
When teenage Priscilla Beaulieu meets Elvis Presley, the man who is already a meteoric rock-and-roll superstar becomes someone entirely unexpected in private moments: a thrilling crush, an ally in loneliness, a vulnerable best friend.
Sofia Coppola’s strong directional choices, including the timely visuals and songs, shine through in Priscilla. Cailee Spaeny’s star-making performance shows Priscilla as a young woman who feels like the luckiest girl on Earth as she’s the one adored by the world’s most desirable and larger-than-life musicians and celebrities. She feels like she’s a princess, like she’s in Barbieland — except she soon learns that she’s seen as more of an accessory in Elvis’ “dollhouse” than the star. The movie doesn’t gloss past the couple’s age difference, nor does it forgive Elvis’ reckless habits and the consequences of fame on personal privacy and autonomy. Priscilla is depicted as a woman who always longed for independence but is never truly able to stand on her own two feet in her pursuit of adoration from the man she loves. Jacob Elordi also steals the scene as Elvis, perhaps not as pitch-perfect as Austin Butler’s transformation last year in Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis, but he still brings a lot to the role.
The costumes and production value create a very lavish look that shows the glamorous life Priscilla was attracted to and lived alongside Elvis, but within that a sense of loneliness as she struggles with sharing him — her Elvis — with the rest of the world, and the celebrity and husband versions of the man become hard to separate in their relationship. Though the second half does begin to feel structurally repetitive and doesn’t draw you in as much as the first half, the film knows exactly when to end in a moment that brings the best out of Spaeny’s performance. Priscilla is a personal look into the lives of legends that’s boasted by its aesthetic style and Spaeny’s naivety and gravitas she brings to the titular role.
