe Le Sourd goes for that glossy Super 8-ish aesthetic.)
But like an arthouse-y version of a Lifetime movie – and I mean this as a sincere compliment – that fantasy incrementally morphs into a dramatic blueprint for emotional abuse and the confines of patriarchal domesticity. Once Priscilla is living full-time at Graceland during her senior year of high school, with her parents' permission, she lives an isolated, lonely existence; when not ostracized by classmates, she's expected to spend the rest of her waking hours sitting around the compound, waiting by the phone for whenever Elvis calls her from the road.
Her limited in-person time with him further emphasizes their disconnect; his bro-y entourage is always around, and he dictates every aspect of their relationship, including her hair, dress, and intimacy. (He rejects her sexual advances, claiming he'll know when the time is "right." Meanwhile, she bitterly reads the gossip mags as rumors swirl about his various on-set affairs with his age-appropriate movie co-stars like Ann-Margret.) He gets her addicted to pills and descends into physical abuse.
Baz Luhrmann's polar opposite of a spectacle, Elvis, cast the singer in a sympathetic, near-infantilizing light (and hardly mentioned his wife); in Priscilla, though, the so-called king of rock-and-roll emerges looking like an egotistical, manipulative dirtbag as a romantic partner. Priscilla ultimately finds herself trapped inside a glass menagerie of Elvis's making, and the mental suffocation is palpable.
A montage effectively highlights the experience of an imbalanced pairing, what it's like to get sucked into someone else's life. At one point, Coppola cycles through the repetitive images of the couple lying around in bed, with daylight melting into dark and into daylight again, and the maid dropping off and leaving a meal tray, and dropping off and leaving a meal tray again and again.
Coppola's insular approach to the material is so engrossing that when the screen abruptly cuts to black and the credits roll just as a 20-something Priscilla leaves Elvis and Graceland for good, it's maddeningly frustrating. The biopic subject remains shrouded in utter mystery, while her husband is colored in with more shades of grey. The deliberate choice to end the film just as she's starting to reclaim her own life undercuts the power of that final scene, especially since we never get a glimpse of who she was in the few short years she lived before the musician entered her life.
Though that's the point, it seems: This is what it's like to fall under the spell of a much older and powerful person during your most formative years. Has the real-life Priscilla ever landed upon a sense of self apart from Elvis? One can hope, yet it remains true that in the public's perception, she'll always be inextricably tethered to his memory. Priscilla only reiterates this sad truth.
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Meet 11-year-old skateboarder Zheng Haohao, the youngest Olympian competing in Paris
- Which carmaker offers the most dependable luxury SUV? See if your choice is on the list
- Police probe report of dad being told 11-year-old girl could face charges in images sent to man
- Generac recalls more than 60,000 portable generators over burn risk
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- College football Week 3 overreactions: SEC missing playoff, Shedeur Sanders winning Heisman
- Hermoso criticizes Spanish soccer federation and accuses it of threatening World Cup-winning players
- Military drone crashes during test flight in Iran, injuring 2
- $1 Frostys: Wendy's celebrates end of summer with sweet deal
- Ukraine's Zelenskyy tells Sean Penn in 'Superpower' documentary: 'World War III has begun'
Ranking
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- Pregnant Kourtney Kardashian Supports Stepson Landon Barker in Must-See Lip-Sync Video
- Delivery driver bitten by venomous rattlesnake
- Norfolk Southern announces details of plan to pay for lost home values because of Ohio derailment
- FACT FOCUS: Inspector general’s Jan. 6 report misrepresented as proof of FBI setup
- Most Americans are confident in local police, but many still want major reforms
- DC police announce arrest in Mother’s Day killing of 10-year-old girl
- North Korea says Kim Jong Un is back home from Russia, where he deepened ‘comradely’ ties with Putin
Recommendation
Charges: D'Vontaye Mitchell died after being held down for about 9 minutes
Ukraine lawyers insist that UN’s top court has jurisdiction to hear Kyiv’s case against Russia
A second man accused of hanging an antisemitic banner on a Florida highway overpass is arrested
Ukraine complains to WTO about Hungary, Poland and Slovakia banning its farm products
Tropical weather brings record rainfall. Experts share how to stay safe in floods.
Trump skipping second GOP debate to give competing speech in Detroit
US defense chief urges nations to dig deep and give Ukraine more much-needed air defense systems
3 former Columbus Zoo executives indicted in $2.2M corruption scheme