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Priscilla (2023)

Benutzerrezensionen

Priscilla

293 Bewertungen
6/10

It was really good and then it fell apart

I have been excited to see this for months - finally out on MAX so I went for it - and the first hour was fantastic . They were both very good in their roles and the chemistry( or lack of ) was very well presented . It took the story of the two of them meeting and made it come to life , the filming was interesting and the general vibe felt spot on . The development in this first part for the characters was great and you really felt like you were being set up to be taken somewhere

And then ....

Then all the sudden the second half it's like the character development just stopped , very little connected together or made sense without background knowledge into the story as a whole , and then the last 20 min it was like "oh shoot we have 20 min better finish it " and no one could figure out exactly how .

The jump from being in an abusive relationship to being her own woman was instant and it all felt very juvenile and hallmark in the end .

Worth watching ? Yes for sure . Not great film but really could have been which made it more disappointing.
  • srgymrat33
  • 23. Feb. 2024
  • Permalink
6/10

The Disturbing Reality behind the King's Wife

Before Elvis Presley's daughter Lisa Marie passed away earlier this year, she was quite contemptuous over Sofia Coppola's portrayal of her parents in her biographical feature Priscilla. Based on Priscilla Presley's 1985 memoir Elvis and Me, the film has nonetheless garnered mostly positive reviews and even earned Cailee Spaeny the Volpi Cup for Best Actress at the 2023 Venice Film Festival. Given that Priscilla herself was an executive producer on this project, it's best to look at this project at a more earnest portrayal of Elvis and Priscilla instead of it being romanticized or sugar coated.

Now as this film depicts the courtship between a then 14 year old Priscilla and a then 24 year old Elvis, the biggest takeaway from this feature is that it's supposed to comment more on the idea of love being difficult to obtain as the wife of a global superstar. While it does depict a taboo romantic subject in mind, it becomes far more toxic when Elvis proves to be far more manipulative and abusive than his rockstar persona claims otherwise. Cailee Spaeny and Jacob Elordi share quite a conflicting bond as their depictions show a more disturbing underbelly to what the public thought of the Presleys otherwise. Coppola makes sure to emphasize the unfortunate implications behind their relationship without directly endorsing it, especially as we can see how much the spousal torment and jadedness behind the life of fame creates more misery in Priscilla than to the people worried for her like her parents and socialites. Behind all the rock & roll, glamour and pizazz lies a hollow marriage where one is no longer illusioned to much of anything, be it romance or appreciation for the music.

That being said, outside of the disturbing implications behind Priscilla and Elvis' courtship, there really isn't much else to take away from the movie. By putting so much of Priscilla's perspective into the limelight, the portrayal of her husband isn't interesting enough to dissect beyond him being a fake charming guy who more so likes the idea of a soul mate instead of actually being with one consistently. It doesn't help that the film rushes certain plot points just to get to Presley's life of prestige, such as Priscilla's time with her rightfully concerned family, her trouble focusing in school and even the implied drug addictions she and her husband faced. Despite that latter key point playing a big role in Elvis' abusive behavior, it isn't explored enough to leave much of a dramatic impact. In fact, for a film that tries to incorporate themes of domestic abuse, it feels surprisingly lacking in showing much of that tension. Also, once the film ends, it feels as if it missed the opportunity to go more into Priscilla's life after leaving Elvis for good, almost as if it felt it didn't need to tell more when it should have.

Outside of those qualities, the filmmaking is competent enough yet never rises above decently well crafted in depicting the era of subject. The cultural aesthetic of the late 50s and early to mid 60s feels more tact on for the sake of the time period, as outside of some of the road shows and projects Elvis is apart of, only the costuming sticks out the most, and yet the film hardly does much with them to make much of an impression. If anything, the pop cultural influence from this era feels more like an accompaniment to the story than really playing much of a role beyond the media playing up Elvis' life as more than it really is. Also, the lack of much of a background score surprisingly doesn't work as most of the scenes play out with an awkward tension that would have benefited from more than just what's on the soundtrack. Speaking of which, for some reason there are all kinds of retro and contemporary rock and jazz songs except from the king himself. Perhaps given the involvement of Priscilla Presley and her ex-husband's enterprises, this comes off as understandable yet confusing.

