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Roustabout

Roustabout
  • Buy New: $27.00
  • as of 2/10/2012 14:25 EST details
In Stock
  • Seller:Springer's Selection
  • Sales Rank:25,516
  • Format:Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Languages:English (Unknown), English (Subtitled), English (Original Language)
  • Running Time:101 Minutes
  • Rating:PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Region:1
  • Discs:1
  • Shipping Weight (lbs):0.3
  • Dimensions (in):7.4 x 5.3 x 0.6
  • Release Date:May 2, 2000
  • ISBN:0792164873
  • UPC:097363802440
  • EAN:9786305837855
  • ASIN:6305837856
Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days


Editorial Reviews:
Synopsis
Elvis plays a down-and-out singer who finds a home with a carnival owned by Stanwyck. Many of his hit songs are included.
Genre: Musicals
Rating: PG
Release Date: 14-AUG-2007
Media Type: DVD
Amazon.com essential video
The Elvis formula was well in place by the time of 1964's Roustabout: a passel of undistinguished songs (anyone remember "Poison Ivy League"?), pretty girls, tight pants, a colorful setting, and a little bit of karate to prove that Elvis really had been studying his martial arts. With that understood, Roustabout is a better-than-average workout for the King--not as peppy as Viva Las Vegas, but a good deal livelier than the sleepwalking It Happened at the World's Fair. Elvis plays a bad-boy singer roaming the highways on his Japanese motorcycle; laid up after an accident, he joins a carnival owned by the feisty Barbara Stanwyck. ("This is not a circus, it's a carnival. There's a big difference.") The cast goes from high to low: both giant-sized future James Bond villain Richard Kiel and tiny Billy Barty are carny regulars, and Raquel Welch has a small role in the opening scene. Teri Garr is one of the carnival dancers behind Elvis. The legendary costume designer Edith Head puts Elvis in a series of snappy windbreakers, but thank goodness he's also in black leather a lot. As if that weren't enough to recommend it, the movie has a sequence involving Elvis riding a cycle inside the "Wall of Death," a huge wooden cylinder with high walls. This bit actually inspired an entire Irish film in 1986, Eat the Peach, in which friends build a similar contraption after they watch Roustabout on tape. --Robert Horton

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