On The 60th
Anniversary- When The King Was “The King”-Elvis’ “Jailhouse Rock” (1957)-A Film
Review
DVD Review
By Associate Film Critic
Alden Riley
Jailhouse Rock, starring
Elvis Presley, Judy Tyler, 1957
As I have mentioned
before sometimes as an associate film critic, meaning a junior member of the
staff, you receive the tail-end assignments, not the good stuff which is left
to Sandy Salmon (and in the old days Sam Lowell). Sometimes you get an
assignment that is something of a so-called “learning experience” like the time
I mentioned to Sandy that I did not know who Janis Joplin was when he asked me
what I thought of her as part of his Summer of Love, 1967 seemingly endless nostalgia
trip and he assigned me to review the D.A. Pennebaker documentary on the first
Monterey Pops Festival in that same year where Janis blew the house down. That
was not the case with the film under review Elvis’ (do I need to print his last
name for the three people in the world who do not know who I am talking about
solely by using his first name) Jailhouse
Rock from 1957 which played off of his huge record hit of the previous
year. I practically begged Sandy for the assignment especially after Sam Lowell
decided that he wanted to concentrate on finishing his also seemingly
never-ending series on early 1950s B-film noirs put out by the English Hammer
Production Company. Sandy demurred suggesting that like with the Janis Joplin
episode I could learn something about the days when men and women (think Wanda
Jackson) played rock and roll like their lives depended on it- and it and they
did.
Now everybody knows, or
should know since I am an associate critic and thus much younger that those
reprobate rockers Sandy and Sam who were as Sam put it one time “present at the
creation,” that I am at least a decade if not more removed from having been, as
Sam Lowell would also put it, washed clean by the rock and roll wave that swept
American youth in the mid-1950s. But that fact does not mean that unlike the
Janis Joplin episode that I am unfamiliar with the work of “the King” when he
was in the king in the 1950s dawning light. The link? I grew up in a rather
tepid household in New Jersey anchored by staid and respectable parents, my
father a civil engineer and my mother, Mildred eternally called Milly, nothing
but a great and resourceful housewife as befit a professional man’s wife in
those days if not now. Except that Milly was wild for Elvis back in her teenage
maiden days. The days when Elvis made all the women sweat. So against staid
respectable housewifely type-cast all day long on some days especially when Pa
was away she would play whatever Elvis tunes hit her fancy just then. And dance
to some of them to my embarrassment when I was younger since it seemed kind of
provocative to me although I didn’t know what that word meant then. The long
and short of it though is that love of Elvis must have been in my DNA since I
have always been a fan of his early music if not the horrible films that he got
talked into after Jailhouse Rock or
the muted musical life of a stuffed animal Vegas head-liner. Yeah, the classic
age of Good Rockin’ Tonight, It’s Alright
Mama, One Night With You (better the version that has One Night of Sin to the same melody-what he might have been if he
followed down that path a bit), Heartbreak
Hotel, and of course the progenitor
of the film under review Jailhouse Rock. The songs that when you look at YouTube
versions makes you understand why he made women like my mother sweat and scream
their frustrations away in their teenage fantasies.
I am sure that I had seen
the film Jailhouse Rock sometime in
my youth since I am sure my mother had it on some revival retro television
station or we saw it at the retro-movies downtown but I was foggy about the
details enough tin this watching that I soon realized that I didn’t recall much
of the plotline. After viewing I had come away really wishing that Elvis had
not done another movie because none compares with the snarly, sullen, youth he
portrays speaking for a whole lost post-World War II generation who had been
too young for that war but had immersed in the frightening Cold War night that
froze the American landscape and which even I caught the tail-end of myself.
From scene one in some
drunken back alley barroom when sullen, sulky construction worker Vince Everett
(Elvis’ role) gets into a fight with some irate customer and winds killing him
drawing two hard years in the state pen Elvis lights the screen up. Sure there
were a million sullen youth out in places like La Jolla sucking up the
surfboard seas, hot rodding down midnight Thunder Roads in Mill Valley,
motorcycle helling with angels like Marlon Brando’s Johnny Too Bad tearing up the
holy landscape with nothing going but Elvis spoke to them. Spoke to guys like
Sam Lowell and Pete Markin in Podunk North Adamsville and a ton of places like
that. And he would have stayed sullen and snarly forever, would have measured
his sappy life by prison stretches except that jailbreak-in bought him in
contact with a guy like Hunk, his bunkmate, a lifer-type jailbird who happened
to have been a small something in the music industry before the inevitable
woman got him thinking crazy about whiskey and blowjobs and got him a long
stretch from a stinking two bit robbery.
Yeah, old Hunk was always
looking for the angle, for the next best thing, saw in the kid something, saw a
meal ticket and so he made Vince sign a pact with the devil, take a chance to
break out of that “from hunger” world that guys like Sam, Pete, and even Sandy
talk about in their poor boy working class days when they too might have taken
one wrong turn too many. I know Sam has told me a million times it was a close
thing with him (a couple of his brothers didn’t make it-wound up inside the pen
more than outside). So sullen, surly too after a deuce in stir Vince takes the
air on the outside thinking maybe he can make it as an entertainer not small
potatoes like Hunk but big, with that big red convertible of his dreams.
But a million guys back
then had that like a million other guys sound borrowed from Hank Williams or
Big Joe Turner or Frank Sinatra, hell, guys were even borrowing styles and form
from hokey Mickey Alba who knocked the women for a loop-for a minute and then
they went back to sleep. No soap, no soap for Vince except maybe cadging drinks
for a tune or coffee and. That is until he met record hustling insider Peggy
who sets him up on the road to dough although never giving him a tumble. Never
buying into that from hunger need Vince exuded since as bright as she was she
was strictly suburban middle class and sullen and snarly in that milieu only
played in sociology classes or in the magazines.
Vince and Peggy wash out
until two things happen, happen in the small company world of records in the days
before big operations like RCA and Columbia sucked all the air out of Mom and Pop
operations. First Vince got told via a tape-recording that he sounded like a lonesome
cowboy singing to and for himself. No feeling, no jump until Peggy blasted him.
Made him jump feel the song. Second Vince figured that he still had a shot at the
bigs by producing and hustling his own records and it worked. Once a Peggy-friend
DJ spun his platter the girls went crazy, went Milly and fantasies crazy. The
rest was history.
Well almost history since
our boy Vince had a thing for Peggy but couldn’t express it, couldn’t figure a
way to get to her and Hunk came out of stir looking for his cut. He got it
alright and in the end Vince got Peggy too but that was a close thing. Here’s
the real play though since every Hollywood production, or most anyway, have some
boy meets girl conflict that must be resolves by the end or else just like here.
What you want to watch this movie for and if you can’t get it go to YouTube to
watch is that Elvis scene when he is doing Jailhouse
Rock for a television show. Watch (forget the lip synched song) Elvis go through
his paces, watch him make the moves that later guys would imitate although they
couldn’t surpass. Watch what made all the young things sweat, hell, all the grown
women too. Watch why my mother in her sainted sanitary home kept her girlish
fantasies alive listening to the king when he was the king do his stuff. Yeah,
watch when men (and women too) played rock and roll for keeps.
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