So while made with earnest intentions and captivating performances, Priscilla is a decent enough biopic that falls flat in exploring more about its subject matter beyond superficial love and all the glitz and glamour that comes with it. I would recommend this on the grounds that it's more interesting than it is thought provoking, though definitely take that for what it's worth given how much influence was done by the target at hand. Besides, even if the king is no longer looked at the same way he was then, projects like these are good reminders to not look up to everyone you admire, let alone fall for.
  • elicopperman
  • 13. Nov. 2023
  • Permalink
6/10

A Disappointing Portrait

When a film seeks to depict the life story of a beloved public figure, it generally works best when it paints a comprehensive portrait of said individual. However, in this biography of the wife of rock icon Elvis Presley, viewers get a picture that seemingly tells only half of the story. Writer-director Sofia Coppola's latest focuses on the years Priscilla Presley (Cailee Spaeny) spent with Elvis (Jacob Elordi). They embark on a sincerely loving relationship that, sadly, falls prey to problems with drugs, firearms, infidelity, prolonged separations and control freak tendencies, conditions - largely initiated by Elvis - that eventually lead to their separation (and at times cause the film to be more about him than her). Regrettably, the choice of this narrative leaves out the many significant personal and professional accomplishments of Priscilla's life on her own, an inspiring story that's completely (and perplexingly) overlooked. As a consequence, viewers are primarily shown a profile of a predominantly subservient character who rarely rebels until she finally somehow musters up the courage to leave (where did that trait come from?), with nothing about the successes that followed. In addition, there are many story threads that feel unresolved or underdeveloped, leaving audiences hanging about what comes from them. To its credit, "Priscilla" is, in several respects, some of the best (though surprisingly most conventional) work that Coppola has produced as a filmmaker, as evidenced in the cinematography and editing and in Elordi's balanced portrayal of Elvis. But, like other of Coppola's efforts, this offering could still use some tidying up in the writing, character development and overall story structure. The wife of a King truly warrants better treatment.
  • brentsbulletinboard
  • 25. Feb. 2024
  • Permalink
6/10

It's competently put together visually at least, though overall I can't honestly say this made a mark

Just rather uninteresting, on film terms at least.

It is interesting seeing the film portray a different type of version of Elvis Presley, one that is uncomfortable to watch unfold but one that ought to be told. That's where anything noteworthy I have to say about this release ends, though. As a movie, it's rather boring. I'm not convinced there's enough to be told across a full blown picture, at least not one around 1hr 45mins in length. I will say that Cailee Spaeny puts in a solid display as the titular character, in fairness.

Jacob Elordi as Elvis, in my opinion, isn't a positive to be honest. If I didn't know he was playing Elvis I genuinely wouldn't have guessed he was playing the singer, aside from a few outfits and the twisty bit of hair in his fringe. Accent particularly seemed off to me too, Elordi amusingly (given the director's connection) sounds more like Nicolas Cage (c. 1997, 'Con Air', Cameron Poe) on phone call scenes.

It's competently put together visually at least, though overall I can't honestly say this made a mark on me personally. I don't feel like I learnt anything about 'Priscilla' herself. I doubt I'll remember this one long term, sadly.
  • r96sk
  • 3. Jan. 2024
  • Permalink

Sofia Coppola's mood piece on Elvis & Priscilla

Early in Sofia Coppola's languid distillation of Priscilla Presley's life with Elvis, she receives a beautifully coiffed and presented gift of a pet poodle. Priscilla (Cailee Spaeny) had recently moved into Graceland when she gets the present. 14 when they met in Germany, Priscilla was still only 17. She coddles the pooch and treats it like a little princess. Coppola (who wrote the screenplay adapted from Priscilla's book) makes a case that Elvis (Jacob Elordi) viewed his then future wife as a type of possession. When the teenager asks for permission to take a part-time job, the musician forbades it saying that he needs her to be available whenever he desires. Like the dog, Priscilla is always to be primped and pampered to its owner's specifications.

