Elvis Presley was the biggest musician in the world. He was also a movie star. His film career wasn’t quite as successful as his music career, but that doesn’t mean he was without his triumphs. Elvis made a splash on the big screen.
Below are the best movies starring Elvis, with some notable songs.
This was Elvis’ first film and, thus, a vital entrant into his movie canon. Presley’s star was still rising then, so he wasn’t even first billed. However, his popularity was such that the movie’s title was changed from The Reno Brothers to the name of his song during production. Also, fans were so upset that Elvis’ character died in the movie that the film's end was reshot.
One of the truly quintessential Elvis movies, with a hit song to boot. The title song was 21st on AFI’s Top 100 Songs list, and its big dance number is still a piece of iconic musical filmmaking.
The last movie before Elvis enlisted in the military, King Creole benefits from the quality of the directing. Michael Curtiz helmed the film, and he’s the man who directed such movies as Casablanca, Mildred Pierce, and Yankee Doodle Dandy.
Fittingly, Elvis followed up military service with a movie where he plays a guy in the military. Interestingly, the movie caused a riot when it was screened in Mexico City, leading to all Elvis movies being banned in Mexico until 1971.
The critical assessment of Flaming Star was that this was probably the best acting performance Elvis ever gave. It also had a big impact outside of film. Andy Warhol used an image from this film to create a series of silkscreen artworks that have sold for hundreds of millions of dollars.
It just feels like Elvis singing on Hawaiian beaches was kind of what his film career was destined for. This is the right milieu for him. Indeed, Blue Hawaii is a popular entry in Presley’s filmography. Elvis wearing a lei and playing the ukulele? Yeah, that sounds about right.
A hitman tries to kill Elvis in the same film where he gives a heartfelt speech to a judge to get his father’s unofficially adopted children returned to him. A lot is going on in the movie, and it’s maybe a little maudlin sometimes. It was a people pleaser film bolstered by Elvis’ charisma.
Elvis is back in Hawaii. Now, he's in a love triangle. The movie featured the song “Return to Sender,” which became a big hit for Presley. Girls! Girls! Girls! also was nominated for a Golden Globe, though it lost to The Music Man.
Elvis and Ursula Andress, the original Bond Girl, joined forces, but Elvis was not actually having fun in Acapulco. The ban on Elvis films in Mexico apparently included a ban on Elvis filming in the country, leaving him to shoot footage in Los Angeles. The highest-grossing musical of 1963 (a time when musicals were still big business), it’s also considered notable for being the last Elvis movie before the explosion of Beatlemania in the United States.
It’s a weird title for a movie, and it’s a bit silly, but we wanted to include it because Elvis plays dual roles. He plays a serious guy with dark hair and his blond, goofy, hillbilly cousin. Yeah, not high art, but it’s fun in its own way.
To many, Viva Las Vegas is the best Elvis movie. It has the glitz of Vegas. It has Ann-Margret. It has great musical numbers and some wonderful dance sequences. Elvis is truly in his element, and it works on many levels.
Elvis plays a musician who rides the road on a motorcycle and then joins a carnival. This film had an impressive supporting cast. Joining Presley are Barbara Stanwyck, Oscar winner Jack Albertson, and Jaws himself, Richard Kiel.
It’s a bizarre title, but the reviews for Tickle Me were good, nevertheless. The movie about Elvis as a bull rider was written by two Three Stooges writers, ratcheting up the comedy and the slapstick in this film.
You know, maybe Elvis wasn’t the perfect choice for a movie about college spring break in 1965. However, they wanted to capitalize on the popularity of beach party movies of the time, and Elvis was still good at that sort of thing, even if he water skis while wearing a long-sleeved shirt.
One last time, Elvis returned to Hawaii. It’s not quite on the level of Blue Hawaii, but it’s still a worthwhile film from Presley’s filmography. The fact Elvis’ character is a helicopter pilot was a nice excuse for aerial photography.
When you go through Elvis’ filmography, it’s interesting to see the little difference between movie posters. Elvis has a guitar. Bikini-clad women flank him. There’s also a car in this case because Spinout is about a musician and a part-time race car driver.
It’s Prince and the Pauper combined with a beach party film. Presley plays the son of an oil tycoon who swaps places with a waterskiing instructor so he can see if women like him for him and not his money. Yeah, sure, why not? It’s not an Oscar-caliber movie, but it’s what you expect from a film of this ilk.
The soundtrack to this film flopped, and it’s not at the top of his filmography, but there are some good things to be said about Easy Come, Easy Go. For example, there’s a go-go dancing yoga practitioner in the film. Elvis plays a deep-sea diver who is also a nightclub singer, which you don’t necessarily see all that often.
Elvis heads to Europe and gets caught up in the world of criminals and wealthy heiresses. It’s Elvis’ take on one of those European crime farces, though not as good as the best of those genres. Still, if it’s a genre you like, you will get the key things you want from it in Double Trouble.
Elvis’ last three films would come out in 1969, including Change of Habit, a flop where Mary Tyler Moore plays a nun. Live a Little, Love a Little is the last of Presley’s movies with anything going for it. Former singing legend Rudy Vallee, in his sixties, is also in the cast. Plus, this film gave us the song “A Little Less Conversation,” which became a hit in 2002 thanks to a remix.
Chris Morgan is a Detroit-based culture writer who has somehow managed to justify getting his BA in Film Studies. He has written about sports and entertainment across various internet platforms for years and is also the author of three books about '90s television.
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