Baz Luhrmann is about to dive back into his long-aborning Joan of Arc movie. But before he does, he had to return to the Elvis well, and the Kingโs new and returning subjects are glad he did. โEPiC: Elvis Presley in Concertโ opened exclusively in Imax theaters this weekend before going wider to slightly smaller screens on Friday. there was little doubt the audience for Presley is still there, or at least for an Elvis seen through the eyes of one of contemporary cinemaโs biggest name-brand directors.
โEPiC: Elvis Presley in Concertโ may not make it to the $151 million domestic gross achieved by the directorโs 2022 biopic โElvisโ in 2022, but weekend results were strong in the initial 325 Imax theaters that played it this weekend, with a $10,000-per-screen average, the highest of any film on the chart. So Luhrmann can already claim victory in his crusade to immerse contemporary audiences in what he considers to have actually been Presleyโs peak period as a performer, when he first started playing Las Vegas at the very end of the โ60s and beginning of the โ70s. Critics as well as the Elvis flock have taken to it: Varietyโs review, by Owen Gleiberman out of its Toronto premiere, called it โone of the most exciting concert films youโve ever seen.โ
Prior to his personally touring a series of international Imax unveilingss, Variety spoke with Luhrmann over Zoom at his compound in Australia, where he carefully maneuvered the camera to not reveal any โJehanne dโArcโ spoilers plastered across nearby walls. But thereโs nothing to spoil about his contention that, in his mind, Elvis Presley is Americaโฆ at any size, but preferably at about 45 feet tall, enshrined in full motion in Hollywood Blvd.โs vaunted Chinese Theatre.
First off, how are you?
I am extraordinarily absorbed and busy, and itโs just been my nature since childhood. Iโm just always making things and doing things. And Iโm deeply absorbed in my big movie, โJehanne dโArc,โ which is driving ahead. But now I take a moment for this completely different work, which is trying to get as many people โ fans and new audiences โ to see โEPiCโ on the biggest screen possible. I have to pause and shout out John O. Redmond, my editor of at least 20 years, whoโs the creative partner in this and drove it as much as I did. Our big focus is to make a theatrical cinematic experience, and to make it feel as much as possible like youโre actually in the audience and your experience of Elvis is kind of unfiltered. So part of that is me going out and encouraging people to not wait to stream it, to get out and be part of a theatrical experience. Bluntly, itโs a passion of mine.
Putting it on Imax screens exclusively for one week before it goes wider is one way of getting that messaging across. And personal appearances youโre making at some Imax screenings.
Absolutely, man. Iโve been actually in the Gold Coast, where I have my creative facility, then I go to Sydney, which is an outdoor experience with thousands of people, and then that night to the biggest Imax screen in the world, which ia Melbourne. Then I go directly out the back door of that to London, then to L.A. We are doing it at the TCL, the old Mannโs Chinese, in Imax, and Iโm thrilled about L.A. because of the memory I have of coming out of COVID.
Quick side story. After being locked down for two years and working in Australia on โElvis,โ the movie, I was finally able to leave and I came to the U.S., landed, and the first thing we said we would do โ with masks on and all of that โ was โLetโs go down to see a movie.โ I walked into TCL and โDuneโ was on, which I didnโt want to see on streaming, in thistheater I dearly love. I saw the opening night of โTitanicโ there with Leonardo. So I walk up the stairs, thinking, โOh God, whatโs it gonna be like โ will there be anyone here? Iit a good idea to go to the theater?โ And as I go up the stairs, I can see the screen., and I just stood there and looked at the vast image and the sound, and I just went, โIโm home. I am home.โ So the idea that something the whole team has toiled so passionately on is gonna be seen at the TCL, I think for me, thatโll be a historic moment in my journey.
This includes footage that was shot for a couple of Elvis concert films in the early โ70s. I liked those films, but I admit I havenโt seen either of them since I had them on laserdisc in the โ90sโฆ which is similar to a lot of peopleโs experience, except maybe minus the laserdisc part. So for those of us without a clear memory of those films, how much of them might be carrying over into what you have in your film, albeit with a big upgrade?