One could say that PRISCILLA represents the other side of Baz Luhrman's recent phantasmagorical film ELVIS in both style and POV. That's certainly true in many ways, but it's doubtful that Coppola would have made her movie much differently even if Luhrman's film didn't exist. Phillipe La Sourd's cinematography, Tamara Deverell's Production Design and Stacey Battat's costuming all fit nicely within Coppola's aesthetic. The filmmaker's love of pop music is also fully on display with period songs mixed freely with more recent tunes in a similar vein (the movie begins with The Ramones and fades out with Dolly Parton).

Coppola has rarely been an auteur interested in pure plot and narrative drive. She prefers to soak the viewer into the milieu of her characters. On that level, PRISCILLA has a certain effectiveness. Neither Spaeny nor Elordi are stars, but, their anonymity adds to their relatability. Elordi in particular, faces not only comparisons to Austin Butler's ebullient Oscar nominated performance, but decades of imitators. He humanizes the mythic figure even if, at a certain point, his lack of flash reduces the King of Rock 'N Roll to too much the mere mortal. The elephant in the room is, of course, that Elvis would be considered persona non grata in today's climate. When Priscilla first enters Graceland, Elvis' ever-present entourage are taken aback at how young she looks. Coppola exaggerates the difference by casting actors over a foot apart in height (the real difference was closer to 8"). It does make her look like a little girl (and Spaeny convincingly pulls it off despite being only a year younger than Elordi; Elvis was a decade Priscilla's senior). In Coppola (and Priscilla's) telling, Elvis isn't portrayed as making his young wife into a purely sexual object. He kept her under glass in his misguided notion that he was protecting her. To make her into an idealized good Christian girl and modern Southern belle who his recently deceased mama could have been proud of. It's an extraordinary tricky balance - particularly with the real Priscilla being a Producer on this film.

By design, PRISCILLA never takes a truly deep look at all the details of the couple's lives. Colonel Tom Parker is only vaguely alluded to. The viewer sees Elvis performing only near the very end, and briefly. Once at Graceland, Priscilla is barely shown with anyone other than Elvis' posse. The movie only spans the years they were together. It's a very insular movie which relies heavily on mood and atmosphere. It will be up to each individual viewer if that is sufficient.
  • gortx
  • 8. Nov. 2023
  • Permalink
6/10

Uncomfortable reality coupled with a one-dimensional narrative

Wow, this was an uncomfortable movie to watch. Priscilla invites inevitable comparisons to last year's "Elvis," portraying an exact opposite narrative. Helmed by the talented Sophia Coppola, who commands great respect, and featuring Jacob Elordi, an actor I admire, the film falls short of expectations. Unfortunately, it presents a one-dimensional, flat perspective that left me somewhat disappointed.

While the performances are strong, and the direction commendable, Priscilla's narrative feels tedious and slow at times. The harrowing depiction of power imbalances in the central relationship adds a layer of discomfort that makes the film hard to watch. Sophia Coppola's artistic choices unveil a side of the characters that, while impactful, renders the viewing experience challenging. Priscilla sheds light on the vulnerability of a young protagonist, emphasizing the discomfort of witnessing a story where she is just a child.
  • cutie7
  • 16. Dez. 2023
  • Permalink
6/10

Uninspiring

The movie fails to provide a closer look at the real Priscilla -- most of the movie's portrayal is already known to the world-wide Elvis audiences. Worse is that it portrays Elvis in such a negative light -- again, much of which; the drug addiction and its obvious ills, the audience already knows. The actors did what they could to this uninspiring script, especially Elordi but it was really the visuals that were, if anything, at all interesting and beautiful. That said, I could not get past the height difference between the key actors which was an obvious mismatch nor a more in-depth understanding of the main character herself. As I drove home from the theatre I just kept asking myself, "But...why? Why make this movie?" What good comes from it? For me, the portrayal did no good to Priscilla necessarily; as mentioned it taught little of her; her parents or their parenting, it lacked an emotional fullness to the real life story of this romance (if you will), and other than the bedroom scenes, very little of Priscilla's thinking, the relationship of Elvis and she. Lastly, and importantly, it does little good to the real-life extended Presley family, not to mention, the legacy of Elvis.
  • dianewds-638-498121
  • 12. Nov. 2023
  • Permalink
7/10

keep the home fires burning

Greetings again from the darkness. It was less than 18 months ago when Baz Luhrman's Oscar nominated ELVIS hit theaters and we were admiring Austin Butler's performance. Where that movie was glitzy and loud and centered on Elvis and Col Tom Parker, this current film from writer-director Sofia Coppola (Oscar winner for LOST IN TRANSLATION, 2003) offers a quieter, more intimate glimpse at the relationship between Elvis and Priscilla through her eyes.

