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Commentary by Steve Pond, author of Elvis in Hollywood; New featurette the Scene That stole Jailhouse Rock; Digitally remastered for improved picture quality; Soundtrack remastered in Dolby Digital 5.1 as well as original Mono; Theatrical trailer; Subtitles: Français (main feature. bonus material/trailer may not be subtitled)
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Jailhouse Rock
1. Credits [1:22]
2. Bar Fight [3:12]
3. Hunk Houghton [4:25]
4. One More Day [3:05]
5. Young and Beautiful (1) [2:46]
6. I Wanna Be Free [2:20]
7. Sign Here [2:52]
8. Do It First [3:03]
9. Out of Jail [2:58]
10. Exploitation Men [3:13]
11. Young and Beautiful (2) [3:54]
12. Don't Leave Me Now [4:03]
13. Record Deal [3:54]
14. Beast in Me [3:38]
15. Vince's Voice Change [2:44]
16. Let's Make Money [3:51]
17. Treat Me Nice [5:19]
18. Each Other's Other Plans [5:06]
19. Hunk Returns [2:35]
20. Jailhouse Rock [3:30]
21. Expensive Flunkie [1:06]
22. Leading Lady [3:05]
23. (You're So Square) Baby I Don't Care [5:29]
24. The Way the Mop Flops [3:17]
25. Teaching Vince a Lesson [6:37]
26. Young and Beautiful (3) [5:10]
Widely considered the greatest rock musical of all time, Jailhouse Rock combines elements of the classic juvenile-delinquent cautionary tale with a fascinating look at early rock-'n' -roll. Its main draw is the charismatic presence of Elvis Presley, alluringly moody as Vince Everett, a construction worker sent to prison when a bar fight turns fatal. He goes in a decent if hotheaded kid and comes out a hard-as-nails ex-con. Managing to parlay a knack for music into rock stardom, Everett nearly destroys his life with his narcissistic behavior. Of course, all his destructiveness only makes Everett one of the sexiest characters Presley ever played. The film boasts a variety of bluesy Elvis tunes, and Mike Stoller -- who penned many of Presley's best songs along with Jerry Lieber -- appears in a cameo as a piano player. The showstopper, though, is "Jailhouse Rock" itself, as exuberant, gorgeous, and sublimely ridiculous a wide-screen musical sequence as anyone could want. Amy Robinson, Barnes & Noble
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