Jump to content

Viva Las Vegas: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Onefortyone (talk | contribs)
mNo edit summary
Line 146: Line 146:


*[http://www.hometheaterspot.com/fusionbb/showtopic.php?tid/138604/ Review] by David Vaughn at [http://www.hometheaterspot.com/fusionbb/index.php? HomeTheatherSpot.com], 09-17-07.
*[http://www.hometheaterspot.com/fusionbb/showtopic.php?tid/138604/ Review] by David Vaughn at [http://www.hometheaterspot.com/fusionbb/index.php? HomeTheatherSpot.com], 09-17-07.

===HD DVD reviews===
*[http://www.dvdauthority.com/reviews.asp?reviewID=5365 Review] by Fusion3600 at [http://www.dvdauthority.com/ DVD Authority].


{{Elvis Presley}}
{{Elvis Presley}}

Revision as of 17:18, 24 November 2007

Also see theme song: Viva Las Vegas (song).
Viva Las Vegas
File:VivaLasVegasElvis.jpg
Directed byGeorge Sidney
Milton Feldman (Ass't)
Otto Lang (2nd unit)
Written bySally Benson
Produced byJack Cummings & George Sidney
StarringElvis Presley
Ann-Margret
CinematographyJoseph F. Biroc
Edited byJohn McSweeney Jr.
Music byGeorge E. Stoll
Distributed byMGM
Release dates
May 20, 1964 (USA)
Running time
85 min.
LanguageEnglish

Viva Las Vegas (1964) is an American romantic musical motion picture co-starring American singers Elvis Presley and Ann-Margret. The movie is regarded by fans as one of Presley's best and is noted for the on-screen chemistry between Presley and Ann-Margret. However, according to a contemporary review in the New York Times, "Viva Las Vegas the new Elvia Presley vehicle, is about as pleasant and unimportant as a banana split."[1] Notwithstanding, "Viva Las Vegas" has become one of Presley's most iconic phrases.

The chemistry between the two stars was apparently real during the filming. Presley and Ann-Margret allegedly began an affair which received considerable attention from gossip columnists and led to a showdown with a worried Priscilla Beaulieu. In her 1985 book, Elvis and Me, Priscilla described the difficulties she experienced when the press announced that Ann-Marget and Elvis were engaged to be married.[2] However, there may have been other reasons for the great publicity campaign about the romance between Elvis and Ann-Margret during the filming of Viva Las Vegas and the following weeks. It primarily helped to increase the popularity of the young Hollywood beauty. In her memoir, Ann-Margret only refers to Presley as her "soulmate", but very little is revealed about their long-rumored romance.[3] In his critical study on the "dream machine" that publicists, tabloid newspapers, journalists, and TV interviewers use to create semi-fictional icons, often playing with inauthenticity, Joshua Gamson cites a press agent "saying that his client, Ann-Margret, could initially have been "sold ... as anything"; "She was a new product. We felt there was a need in The Industry for a female Elvis Presley."[4]

In addition, the filming produced unusually-heated exchanges between Colonel Tom Parker, Presley's manager, and the movie's director, the highly experienced George Sidney, concerning the time and effort allotted by the cinematographer, ostensibly on Sidney's orders, to the musical scenes involving Ann Margret, which included views from many different angles, re-takes and the use of several cameras for each shot.

Presley's screen charisma was nevertheless there for anyone to see. The scene in which he delivers the title song remains the only one in his career to depict him performing an entire song, in one uncut take, and as shot by the lens of a single camera.

Plot summary

Lucky Jackson (Elvis Presley) goes to Las Vegas, Nevada to participate in the city's first annual Grand Prix. However, his race car is in need of a new engine in order to compete. Jackson raises the money but mislays it when distracted by Rusty Martin (Ann-Margret). Soon, Jackson's main competition, Count Elmo Mancini (Cesare Danova), enters the picture to steal both the race and Rusty.