Ms. Coppola is a detailed filmmaker who excels when dealing with personal isolation, and Priscilla makes a fitting and worthy subject. The screenplay by Coppola and Sandra Harmon is adapted from Priscilla Presley's 1985 memoir, "Elvis and Me", a book that also served as the basis for the 1988 TV movie of the same name (screenplay by Ms. Harmon). Although Elvis Presley Enterprises was not involved with this film (explaining the lack of familiar Elvis music), Priscilla Presley did serve as Executive Producer (EP, ironically), so her memories and preferences likely play a key role in much of what we see here.

Relative newcomer Cailee Spaeny ("Mare of Easttown") delivers an outstanding performance - from 14-year-old Priscilla Beaulieu in 1959 to Elvis's bride in 1967 through their divorce in 1973. Ms. Spaeny perfectly captures the wide-eyed innocence of a young fan, the frustrations of a young woman being controlled and isolated, and finally, a grown woman standing up for her own freedom. Playing Elvis through this same time period is Jacob Elordi ("Euphoria"), and he is effective in mimicking the familiar mannerisms and speaking voice. Physically, he towers over the diminutive Spaeny, which although not historically accurate, does add a dimension to the couple's disconnect. As for the age difference, the two actors are close in age, but are able to portray the actual 10 year age gap between Elvis and Priscilla.

The creep factor is ever-present as 24-year-old Elvis, overseas on military duty, shows an elevated interest in 14-year-old Priscilla Beaulieu, whose military father is also stationed in Germany. The naivety of their first meetings is captured as Elvis' beloved mother has recently passed away. Both are lonely and away from home, and Elvis simply finds her easy to talk to. It's hindsight to question how parents could allow the situation to escalate, but anyone who has parented a teenager understands the challenges. When Priscilla turns 17, she moves into Graceland, yet Elvis insists the intimacy wait until after they are married.

At the core of the story is Priscilla's solitude and loneliness. She is confined to Graceland and requested to "keep the home fires burning" as Elvis marches off to the stream of movies set up by a never-seen-here Col Tom Parker. Keeping Parker on the phone allows Priscilla's world to remain even smaller despite being married to the biggest star on the planet. Doses of Elvis and the Memphis Mafia occur between extended stretches alone with Elvis' grandmother and personal cook. She is isolated from the real world and clearly controlled by Elvis, who was only partially present.

When Priscilla and Elvis are together, the strain is apparent. Prescription drugs and sexual tension are interrupted by periodic bursts of Elvis anger, followed by a sincere apology. It's here where we realize he's more of a kid than she is ... emotionally stunted in what makes a relationship (it takes more than the tabloid reports of movie set flings Priscilla reads about). This is also evident as she watches him go through many phases in search of himself - martial arts, bible study, eastern philosophy, etc. In the family photo shoot with Lisa Marie, body language tells the whole story. Priscilla's fling with karate instructor Mike Stone is teased, but not dwelled upon. We realize that Priscilla was the one thing in life he felt he could control. By the end, one of them has escaped the cage, while the other remains captive.

Voted 'Best Film' at this year's Venice Film Festival, it also reminds us what a terrific filmmaker Sofia Coppola can be. Working with a limited budget, she and her team are so proficient, it never seems as if they cut corners. Cinematographer Philipe Le Sourd and Editor Sarah Flack manage to sustain the pacing despite an inordinate amount of time Priscilla spends on her own at Graceland. Production Designer Tamara Deverell recreated the recognizable interior of Graceland, while the work of Costume Designer Stacey Battat guides us through the fashion changes that occurred over these 14 years. The film recreates some of the iconic images and moments that are ingrained in our memory banks, and director Coppola chooses to end with Dolly Parton's "I Will Always Love You", supposedly the song Elvis sang to Priscilla as they finalized the divorce.

