Elvis Is Not In The
House-Nor Is His Kin-Kevin Cosner’s “3000 Miles To Graceland” (2001)-A Film
Review
DVD Review
By Laura Perkins
3000 Miles From Graceland,
starring Kevin Cosner, Kurt Russell, Courtney Cox, 2001
I suppose that it will
never happen even beyond the grave that a multitude of sins will not be laid at
the door of the “King,” of Elvis, of Elvis Presley (those three designations
reflecting the generational divide the first from those washed clean by the
rising tide of rock and roll, now called classic rock and roll, lifted high on
the Elvis tide by his generally acknowledged kingship of the genre, the second
reflecting his latter day career as a garishly costumed Vegas lounge lizard act,
sorry, for sweated mothers who never got over those hips swaying to and fro,
and the third the clueless who need a last name to place him as some old fogy
relic with wickedly silly sideburns and drawl plus swivel hips which their
grandmothers still sweated over). When I was growing up, coming of age, meaning
unlike for my long-time companion and fellow writer in this space Sam Lowell,
not about going out to confront the great big raucous world but the more
personal coming into young womanhood, getting “my friend,” my period Elvis
meant in my household playing “the devil’s music,” making all the young women
sweat, and not so young women too, making them think the “s-x” word (a term never
ever expressed in that household. Yes, Elvis and those impossible swaggering
hips making a young girl think who knows what thoughts and that hair and those
songs which he seemed to be singing directly to me (whoever “me” was) was more
than our proper mothers could handle without recourse to some strictures, and
it was always mothers in such situations out on the farms in upstate New York
where I grew up about twenty miles outside of Albany. Didn’t figure that the
King would show up on television, on the freaking bland Ed Sullivan Show, and let the whole world know that Uncle Ed had
given his blessing. Then he, the King, moved on to the Army, or died, or
something like that and we, we young womanhood, moved on to the next crooner
who was singing directly to the “me.”
That was the King live
but today in the film under review, 3000
Miles From Graceland, Graceland signifying the King’s homestead in Memphis
and Holy Grail pilgrimage location even to this day for that clueless
generation, he has to take the rap for “fronting” for a major armed robbery of
one of the casinos in Vegas a town where last he dwelled on stage. The action
centers on the seemingly endless fascination with his look, his image and his
persona by a coterie of devotees, good and bad, at the annual Elvis
impersonation festival which draws fervent crowds to worship once more at the
shrine (and spent serious dough at the gambling tables).
So that is the draw that
is the effect of the Elvis phenomenon, the storyline, the “skinny” as Sam says
when reviewing films and I have picked up the term to announce a summary of the
action for the readership to mull over when checking out older films. Before
that though, since it struck me as funny, how I got this assignment in the
first place. I had been complaining, complaining in the public prints, that I
had to deal with current site manager Greg Green’s one time idea to reach a
younger audience by reviewing every possible Marvel and DC comic book super-hero come to the big screen
in the universe. Although I was not alone in looking at the whole project with
a very jaded eye I was one of the ones who complained in public and thereafter
got a few better assignments (like a long sought after go at a Humphrey Bogart
starring black and white film to gain some bragging rights with Sam who made a
good career out of specializing in such fare).
Then “politics” came into
play when Greg asked for a return of the favor asking me to review this film.
He did not want Sam, really the natural choice for anything Elvis as far as
music and growing up times in his old working class North Adamsville
neighborhood went, to do it for he would get a long screed about that growing
up scene and about two sentences on the film. Greg wanted a woman’s touch, a
woman’s view, but also a woman who had been through the wringer with Elvis in
her youth. With that “left-handed” compliment from Greg I agreed to do this
one.
Other than the
Elvis/Graceland hook I knew nothing about this film except most of the actors
so I was somewhat shocked by the gratuitous and seemingly non-stop violence
displayed from almost the beginning of the film which was way over top even in
modern day cinematic terms. Greg has made a point of stating publicly that he
screens all the films before he makes his assignments (a trait he developed in
his long years at American Film Gazette coming
here). I am not so sure about that preview here, certainly why I would be
picked to do this one which under other circumstances I wouldn’t touch in a
million years.
Here goes. Murph, Kevin
Cosner’s role, a serious cinematic psychopath if there ever was one and
somebody to avoid like the plague on screen or in real life, and Michael,
played by Kurt Russell both ex-cons are part of a six man team who are intent
on robbing not a bank like the legendary bank robbery Willie Sutton is rumored
to have said because “that is where the money is” but a high dollar casino in
Vegas where the money also is when you think about it during Elvis Impersonation
week. Nice idea, a one of a kind idea unlike that boring bank stuff that every
hardened criminal takes a run at, so that the whole armed to the teeth crew has
cover as Elvis impersonators like half the guys in town just then. The whole
scheme actually works but here is where the over-the-top violence gets its
first serious work-out. Unlike such cons as Danny Ocean (either the Frank
Sinatra or George Clooney version will do) and his crowd of master criminal
technicians worked out this one turned into an old Wild West shoot-out with
murder and mayhem as much the loot part of the project. (One gets in the
aftermath of the Vegas massacre of 2017 where a lone gunman wreaked havoc on
the crowds a gruesome idea about the power of assault weapons to create
horrible “killing fields” and I wonder if anybody short of an ardent NRA aficionado
had a very queasy feeling like I had after this cinematic shoot-out.)
The rest of the film
essentially aside from the on-going violence at every turn even where it would
not make sense except to an American pyscho like Murph (who also thought he was
the long lost son of Elvis so you know how scarred he was by whatever life had
passed his way) was done under the title of there being “no honor among thieves”
(or as Sam would say in one of his reviews of those old time film noirs there
is honor more in the breech than the observance). Once it got to be split the
dough time Murph got ugly, wasted every one of his confederates (except the
pilot who had gotten them out of the hell-hole casino). Or tried to. Michael
sensing Murph’s, ah, instability donned a bullet-proof vest which saved him.
From that point on it is strictly con against con to see who will get to keep
the whole pile (some three million not bad even today for guys who seemed to be
otherwise unemployable).
Well maybe not strictly
con against con because apparently even in a blood- bath saga Hollywood cannot
resist evoking the “boy meets girl” story in some form. Before going off to
battle the casino cash till with his erstwhile confederates Michael had met and
bedded a fetching dish, Cybil with a “C,” played by very dishy Courtney Cox,
and has tangled with her wayward young wannbe hoodlum son. As a single Mom she
has her claws out once she knew that Michael had help pull the biggest heist
she had ever heard of. That starts the merry-go-round (and the growing love
interest between the bedmates and Michael’s growing paternal feeling toward
that sullen youth) where who has the dough, who doesn’t have the dough and how
to get it from the other might or main runs the chase (including an independent
run by Cybil with a “C”) until the final war zone-like shoot-out (which
reminded Sam of the fire-fights in Vietnam) between the coppers and Murph who
goes down in a frenzied blaze of glory (with Michael on the side but unhurt by
the action again due to that handy bullet-proof vest). A bit strangely since
Michael has a fistful of criminal code violation on his own hook the love-bugs
survive to live another day. This one may get the NRA’s seal of approval but in
the light of the mass shootings since 2001 a thumbs down here. By the way Elvis
should sue.
No comments:
Post a Comment