Cast

Soundtrack

The soundtrack songs were recorded in July of 1963 at Radio Recorders Studios in Hollywood, California and are regarded by some as among Presley's best. In addition to Presley's vocals, Ann-Margret performs two solos in the film. Three songs, "Night Life", "Do The Vega" and "You're The Boss", were recorded for the film but never used. "You're The Boss" is a duet by Elvis and Ann-Margret.

RCA Records has been heavily criticized (in Elvis: The Illustrated Record and other retrospectives) for mishandling what was considered by critics to be the best set of songs recorded for an Elvis film for years. None of the vocals involving Ann-Margret was released at the time, although she was a successful RCA recording artist in her own right and had performed two solo numbers in the film ("Appreciation" and "My Rival"). The only recordings released simultaneously with the film were the theme song plus a cover version of "What'd I Say?" on a single; and a few additional songs on an EP. Additional songs recorded for the film would appear scattered about later album compilations, while the Ann-Margret duets with Presley - "The Lady Loves Me" and the deleted "You're the Boss" - would not be officially released until after Presley's death. The version of "C'Mon Everybody" released on record is a different version than the one used in the film, lacking Ann-Margret's backing vocals, a whistling interlude, and the closing bars.

Although bootleg LP's began to appear in the 1970s, purporting to contain the complete soundtrack, RCA did not officially release anything approaching a full soundtrack until 1993, when it began to reissue Presley's film soundtracks on a series of "Double Features" CDs, the pairing of Viva Las Vegas soundtrack with that of Roustabout being in the first batch. These CDs do not include the solo Ann-Margret performances or "The Climb" by the The Forte' Four. An almost complete soundtrack from the film was released on Follow That Dream Records (the Danish division of BMG) in 2003. It includes all master takes plus alternate versions. "The Climb" is also included, but the Ann-Margret solo tracks are not. At present, the Ann-Margret solos are available only on the 5-CD box set: Ann Margret 1961-1966 from Bear Family Records in Germany, but her "You're the Boss" duet with Elvis is on her otherwise solo cd album, "Lovely Ann-Margret: Hits and Rarities," digitally remastered and released 1995 by Marginal Records MA 022, Brussels, Belgium.

According to Elvis historian Steve Pond, in an interview for Kingdom : Elvis in Vegas, a featurette included with the 2007 DVD release of the film, only the lead singer of the Forte Four was actually recorded singing "The Climb", not the rest of his group. Instead, the backing vocals were provided by the Jordanaires and by Elvis Presley himself.

Recording musicians

File:Viva Las Vegas.jpg
Ann-Margret & Elvis in a promotional image for the movie

Tracks (songwriter)

DVD Releases

1. Warner Home Video, August 1, 2000.

This was the first DVD release. It contains the movie in two formats on a flipper disc. One side contains the movie in the Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 (4:3), the other side is in Widescreen (Letterbox). The soundtrack is presented in mono.

(Source: Amazon.com)

2. Viva Las Vegas Deluxe Edition, Warner Home Video, August 7, 2007.

Special Features:

- Commentary by Steve Pond, rock journalist and author of “Elvis in Hollywood ”

- Restored and Digitally Remastered in a 16x9 master, enhanced for widescreen televisions. Color/16x9 Anamorphic transfer 2.4:1

- New featurette Kingdom : Elvis in Vegas

- Remastered soundtrack in Dolby Digital 5.1 from original production elements and original mono theatrical soundtrack.

- Theatrical trailer

- Subtitles: English & Français (feature film only)

(Source: ElvisNews.com - Details Warner and Paramount DVD releases)

References

  1. ^ New York Times, May 21, 1964, p.42
  2. ^ See Priscilla Presley, Elvis and Me, p.175 f.
  3. ^ Ann-Margret with Todd Gold, Ann-Margret: My Story (1994).
  4. ^ See Joshua Gamson, Claims to Fame: Celebrity in Contemporary America (University of California Press, 1994), p.46. See also C. Lee Harrington and Denise D. Bielby, Popular Culture: Production and Consumption (2000), p.273.

See also

Movie reviews

DVD Reviews

Blu-ray reviews

HD DVD reviews