Movie Background

G.I. Blues

Stationed in West Germany, soldier Tulsa McLean dreams of opening a nightclub once his army days are over. Lacking the capital to make it happen, he seizes a chance to raise funds through a friendly wager. Local dancer Lili (Juliet Prowse), notorious for her ice-queen persona, becomes the target of his gambit as Tulsa bets all he owns that a friend of his can win her affections. But when that friend is dispatched to Alaska, the burden falls on Tulsa to melt Lili's heart.

Director(s)

Norman Taurog

Michael D. Moore

Where to watch

Amazon Video

Amazon Video

Rent

Cast & Crew

Britt Ekland

Britt Ekland

Britta - Redhead (uncredited)

Michael D. Moore

Michael D. Moore

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Bess Flowers

Bess Flowers

Cafe Europa patron (uncredited)

Leoda Richards

Leoda Richards

Cafe Europa patron (uncredited)

Joe Gray

Joe Gray

Soldier (uncredited)

Mickey Knox

Mickey Knox

Jeeter

Jeremy Slate

Jeremy Slate

Turk

Elvis Presley

Elvis Presley

Tulsa McLean

Arch Johnson

Arch Johnson

Sgt. McGraw

Letícia Román

Letícia Román

Tina

Kenneth Becker

Kenneth Becker

Mac

Norman Taurog

Norman Taurog

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Edit Angold

Edit Angold

Mrs. Hagerman (uncredited)

Beach Dickerson

Beach Dickerson

Warren

Scotty Moore

Scotty Moore

Musician (uncredited)

Ludwig Stössel

Ludwig Stössel

Owner of Puppet Show

Fred Essler

Fred Essler

Papa Mueller

Erika Peters

Erika Peters

Trudy

Trent Dolan

Trent Dolan

Mickey

Richard Cowl

Richard Cowl

Musician (uncredited)

Marianne Gaba

Marianne Gaba

Bargirl (uncredited)

Robert Ivers

Robert Ivers

Cookie

James Douglas

James Douglas

Rick

Robert Boon

Robert Boon

German Guitarist (uncredited)

Juliet Prowse

Juliet Prowse

Lili

Sigrid Maier

Sigrid Maier

Marla

John Hudson

John Hudson

Capt. Hobart

Carl Crow

Carl Crow

Walt

Ron Starr

Ron Starr

Harvey

Edson Stroll

Edson Stroll

Sgt 'Dynamite' Bixby (uncredited)

Fred Kruger

Fred Kruger

Herr Klugmann (uncredited)

Details

GenresMusic, Comedy, Romance
Runtime1h 44 mins
Released on23 Nov 1960
Languageen
Produced InUnited States of America
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Reviews

Wuchak

6/10

_**Elvis as a G.I. stationed in Germany trying to score with a hot German nightclub dancer**_ An American tank specialist serving in Deutschland (Presley) dreams of running his own nightclub and bets that he can win the favor of a hard-to-get German performer with legs from here to Frankfurt (Juliet Prowse). Robert Ivers is on hand as the protagonist’s soldier pal. “G.I. Blues” (1960) was Elvis’ 5th movie of the 31 in his acting filmography. The highlights here are the German locations, the tank action and Juliet Prowse, especially her two sizzling dance routines. Letícia Román (Tina) and Sigrid Maier (Marla) are also featured in the feminine department. While this is one of the more obscure Presley flicks, it has its own uniqueness and delivers the goods as an entertaining Elvis vehicle. The film runs 1 hour, 44 minutes, and was shot in Germany (Hessen & Barvaria) and Paramount Studios, Los Angeles. GRADE: B-/B

CinemaSerf

6/10

I'm not sure too many other G.I.s in Germany after the war looked quite so pristine as "Tulsa" (Elvis Presley) and his squad as they bet that "Dynamite" (Edson Stroll) can't get a date with the lithe local dancer "Lili" (Juliet Prowse) who has a bit of a reputation rejecting the amorous advances of soldiers. If they win, well there ought to be enough cash for "Tulsa" to go home and own his own nightclub. Thing is though, about five minutes after the bet his pal is posted to Alaska and so he must try to fulfil the wager himself! Initially she's not remotely interested, but yes... it is all that predictable. Elvis fans will probably enjoy this as an expertly staged, choreographed and lit vehicle for a star who doesn't look remotely natural at any stage and who simply cannot mime to his own songs. His regular "Jordanaires" get in on the gig too, but most of the renditions of songs like Carl Perkins's timeless "Blue Suede Shoes" as well as "Wooden Heart" and "Pocketful of Rainbows" look like they are episodically shot and inserted into the weakly constructed drama that does, to be fair to Prowse, offer us one glimpse of her dancing skills. This is a very sanitised image of "The King" that looks like production line stuff from the most risk averse of marketing departments from end to end. Not great from anyone, sorry.

All Trailers

G.I. Blues - Trailer
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