Opens in theaters on November 3, 2023.
  • ferguson-6
  • 1. Nov. 2023
  • Permalink
8/10

Almost one of Coppola's best; Spaeny is an immediate star

Priscilla is absorbing material told with a quiet confidence; like Marie Antoinette, for at least two thirds of the way in, this feels like it is so close to being one of this director's most Formally and performance-wise impressive and inspired films. Whether you sense any deeper personal connection Coppola may have had with the story (Id need a psychology degree to unpack what it may or may not be like for this director to have been so close to a figure like Francis Coppola, though a much different context), the film largely works as a story where you get not only why a young woman would fall for this man at this time, but why it would be so hard to leave when it gets... rough.

When it's Priscilla in her high school years, in total yet totally understandable infatuation with Elvis (that time period when he goes away and she counts the months by calendar, chefs kiss), and even into most of the time into Graceland, it's engrossing. The flaw is when it kept going after running out of things to say; in that sense, ironically given how they are so wholly tonally different films, this has the same problem as Luhrmann's Elvis where it covers so much ground that it runs out of steam dramatically (the Hit The Points We Know sort of thing). If you asked me which is the superior film I'll say Coppola's, but it's not by a long shot exactly, just with different strengths for each.

Still, Spaeny gives, along with Dominic Sessa in The Holdovers, the OMG where did *that* come from Young actor turn of the year, as well as Elordi being ideally cast as *this* Elvis, and even with my qualms I would say to anyone vaguely interested to check it out. It's the kind of storytelling where the physical details are so impactful - watch what Priscilla does just before she goes to the hospital to give birth to her daughter, not subtle but a devastating fine-underlined point about her life as it was - and as per Coppola the production design and costuming and the camerawork is fantastic (though it took me a few minutes to adjust to how dark some of the scenes are lit).

And I must also add, other mostly splendid music choices besides (sampling from 80s New Wave to Santana), the opening needle drop ("Baby, I Love You," by The Ramones via Phil Spector) is as nerve-tingling as the final one is tacky (I'll leave you to be the judge, but I kind of groaned at that forced romantic irony).

PS: that moment when Priscilla breaks down and tells Elvis to stop reading from that book is one of my two or three favorite moments from any film this year.
  • Quinoa1984
  • 4. Nov. 2023
  • Permalink
6/10

Heavily Muted Look Back at Priscilla's Years with the King

Director/writer Sofia Coppola's atmospheric adaptation of Priscilla Presley's 1985 memoir is so muted the 2023 film often feels emotionally inert. The approach makes sense when it focuses on the compartmentalized world Priscilla lived in from age 14 when she was summoned to meet Elvis in Germany. The first part of the film focuses effectively on her sense of isolation, but it also builds anticipation for a great romance that we don't actually witness much in a relationship marred by jealousy, manipulation and often violent swings in behavior. Coppola manages to draw out solid lead performances from Jacob Elordi who captures Elvis' conflicted offstage personality well, and especially Cailee Spaeny who conveys the title role with aching vulnerability and an evolving sense of self.
  • EUyeshima
  • 24. Feb. 2024
  • Permalink
3/10

fails to tell what she felt

She is just a teenager, when Elvis entered her life - as young as she was, she must have had hopes, fears and dreams. We learn nothing of those or what else is going on inside of her. She remains the empty piece of paper, the unwritten human being, the entire world assumed she must have been... Unforgivable from a woman's perspective.

As other mentioned: the height-difference is off-putting since it's pushing the narrative towards an even bigger difference of power as it might have been in reality, almost scratching the topic of abuse.

I'm sure the real Priscilla had dreams and ambitions and was not the flat and willingless object as she's portraited here.
  • ulrike-23
  • 1. Jan. 2024
  • Permalink
8/10

Priscilla (2023) > Elvis (2022)

It's unfortunate that this movie came out so recently after Baz Luhrmann's Elvis did. Unfortunate because most will look to that as the "definitive" Elvis biopic - while it is in many ways, there are an equal number of ways that Sofia Coppola's Priscilla offers deeper insights into Elvis and Priscilla Presley and their very famous relationship.

