Baz Luhrmann on polarising critics and his next project
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Tom Hanks plays his wily manager, Colonel Tom Parker, with a strong Australian supporting cast that includes Olivia DeJonge as Priscilla Presley, Richard Roxburgh and Helen Thomson as Elvis’ parents, and David Wenham and Kodi Smit-McPhee as country singers Hank Snow and Jimmie Rodgers Snow.
While it was warmly received at the Sydney premiere at the State Theatre on Sunday, there were fears the film would never get made when Hanks tested positive for COVID-19 just three days before the start of shooting in March 2020. But he returned to the Gold Coast later that year – going through two weeks in hotel quarantine – to resume filming.
“I’m really interested in recording things that were great but have somehow become rusty”: Baz Luhrmann.Credit:Steven Siewert
Since delivering Elvis to Hollywood studio Warner Bros, Luhrmann has been zigzagging around the world promoting its release, set for later this month.
His schedule has included the Coachella music festival in California, the Met Gala in New York, and Cannes, followed by screenings in London, the Gold Coast and Sydney. This week he starts a circuit of screenings in 10 American and Canadian cities.
Luhrmann’s hoarse voice shows how hard he has been working to sell Elvis.
“You need to give it your all,” he says. “I’ve made a theatrical film and all that matters to me is that strangers of every kind end up in a dark room communing in a big story.”
Luhrmann mentioned one possible big story for the future at a Vivid Ideas talk on Sunday – a film about the famous New York nightclub Studio 54 – but won’t decide what comes next for some time yet.
Once Elvis opens, he plans to get back to what he has done for every film except Gatsby: head off for an anonymous solo break somewhere unlikely in the world.
“I’ve never woken up one morning going, ‘Oh, I’m going to do that’,” he says. “They all percolate for years. It’s just a question of what’s useful.”
His break – he is hoping it turns out to be more successful than when he went to Kuwait to decompress after one film – will have particular resonance given he is about to turn 60.
Producer Schuyler Weiss, Baz Luhrmann, Olivia DeJonge, Austin Butler and Tom Hanks at the Sydney premiere of Elvis at the State Theatre on Sunday night. Credit:Brendon Thorne/Getty
“I’ll spend some time going, ‘I’m 60, what does that mean?’,” he says. “I’ll grow old disgracefully but I don’t feel I’ve really got going yet.
“So I need to have time to work out, ‘What does [my] life need?’ and ‘Can I put something out there that’s useful?’”
Luhrmann, who has been living with his wife, production and costume designer Catherine Martin, and their two teenage children on the Gold Coast, also believes it’s time for the new federal government to push on with becoming a republic.
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While happy the Queen has had her platinum jubilee – “she’s a remarkable person, no doubt about it” – he wants a new head of state for his children’s generation.
“I really believe there’s an importance in being a republic,” he says. “Young people want to make a difference but they need a system of self-governance that’s commensurate with the maturity that the country has.”
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Email the writer at gmaddox@smh.com.au and follow him on Twitter at @gmaddox.
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