King Creole Review

King Creole
Juvenile delinquent Elvis (you guessed it) flunks high school and quits his job. As a busboy in a nightclub, he gets a chance to perform and, well, once his talents are unleashed, there's no stopping those who want o push him onwards and upwards.

by William Thomas |
Published on
Release Date:

02 Jul 1958

Running Time:

116 minutes

Certificate:

PG

Original Title:

King Creole

Made before he went into the army, this is probably Elvis' best movie - although Jailhouse Rock has better music and Flaming Star has a better story and acting - in that it features several qualities notably rare in the Presley filmography: a major director (Michael Curtiz, who made Casablanca and The Adventures Of Robin Hood), a top-flight supporting cast, a good script (based on Harold Robbins' novel A Stone For Danny Fisher, in which the hero was a boxer not a singer), an interesting and realistic setting (the New Orleans underworld), and a pretty fair LP's worth of songs (King Creole, Crawfish, New Orleans).

Elvis plays a James Dean-type role, a mixed-up kid angry with his weak sister Dad (Dean dagger) who falls in with a bunch of hoodlums - led by the superbly sneering Vic Morrow - and winds up in big trouble with brutal gangster Walter Matthau.

Made before the scripts started going downhill, this is the jewel in the King's crown.
Just so you know, whilst we may receive a commission or other compensation from the links on this website, we never allow this to influence product selections - read why you should trust us