Truly, these two films shouldn't be compared as they are very different. However, since they will be I'll throw my thoughts into the ring. Elvis was a very erratic, wacky film that had too much going on to the point that you never really engaged with it, moreso just followed along as it quickly gave you flashes of significant events in Elvis' life. Priscilla, on the other hand, focuses on one element of the Elvis story - his relationship and marriage with Priscilla. Plus, in this film, rather than taking an objective perspective like in Elvis, we get to follow the perspective of Priscilla and see Elvis the way she saw him, which is a far more compelling setup for a story.

Sofia Coppola holds nothing back (losing permission to the music rights in the process), as she artfully captures the loss of innocence and darker aspects of the famous relationship between Priscilla and Elvis. She was the perfect filmmaker to tell this story from this perspective, directing it almost like it is a dark fairytale.

Delicate and quietly fierce, at first glance, this film may not appear to share much with Oppenheimer and Killers of The Flower Moon, but they all have one thing in common: depicting the banality of evil in an almost detached way, framing objectively problematic events through a subjective individual's experience. Somehow, all three are able to say so much without preaching, presenting you with ugly and evil things and allowing their ugliness to be self-evident, often through juxtaposition between intense sin and mundane ordinariness.

Priscilla does not include impassioned monologues about female independence or misogyny-in fact, it's arguable that the heroine makes her first active choice in the final moments of the film-but it manages to grab you with its subtle allure and wrap you up in something that feels somehow good and gross, a delightful and desirable fairy tale and a slow-motion car accident from which you can't look away. It's hard to praise performances without being generic, but suffice to say that Cailee Spaeny's eyes and little half-smiles are doing so much heavy-lifting here-and Jacob Elordi somehow pulls off Elvis far more effortlessly than Austin Butler, in all his intense energy, could have ever dreamed. The seemingly 10-foot divide in height between the two of them helps, too.

Without even opening his mouth, Elordi embodied the essence of Elvis with his mannerisms and the way he carried himself. And when he did speak, that Southern drawl could charm anyone. Spaeny's performance from a naive and vulnerable fourteen-year-old to an emotionally mature adult was flawless. (I was amazed how the performance and the hair/makeup/clothing seamlessly worked to convince the audience of Priscilla's age in each period.) Spaeny's doe-eyed innocence at the beginning slowly turns to a sexual hunger and then pure emptiness. She was molded into the "perfect" wife by Elvis, and she had no freedom to choose her path in life.

The movie looks gorgeous and the soundtrack is phenomenal. The choice by Elvis' estate to not let his music in the movie worked positively for it. Without that music, he loses some of the mystique he has. He's just a normal abusive man.

I really enjoyed Priscilla - it is quite a special film that I hope people find! The mainstream take on this story will always be Baz Luhrman's version, but this truly has something more to offer. And that's to say nothing of the direction; there's an almost Phantom Thread level of soft and silky atmosphere here that makes the whole thing feel like ASMR, which only heightens the dysfunction that occurs within that gentle world. I loved the subtlety to Sofia Coppola's direction and was compelled the entire time; I couldn't take my eyes off the screen. The fact that the story ends at what feels like the halfway point only drives home the feeling that, for Priscilla Presley, that's what it was. Unfortunately, this film does lose a bit of its momentum near the end as it becomes less cohesive and jumps years forward between scenes, but it didn't really detract from my enjoyment of the film. This is definitely my preferred film compared to last year's presentation of these characters.

Priscilla is a subtle piece of art from Sofia Coppola. Cailee Spaeny is a marvelous revelation while Jacob Elordi turns in a subdued, more complex version of Elvis. Highly recommend it.
  • parksiet
  • 8. Nov. 2023
  • Permalink
7/10

Heavy

Imagine you're a teenage girl in love with the biggest celebrity the world has ever seen. Imagine he chooses you.

Priscilla Presley lived every teenager's fantasy, and every woman's heartbreak.

This film sensitively handles the power imbalance, choosing to show their relationship through Priscilla's eyes. With a male director, this could have easily become a male gaze fantasy, but with Sofia Coppola, it becomes far more realistic.

That's not to say there are uncomfortable moments which feel heavy to watch. For example, when Priscilla is parading clothes under the eye of Elvis and his male entourage, or when Elvis gaslights her. These scenes elicit sympathy from the viewer for Priscilla's plight. A young, lonely, naive woman who just wants the fairytale romance she's been promised.