Yeah, I can tell you. Look, I loved them too. I really did. But the quick narrative is: Iโm making โElvis,โ and I hear from John that there might be these lost reels. He said, โLook, if youโre able to get the funds, maybe try and find these reels.โ And Ernst Jorgenson, who is probably the premium expert on Elvis in the world, says to me, โTry and get the funds.โ And I go, โOK, maybe we can use some of these extra reels,โ as supplementary footage of the (Las Vegas) showroom, which I didnโt have in the film at that point. So we got the funds, we go looking, and to our surprise, we find 69 boxes. I didnโt go there, but itโs literally in the salt mines in Kansas City where the negatives of the whole MGM collection are kept so that they donโt rot. When the guys find it, they start sending pictures โ boxes everywhere, some are mislabeled, some stuff missing, some not. Wow. So we bring it out and we print some of it. I go, โLook, this is too big a job right now. Iโm gonna build the showroom (as a practical set). Weโre not gonna use it.โ
But now we have 59 hours of not just โThatโs the Way It Is,โ but โElvis on Tour,โ and some 8mm. And most tellingly, we have this audio โ about 50 minutes of it โ of Elvis just talking about his life in a way in which you really never hear him talk. So all the way through making โElvis,โ we said, โWeโve got to do something.โ And the Elvis fans got wind of it, and it was a bit like, โRelease the video! Release the footage!โ Like, โRelease the files! โ the Elvis Files.โ And I contemplated: Do we just kind of do a reboot of โThatโs the Way It Isโ and โElvis on Tourโ? But then we also had this 8mm that was extraordinary, and we had this audio, and we also got things like the full Hampton Road concert (shot on 1972 at the Hampton Roads Coliseum in Virginia for โElvis on Tourโ). But we only had negatives and we didnโt have the sound.
I was so lucky to work with Peter Jackson and his remarkable team at his studio, because you know how Peter had done refurbed the Beatles (for the โGet Backโ docuseries). And Park Road have a particular gift for (upgrading) 35mm anamorphic. MGM shot in 35mm anamorphic for โThatโs the Way It Is.โ Then you had 16 and you had 8. I wanted to bring it all up to Imax quality, so thatโs expensive. And then we spent two years trying to find the sound. The mag tape wasnโt there, so we had to find audio. Sometimes we had people in car parks in the middle of the night trading bootleg stuff. I mean, the bootleg industry for Elvis is gargantuan.But the concept becomes: Why donโt we do something that never really happens when it comes to either an Elvis doc or even a concert film, and just let Elvis tell his story โ sing it and tell it to you โ almost like in a dreamscape?

โEPiC: Elvis Presley in Concertโ
Neon
Now, John O. Redmond will be able tell you whatโs in this exactly frame by frame. [For more of that, look to a separate interview with Redmond about making the film, coming up in Variety.] There are some bits that are in โThatโs the Way It Is,โ and there are some bits that look like theyโre in โThatโs the Way It Is,โ but actually arenโt; itโs a different night, or a different angle. Then there is a significant percentage of the footage which is material that just simply has not been seen. Or maybe some seconds or some minutes have been bootlegged.
Iโll give you an example. Thereโs an amazing bit I love where Elvis was just sitting with the guitar and he is doing โLittle Sister,โ and he segueways into โGet Back.โ Now, thereโs pirated black-and-white stuff out there, but through Park Road we were able to print it and bring it back into a colorscape. Or, when he sings โHow Great Thou Artโ in the gospel section, 16mm, thatโs just never been released. Some of it you wouldโve seen in very scratchy bootleg versions. But even if youโve seen some of it in โThatโs the Way It Is,โ youโve never seen it like thisโฆ In our movie you see Sammy Davis Jr. and Cary Grant backstage, and weโve been able to dig back the sound. Youโve seen that footage occasionally, pirated, but we found the sound of what they actually say.
