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 Description:
 
 This 1970 concert documentary captures Elvis Presley midway through a  fateful transition, seeking to reclaim his musical primacy after a decade of  self-imposed exile from concert stages. Sidelined by his big-screen career,  eclipsed by rock's mid-'60s transformations, the King had begun his return two  years earlier with the relatively lean attack of his fabled network television  appearance, '68 Comeback Special. Now the Memphis legend was poised to  reposition his performing profile by pursuing the top rungs of headliner status  in Las Vegas, a career choice that seems even more ephemeral in hindsight than  it already did at the time.
   Elvis: That's the Way It Is follows the show's genesis from rehearsal to  stage, with the performance footage that provides its inevitable climax shot  over six nights. The rehearsal footage, expanded for this special edition,  offers further proof that Presley's band was simply superb: stripped of the  orchestrations and lush choral arrangements that would be grafted onto the stage  show, the sextet sounds both tough and nimble. In performance, we're treated to  a mostly riveting glimpse of Presley in top vocal form, poised at the brink of  bombast. This is Elvis before the onset of portentous Richard Strauss overtures,  karate kicks, and tossed scarves, kicking off the show with the classic "That's  All Right." If he risks undercutting the punch of his early songs with self-deprecating clowning, he attacks two Ray Charles classics with gusto. The  special edition also boasts digitally remastered visuals, crisply remixed Dolby  audio, alternate versions that replace the original performances of several  tracks (including the extended vamp of "Suspicious Minds"), a theatrical  trailer, and a new documentary on the restoration of the film. --Sam  Sutherland
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