I wasn't convinced Jacob Elordi could pull off a convincing Elvis, but he did an adequate job. I think his youth and non-exposure to the pop culture phenomenon that is Elvis played a big part. Cailee Spaeny protrayed Priscilla's naivety well, although I thought the height difference between her and Elordi made Priscilla all the more childlike... Maybe that was the goal.

I must mention set design. It was beautiful! The Christmas trees stuck in my mind, as well as a scene near the end where Elvis sits in a red room, framed by metal love hearts. Perfection.

Recommended for everyone who has/had a celebrity crush and wondered "what if?"
  • superfox_888
  • 21. Jan. 2024
  • Permalink
5/10

Not as interesting as you would think

  • steph868-936865
  • 25. Feb. 2024
  • Permalink

Utterly forgettable

I saw this 2 weeks ago and completely forgot that I had. Even watching the trailer right now doesn't bring memories of me watching this movie. It's like a bland meal with zero spices. Totally unoriginal. Utterly boring and predictable. It's sad because this is a story worth telling and I'm sure that it was an epic ride for Priscilla but this movie barely made any impact. It lacked something major and I can't even put my finger on it. Don't get me wrong, it wasn't terrible but it was nothing to rave about.

My main issue with this movie is how Priscilla is portrayed. She is totally character-less. Almost no emotion. Very slow. Lifeless. As if she never even lived. Even the party scenes in Vegas were slow and lifeless. It may have been the editing or maybe the low budget (?) but this movie did not portray the grand-ness and epic-ness of the life that Elvis' girl must have had.

Watch if you're bored and have nothing better to do. Otherwise, skip.
  • ivantheeditor
  • 13. März 2024
  • Permalink
6/10

More bitter than sweet

  • lauramdaniel
  • 1. Nov. 2023
  • Permalink
6/10

Bad Elvis.

  • chand-suhas
  • 14. Dez. 2023
  • Permalink
6/10

Not what it seems

No Joy

The story of this movie is simple, it's the life of Priscilla before and during her time with Elvis. As a young girl, 16/17 getting swooned into an infatuation with Elvis after a night they become closer and closer until she moves to him and they start a "life" together.

The movie is sad, the poor woman was treated like crap by this beloved man. I don't want to spoil it completely, yes it's a true story but on the other hand I had no idea about any of this until the movie.

Elvis isn't this amazing be all end all guy, he is a star, who struggles with self confidence and takes that out on Priscilla, there are some intense scenes, and very little to smile about.

The movie is good, I don't really see myself watching this one again, not that it's bad it's just a bit heavy, that's a testament to the terrific acting all round.

A bit slow, not amazing but not bad, decent watch 6/10.
  • eoinageary
  • 21. Dez. 2023
  • Permalink
7/10

Queen of the Desert...

An invitation's made while you're in adolescence, from an older man who has some kind of presence, but your parents are quite carful, this could be so controversial, as time passes, they eventually consent. So you find your way to Graceland and move in, it's a strange life being partnered with The King, discover things aren't always bliss, that you're easy to dismiss, competition really gets, under your skin. After changing how you look, being disparaged, you're in a wedding dress and next you're married, with a daughter making three, it's fair to say there's little glee, and your partner seems to be, constantly harassed.

Two outstanding leading performances that leave you under no illusion of the perspective from one of them.
  • Xstal
  • 5. Jan. 2024
  • Permalink
6/10

A let down from Ms.Coppola

A series of clips clipped together to make a movie to avoid making a web series, that is what "Priscilla" is.

Movie faithfully covers complete life story of Elvis and Priscilla but it is mechanical, a job to be done and be done with.

Most of the awards won or nominations are for costumes.

Cailee looks innocently beautiful. Jacob Elordi fails to create the magic that Elvis was, an Elvis who after fifty years still inspires look-alikes to look Elvis.

Strangely and sadly, "Priscilla" is a song-less biography of the legenday singer who mesmerized a whole generation of fans.; a pity.