And we had the original Elvis voice, we have the band, but sometimes Iโm going from him singing on stage to him talking. Or weโve done these DNAs where weโve kind of made new Elvis songs. So itโs meant to be a dreamscape, and that distinguishes it from โThatโs the Way It Is.โ But what I do want to say is, even in Toronto (it premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival), people were geeking out about the quality. The image is three times the size of my building Iโm in, if youโre in a big Imax. But what we really did was make it sound and feel like youโre actually there.
For a lot of us who grew up after the main Elvis era, we go through a journey where we come to worship the Sun Sessions of the โ60s, and things like the โ68 comeback special, but generally, Elvis later on represents something to us that is spoiled or gone to seed. And so thereโs this dichotomy: Black Leather Elvis, cool. White Suit Elvis, not cool. And the average person almost has to put some effort into listening to the boxed sets RCA has put out over the years from the late โ60s and early โ70s to discover how much of value is there. Thereโs still this fallacy we have to get over that Las Vegas was just, in its entirety, not a great period.
Yeah. A thousand percent. Youโre dead right โ the black leather, cool, but the white jumpsuit, because itโs associated with his extremely fast decline at such a young, young ageโฆ And with Las Vebgasโฆ He does it once and twice, and then he does the 15 cities/15-day tour, great. Then does it again, and then does it again, and then does it again, and then does it again. He doesnโt quite know, like a bird hitting a glass window, why the hell he canโt go and do the world tour that he so desperately wants to do. And then as with all of those artists that are beyond music but are actually cultural icons, all of the corruptive things come, and the body becomes corrupted. So what we remember is the Halloween costume โ the cheesy white jumpsuit that people wear at Halloween with the glasses, or the wedding chapel send-up guy or the impersonators.
And what gets lost is that when he first did that show, everyone expected him to do a nostalgia show, but he was totally on the cutting edge. And the big sound, like taking โBridge Over Troubled Waterโ and turning it into this giant gospel power ballad โฆ I spoke to Clive Davis, and he said, โI was there opening night, and you know what? I still to this day have never seen a night like that,โ talking about the opening night, the โ69 show. The white suit doesnโt come till 1970, because thatโs when they film it. But he said, โThey had to stop him from doing cartwheels.โ The energy on stage was just on another level.
So what has been forgotten is that his absolute pinnacle, his true pinnacle, are those very early Vegas shows. The other thing I think is worth taking into account is that the critics were all flown in by Colonel Parker, and it was a time of the counterculture and the Beatles were breaking up. They came basically with an attitude of like, โThis is gonna be a bit of a joke,โ and they were utterly blown away by the artistry and the sheer stage power. One thing that I love in the film, for me, personally, is when he is covering the Beatles or doing a Bob Dylan song. Bob Dylan actually said, โThe highlight of my career, thatโs easy, Elvis recording one of my songs.โ
I mean, even the white jumpsuit, by the way: If you look at Mick Jagger and Freddie Mercury, the jumpsuit becomes this huge rock โnโ roll iconic thing. Mick wore it, Freddie wore it. But it comes from Elvis.

Neon
One thing not everyone will be aware of before seeing this is how great the TCB Band is, with some of the greatest players in the world, on their game.
What do you think the privilege is like to be able to work with this stuff? Iโve produced a lot of music; Iโve been working with RCA for, like, 15 years;Iโve had a label with them. But to be able to isolate just Ronnie Tuttโs drummingโฆ the Tuttsterโs drummingโฆ Heโs surrounded by the best. And when you see Elvis rehearsing, he sings the top lines โ like, he sings the orchestrations โ and heโll go, โNo, no, no, letโs go up here.โ Itโs in his head. And I think what gets lost again in the whole white jumpsuit kind of Halloween costume smoke is what an awesome and profoundly gifted musician he was. Heโd just pick up and sing anything. By the way, think of the voice. So, heโs starting as a high tenor in the โ50s. But heโs so obsessed with Mario Lanza and opera singers, and he says in our film, โI listen to everything,โ and heโs always working on his voice. By the end of it, heโs truly got operatic tone.
