Pre-Production The documentary's central director and producer Eugene Jarecki is award-winning in his investigative documentary field. Winning the Sundance Grand Jury Prize for his 2002 film
The Trials of Henry Kissinger, Jarecki went on to win the 2005
Peabody Award for his 2005 film
Why We Fight. Jarecki's success in both the directing and production of films continued with his viral 2010 short film
Move Your Money, which functioned to encourage Americans to shift their money from “too big to fail” banks to community banks and credit unions in response to the
2008 financial crisis. Jarecki's interest in the investigation of America and its values, as reflected through
The King, is further evidenced through his 2013 film
The House I Live In. Winning the Grand Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival as well as, a second Peabody award, Jarecki's critique of America through the exploration of the nation's war on drugs led to the conception of the article subject
The King. Production An organic and continually altered process, the production of Jarecki's 2017 film
The King took 2 years. Specifically, this included; filming which occurred between 2015 and 2016, and editing which occurred between 2016 and 2017. The conception of
The King came to Jarecki while touring for his 2013 film
The House I Live In. Stunned by the nation's transformation from patriotism to disillusionment prior to
Trump’s 2016 election, Jarecki described the nation’s transition during a film-related interview, as an “overnight transformation into fat Elvis”. Jarecki selected the Rolls-Royce over a
Cadillac or
Thunder Bird, as he believed the Rolls-Royce more authentically reflected the “venturing off-script” of the country boy and the nation. Although aware of Presley's story, and the significant locations which framed his rise and fall, Jarecki's integration of interviews throughout the documentary were spontaneous, often occurring within real-time. A prominent example of this was Jarecki's interviewing of students in Memphis. Discussing Elvis Presley and the issues of race and appropriation, the students authenticated the interview sequence in their singing of gospel songs and reclaiming of blues music conventions. Stating within an interview that there is, “a virtue in just showing up”, the organic production of the 2017 documentary is further evidenced through filming in Nashville. Turning up to the significant location with no plan or contacts, it was through conversation with locals that Jarecki became acquainted with the country singer
EmiSunshine who became a central interviewee for the documentary.
Post-Production Premiered as
Promised Land at the 2017 Cannes film festival,
The King was further edited prior to its commercial release. Trimmed and made more concise, the documentary shifted from a broad exploration of Elvis Presley as a metaphor for America, to a nonfiction chronicle urging audiences to consider What happened to America? This questioning is specifically in relation to the nation's distance from reality, and obsession with wealth and material gain. Warning audiences of the dangers of transitioning into the ‘Fat Elvis’, the final documentary presents the rise and fall of Elvis Presley as a rehearsal and warning of the rise and fall of America. ==Reception==