The photography, the editting, the lighting, the lot, is below par.
  • srd-30659
  • 29. Feb. 2024
  • Permalink
1/10

Awful movie

It is difficult to imagine that Priscilla Presley was one of the producers of this awful film. It is easy to understand why daugher Lisa Marie refused to endorse the movie prior to her death. It is slow with too many scenes filmed in darkness, a mumbling Elvis who was impossible to understand, actors whose height difference was a distraction, NO Elvis music, a monotone delivery by the actress portraying Priscilla, and the emphasis that Elvis was creepily grooming 14 year old Priscilla for his 24 year old needs. There was no energy in the film, even the scenes of Las Vegas were a bore. Read Priscilla's book if you are interested in her life with Elvis. This movie does not deliver.
  • nmottel
  • 23. Feb. 2024
  • Permalink
9/10

Dreamy and well done..

Priscilla is from her side, from her perspective, so it switches between times of quiet shyness and awkwardness to scenes of a lavish fun dream life. Anyone could see how it would be very easy to get carried away in the situation she found herself in. Visually the film was very dreamy and beautiful, I love the little clips and montages of fun nights out, reminded me of Goodfellas or Casino, and I was more than happy to watch Priscilla change amazing outfits like 100 times. Also relieved to report Jacob Elordi was a very convincing Elvis, not corny at all and nailed the voice. Also I loooved the choice to not use the real Elvis's face on records and merch in the movie, it all had Jacob Elordi as Elvis on it, it was such a charming detail and keeps you more in the world of the movie. Really fresh fun soundtrack too. I would say Priscilla is another recent example of a movie that's made like specifically for women, so men/male critics will friggin haaaate it. Like men really can't consider for a second that some things just literally aren't FOR them.
  • JK-WhatsUpWeirdoPodcast
  • 24. Okt. 2023
  • Permalink
7/10

Ok

It was ok. I had a hard time with the way the actors looked. The real Elvis and Priscilla were each unusually stunning. Actors portraying them are attractive... but to really capture the genuine essence of the true story...for me, actors should have been as stunning as the real people. Also Elvis 5' 11" Priscilla 5' 4"...Elvis actor 6' 5" Priscilla 5' 1"... just came across as peculiar.

The acting was stellar, the story was...well it was Priscilla's story, and I believe, certainly worth telling. The actress playing Priscilla was superb, but I had a hard time getting past her diminutive stature, especially against a 6' 5" Elvis...I felt like the movie was worth seeing, but felt like it was missing something. Left me feeling like I wanted more..more emotion, more details, more of the story.

I prefer the 1988 TV "Elvis & Me".
  • seraichyk
  • 8. Nov. 2023
  • Permalink
4/10

Return to Sender

I saw "Priscilla" yesterday. "Priscilla" is a 2023 American biographical drama film written, directed, and produced by Sofia Coppola, based on the 1985 memoir "Elvis and Me" by Priscilla Presley (who served as an executive producer) and Sandra Harmon. It stars Cailee Spaeny in the titular role and Jacob Elordi as Elvis Presley. I looked forward to seeing this film based on the rave reviews it has received. However, I must say that I was disappointed by the film. Some critics say that the movie was "understated" - that is an understatement! I found it to be tedious and slow. I just couldn't get invested in Cailee Spaeny's performance - it didn't grab me as authentic. She has limited range as actress - which seems to be all the way from A to B. Jacob Elordi is strikingly handsome (as Elvis was) but he doesn't seem right for the role - he is 6' 5" and Elvis was 5' 11"! More importantly, his performance is annoying, especially when he mumbles (of course, he could be a victim of Coppola's script and direction). Speaking of writing and direction, Coppola speeds through parts of Priscilla's life towards the end whereas she spends too much in the initial buildup to the marriage. Therefore, I cannot recommend this film. As Elvis sang - "return to sender". 4/10.
  • dlmiley
  • 30. Nov. 2023
  • Permalink
6/10

Casting??

What I can't understand is why they would hire an actor who's 6'5" to play Elvis, when, in reality, he was 6 feet tall. Then they hire an actress who is 5'1" to portray a living person who is 5'4" tall. They look ridiculous next to each other! It's hard to equate that to our perception of Elvis and Priscilla. All I can think of is the casting was to assist with the portrayal of Elvis as an adult man and Priscilla being a young girl. The difference in their heights is distracting from what could've been a good story. Sofia Coppola is a talented director, but I think she missed the boat here. I'm disappointing because both my husband and I are huge Elvis fans.
  • mestberg
  • 2. Nov. 2023
  • Permalink

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