You have some augmented or drastically remixed tracks in the film and on the soundtrack.
Working with Jamieson Shaw, we started doing this on โElvisโ the movie, thinking, instead of just having score all the time โ although we do have score in this โsometimes we go, โWell, why donโt we just make a new Elvis track?โ โฆ We have this small section of Elvis singing โOh, Happy Dayโ with the Sweets [the Sweet Inspirations]. We started the movie with him singing that, but he always dreamed of singing with really giant Black gospel choirs, because as you know, he would go when he was a kid and see people like Mahalia Jackson. Elvis was always mixing white and Black gospel. So we have him singing with the Sweets, but then we also recorded choirs in churches in the South, so that we could realize slightly the dream, in this dreamscape, of Elvis singing โHappy Dayโ with a giant gospel choir. And a big shout-out to our lovely friends in the South who recorded that for us. Itโs just going like, well, what ifโฆ wouldnโt it be amazingโฆ weโre always asking the question, what would Elvis do?
If you read reviews of the comeback special, some of the (critics) said, โOnce again, Elvis is selling sex, but really canโt sing.โ I mean, I work in opera. Iโve worked with the greatest singers in the world. And heโs almost like Orpheus, heโs so gifted. Iโve heard the raw vocals. He never recorded in studios with a drop mic; he always had a handheld. So when heโs on stage, the clarity and the evenness of the vocal, even with a pretty crap sound system, is so great. Thatโs because heโs basically mixing it himself, by mic technique. Which is a thing you just learn โ when you bring it in and out, basically, youโre balancing yourself. Iโve heard raw tracks of all sorts of icons, and he has the greatest mic technique of any vocal artist that ever existed.
Do you have a favorite performance of his thatโs in the film?
Well, I always avoid doing lists. But, I really lock in every single time when he does โPolk Salad Annie,โ because itโs so random. When he goes into the onomatopoeiaโฆI donโt wanna be the worldโs biggest name dropper, but a famous, famous, iconic singer of a famous band who I dearly love as a friend said to me, โOh, the thing about us is, we rehearse, but Elvis never rehearsed moves. Itโs a bit like heโs in a spiritual state. He just kind of felt it.โ And you see it in โPolk Salad,โ him just feeling the music and doing the scat, and then the movement, and then what he does at the end โ heโs not so much making it up as heโs going along as just feeling it and passing it on to the audience. And I think thatโs why heโs so enigmatic on stage, is that not only does the audience not know what heโs gonna do, the band didnโt know what he was gonna do. Ronnie Tutt said, โWe had to glue our eyes to him because we were like, whatโs he gonna do next?โ Thatโs why heโs so remarkable as a live performer, because he is literally like a live wire. For a person whoโs so uncomfortable off-stage, heโs so comfortable on stage. Itโs like youโre in his lounge room, hanging out.
Speaking of iconic singers of famous bands. Bono has been very interested in Elvis all along, even writing a song on โThe Unforgettable Fireโ that is essentially his poem about Elvis. Here, you have Bono delivering another poem speaking at the end of the movie. How did that come about?
If you saw the show the guys did in Vegas in the Sphere, thereโs a lot of Elvis in that, you know? Bono is a real friend, and weโve collaborated way back in โMoulin Rouge,โ and he was such a help on this, just as a cheerleader. I was in the South of France where he lives, and he said, โLook, Iโve written a poem about Elvis,โ and he read it to me. John O. and I were thinking, how do we end this? You canโt wrap it up with a comment. Is it another song? And John O. put the poem in, and it seemed to be a great way, with a film that is really, I think in itself, a poem, to end poetically. So I rang Bono, and he said, โAbsolutely, Iโm honored that you would use it.โ

Baz Luhrmann and Austin Butler at Baz Luhrmannโs โEPiC: Elvis Presley in Concertโ Los Angeles Premiere held at the TCL Chinese Theatre on February 18, 2026 in Los Angeles, California.
