17 niche Elvis references you probably missed in Baz Luhrmann's biopic

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Niche Elvis references

Like all of director Baz Luhrmann's movies (Romeo + Juliet or Moulin Rouge!, anyone?), Elvis is a maximalist treasure trove of sound, color, and emotion. The biopic sees Austin Butler play the King, while Tom Hanks takes on the role of his manager, Colonel Tom Parker. Luhrmann charts Elvis' rise to fame and takes us all the way through to the rock 'n' roll behemoth's health problems and death in 1977.

The movie also contains an ensemble cast of key figures from Elvis' life, including his wife Priscilla Presley (Oliva DeJonge) and blues artist B.B. King (Kelvin Harrison Jr.). Coupled with a mighty runtime of two hours and 40 minutes, Luhrmann certainly packs plenty into the movie, so you could be forgiven for missing some of the more niche references and Easter eggs hiding in plain sight.

By Jane Crowther. Contributions from Emily Garbutt 

(Warner Bros.)
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Seeing double

During the opening split-screen montage of Elvis performing in his iconic blue jumpsuit, there's a moment when the screen is a two-panel split as the King does karate moves. One is Presley and one is Butler – the footage was taken from a costume test.

(Warner Bros.)
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Star Trek

As Colonel Tom Parker is rushed to hospital the sign outside The International Hotel advertises a Star Trek show. Why? Elvis was a Trekkie who named one of his horses Star Trek. Posters of the stars of the show also appear in the control room during the 1968 special segment.

(Paramount)
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Nightmare Alley

When Colonel Tom Parker first describes looking for an act that could make audiences feel what they weren’t sure they should feel, we see a pan across a carnival to a freak tent when shadows recall the imagery of the 1947 film Nightmare Alley. This was Parker’s favorite film. Later when Parker 'seduces' Elvis at the fairground, a 'geeks' poster is visible behind The King – another nod to Nightmare Alley – and, if you know that story, a foreshadowing of how Elvis will ultimately become Parker’s ultimate geek show.

(Warner Bros.)
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Through thick and thin

When Elvis tells Colonel Tom Parker on the ferris wheel that he’s the best manager he could hope for, it’s a direct quote from a telegram Presley sent his new manager in February 1956. "You are the best, most wonderful person I could ever hope to work with," he wrote from New York. "Believe me when I say I will stick with you through thick and thin…"

(Warner Bros.)
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Blue Hawaii on Beale Street

When Elvis and BB King are finding outfits together in Lansky’s outfitters on Beale Street, the display of shirts on the shelf behind them includes the famous red Hawaiian shirt worn by Presley in his 1961 movie, Blue Hawaii.

(Warner Bros.)
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Trouble

When Elvis licks and fondles the RCA model dog during his Trouble performance at Russwood Park, that’s a nod to Presley’s cheeky behavior with the record company mascot during a show in LA in 1957 when he dry-humped Nipper. He didn’t actually sing Trouble at this event because he first recorded it for King Creole in 1958.

(Warner Bros)
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It Happened at the World's Fair</strong>

During the 'Elvis’ Life At A Hollywood Movie' montage, look out for a child kicking Elvis in the shins in a clip from the Elvis film It Happened at the World's Fair. That’s Kurt Russell as a child actor in his first on-screen role. Russell would famously go on to play Presley in the 1979 John Carpenter biopic, Elvis.

(Marvel Studios)
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All dolled up

In the same montage, there’s a moment where Elvis is applying make-up to Priscilla – a nod to Priscilla Presley’s autobiography in which she talks about Elvis liking her to always wear a full face of make-up.

(Warner Bros.)
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Toxic

Also in this montage, there are strains of Britney Spears’ Toxic – a comment on the controlling management of stars and our own public consumption of them

(Jive)
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Live a Little, Love a Little

At the end of the montage, that spinning 'Elvis in pyjamas' shot is from his 1968 film, Live a Little, Love a Little. The pale blue outfit brought to his bus, which he later wears when he chastises Jerry for laughing at the promotion of Singer sewing machines, is the suit he wears in a psychedelic dream sequence in the movie.

(Warner Bros.)
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Road tripping

When Elvis is on set and hanging out in a lux bus it’s a nod to the fact that the King preferred to drive (with his Memphis Mafia) from Tennessee to Hollywood in a custom-built bus rather than fly. He often drove.

(Warner Bros.)
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Order of business

That scene at the Hollywood sign was the first one Butler filmed. He then went into filming the 1968 special in the leather suit for his first 'performance' and his final scene was the water-skiing scene in the montage.

(Warner Bros.)
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Seeing red

During the rehearsal scene in Las Vegas for the International Hotel show, Elvis wears a red shirt director Baz Luhrmann describes as a pirate shirt. The helmer always put a red item of clothing in his movies and this is Luhrmann’s talisman red costume for this film.

(Warner Bros)
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Once upon a time

When Elvis is in hospital, the TV shows news reports of the death at the Altamont concert headed by the Rolling Stones in December 1969 and Parker is reading a paper reporting on the murder of Sharon Tate. Not strictly possible as Tate was killed in August 1969 but likely a narrative conceit as well as a cheeky nod to Butler's pre-Elvis role as Tex, one of Tate’s murderers, in Once Upon A Time…in Hollywood.

(Sony)
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Runway regalia

When Elvis and Priscilla meet at the airfield to swap parenting duties with Lisa Marie, Priscilla is wearing a coat that is a replica of the one she wore the day she divorced Elvis. He’s wearing the tracksuit he wore on the day.

(Warner Bros.)
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I Will Always Love You

In the same scene, when Elvis mouths "I will always love you" to Priscilla before boarding the plane, it’s a reference to the famous Dolly Parton song that Elvis sang to his ex-wife on the day of their divorce. Presley had hoped to record the track but Parker’s strict royalties deal meant that Parton wouldn’t give the song away.

(Warner Bros.)
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Unchained Melody

The Unchained Melody performance that ends the film starts out as Austin Butler and cuts to the real performance by Presley in Rapids City in 1977. Luhrmann originally had resistance to using the footage but he argued that Elvis’ smile during the sequence shows how he came alive in front of an audience until the very end. Butler’s performance is so immersive some viewers don’t spot the switch.

(Warner Bros.)

Did you notice these references?