Priscilla | Elvis, heart of a pygmalion





Sofia Coppola’s adaptation of Priscilla Presley’s biography, Elvis and Mepublished in 1985, is a subtle and intimate work on the emancipation of a woman under the yoke of a pygmalion since adolescence.




The story of a bride dazzled by the aura of her Sun King, then condemned to the shadows by the King, who locks her in his Graceland castle. A story in perfect harmony with the rest of Sofia Coppola’s filmography, about young women in search of freedom, which rises through its mastery above the fray of Bling Ring, Beguiled And On the Rocksor even Marie Antoinette.

Priscilla Beaulieu was only 14 years old – the age of Marie-Antoinette when she was married to the future Louis XVI – and Elvis Presley, 10 years older, when they met in Germany in 1959. Elvis is doing his service military in Bavaria. Priscilla lives there with her parents on an American base. It’s love at first sight. He cures his homesickness with this teenager from Austin, Texas. She is in heaven and spends her days fantasizing about the idol of American youth.

It is from this moment, and through the eyes of Priscilla Presley, that Sofia Coppola tells this mythical love story that today we would describe as toxic.

The filmmaker adopts a subtle, minimalist and impressionist approach, which makes Priscilla the perfect antidote to Elvis bloated by Baz Luhrmann. We never see Elvis in concert or in the cinema, and we hear very few of his songs, barely a piano version of Love Me Tender.

That said, the film’s soundtrack is filled with anachronistic gems – a trademark of Sofia Coppola’s cinema – from the interpretation of Crimson and Clover by Joan Jett to the original version of I Will Always Love You by Dolly Parton, perfectly marrying the end of the film and of this marriage, which lasted from 1967 to 1973. The soundtrack, signed by Phoenix, the French group of Sofia Coppola’s husband, Thomas Mars, is fabulously vaporous, like remains the artistic direction.

A golden prison


PHOTO PROVIDED BY ENTRACT FILMS

Cailee Spaeny plays Priscilla Beaulieu in Sofia Coppola’s film.

At age 16, Priscilla Beaulieu moved to Graceland and finished high school at a Catholic school in Memphis. The fantasy of kitschy castle life in Graceland quickly takes a turn for the gilded prison. Priscilla is the story of thwarted love and an addiction to amphetamines and sleeping pills that Elvis encouraged him to take.

He is her confidant and her husband, not enough her lover and very much her father. He decides everything, from when they can make love (on their wedding night, according to the story), to the color of her hair (black) and dresses (blue). He doesn’t ask her to marry him, he announces their marriage to her.

Although the film portrays Elvis as a shy gentleman with no ulterior motives when he wooed a barely pubescent teenager, it is an unflattering portrait of Presley, darkened by episodes of domestic violence and an attempted rape.

Each time Priscilla reproaches her husband for his numerous infidelities (with Nancy Sinatra or Ann-Margret, for example), he lets the threat of his replacement by a more docile and indulgent wife hang like a sword of Damocles. Even pregnant with Lisa Marie (who died last January), Priscilla endures Elvis’s mood swings, who suggest a break in their marriage.

Sofia Coppola made the wise choice to entrust these iconic roles to little-known actors. Australian Jacob Elordi (Euphoria) does not attempt to imitate Elvis, as Austin Butler did in the film of the same name. He is much taller than Elvis, so much so that Priscilla looks like a child next to him (which is probably intentional). On the other hand, it gives off an energy that is both touching and terrifying.

The American Cailee Spaeny, who won the Best Actress Award at the most recent Venice Film Festival, is completely convincing, both in the skin of a lovestruck teenager and in that of an emancipated woman of 28 years.

The dynamic between the two actors certainly contributes to making Priscilla the best film of the filmmaker The Virgins Suicides Since Lost in Translationalready 20 years ago.

Priscilla

Biographical drama

Priscilla

Sofia Coppola

With Cailee Spaeny and Jacob Elordi

1h50
Indoors

8/10


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