JC Olivera
Youโve been on such a mission with Elvis, so you must feel gratified that, with the previous film, the world kind of came along with your vision. There has been a fear among some Elvis fans that his core audience will die off, and even the next generations, over time, so will people still be going to Graceland in 50 or 75 years? You forestalled that, to a degree, or at least gave him a major cultural turbo boost. Even though the feature film will probably always be the biggest thing you do for Elvis, it looks like this is going to be kind of a continuum through your life.
Look, it wasnโt planned that way. I mean, I was affected by Elvis as a child, but I also went on to other artists as I grew up โ Bowie and Michael Jackson and Elton John, for sure, who I love and work with. But Elvis was always there, more than just as a musician or even a pop icon. He was America in so many ways, through the โ50s, โ60s and โ70s โ the incredible rebellious energy, the kind of cool family part, but also then almost rising up like a god, and then the descent. And even in his most corrupted bodily state at the end of his life, he sings โUnchained Melodyโ with probably the best voice heโs ever had.
I did not intend to become this enmeshed in the curation of Elvis. But to your question, the gratification for me โ and itโs a little bit unexpected โ was to give Elvis a fair voice. Itโs not particularly my vision. Of course, any storytelling is somebodyโs storytelling. But when I spent all that time in the South, I found Sam Bell โ ย very hard to find him, actually; an older gentleman of color who, when Elvis lived in one of the very few white houses in the Black community, told the story about how they grew up. And I really realized at that point the impact of Elvisโฆ and you canโt extract him from the story of America. Heโs that central to so many key things.
I think about whatโs going on in America right now. And if you want to know what Elvis might think โ and Iโm not gonna answer for him; he didnโt often use words โ itโs in the song choices. Iโm so happy weโve got โWalk a Mile in My Shoesโ or โIn the Ghettoโ in this show. And people did not want him to record those songsโฆ Now we know through the data that not only have we picked up a truly surprising percentage of young audience that have discovered audience Elvis anew, but even little kids jump up and down in front of the television watching the โElvisโ movie. Itโs Elvisโ energy. It moves through time and geography.
More than gratified, I feel privileged to have been the curator to help it be guided away from what I consider to be an ossification โ not malicious or on purpose, but an unfair unfair rusting, an untruthful summation, turning Elvis into a trope. It happens. And I wanted to take the trope, shake off the rust and help guide and reveal Elvis for the artist that he is, but also most importantly, the impact that he had on culture and on America as a whole. And the world. And the world โ thatโs the thing. We know why he didnโt have the world tour [as explored in the earlier โElvisโ film: Colonel Tom Parker had his sway]. And honestly, we are going to give Elvis the world tour he dreamed of. Because heโs gonna be playing on the biggest screens in the world. In Toronto, people actually came up to me and said, โI couldnโt work out whether I was in the audience or not. It felt like I was at the show.โ
Are you still thinking about doing a stage-musical adaptation of the Elvis story?
Yeah, actuallyโฆ I donโt know if itโs announced; Iโll get in trouble. But definitelyโฆ Let us put it this way: serious work is being done on the Elvis stage show, based on the movie.
Good enough. And then to ask briefly about the Joan of Arc filmโs progressโฆ
Iโm so deep in it. The reason Iโm shooting this corner of my atelier [on a Zoom call] is because the rest of it is just plastered with story structure and script. We have this extraordinarily gifted, gifted, gifted young actor (Isla Johnston) whoโs quietly doing all itโs gonna take. Because itโs gonna take time. I always take time. But I am building medieval France! You know, thereโs not a lot of medieval France hanging around ready to be photographed. So itโs not quick, but Iโm deep in it. As soon as I finish the tour of Elvis, Iโm back to โJehanne dโArc,โ and that will be my next journey. And yet another character who has actually been kind of relegated to a bit of a trope and a little bit forgotten. I like to be involved in those iconic characters from the past who you sort of wish their power and their guidance and their light was around today. Who, in different ways, were the most surprising candidate to have so much of an effect on the world.