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This ā€˜EPiC’ rock star gets the final word in the Elvis concert movie

This ā€˜EPiC’ rock star gets the final word in the Elvis concert movie

Kim Willis, USA TODAYFri, February 27, 2026 at 2:30 PM UTC

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Spoiler alert! We’re discussing the ending of the concert film ā€œEPiC: Elvis Presley in Concertā€ (in theaters now). Come back later if you haven’t seen it yet.

Elvis Presley begat a slew of admiring rock ā€˜n’ roll legends, from Bob Dylan to David Bowie. But only one of them felt moved to memorialize the King in an elegiac poem.

In the final moments of ā€œEPiC,ā€ Baz Luhrmann’s visual spectacle built around Elvis’ culture-shaking ā€˜70s residency at the Las Vegas International Hotel, Bono rap-reads a condensed and slightly tweaked version of his poem ā€œAmerican David,ā€ written more than 20 years ago.

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"EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert" captures a snapshot of a music legend in his prime and makes him as vital as he ever was.

ā€œElvis white trash, Elvis the Memphis flash,ā€ he begins the 48-second snippet. ā€œElvis, he didn’t hear the shot, but Dr. King died just across the lot.ā€

The U2 frontman goes on to describe the contradictions of the King (ā€œShooting TVs, reading Corinthians 13ā€) before astutely summing up the cost of fame and success: ā€œElvis ate America before America ate him.ā€

The brief performance is included in the documentary’s soundtrack.

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ā€œBono’s influence from Elvis is so great, Bruce Springsteen the same,ā€ Luhrmann tells USA TODAY. ā€œWe thought, well, it’s just a nice way of trying to make this not conclusive or prescriptive. This show’s not linear. It’s about Elvis in his own spontaneous way, I hope, letting you into his heart and his story.ā€

An earlier, longer version of the 1995 poem, which drew criticism for including a racial slur and an offensive slang term for cerebral palsy, appeared in Q magazine and had a public airing in a 2009 broadcast on BBC Radio 4. (Neither reference is heard in "EPiC.")

A poem about Elvis written by U2 singer Bono (seen here at Cannes Film Festival in 2025) ends "EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert."

So how did Luhrmann get Bono involved?

ā€œHe’s a good friend of mine, and I was in the south of France, in Cap-Ferrat (near Bono's home), so I texted him,ā€ the director says. ā€œI was telling him how I was about to start making this. And he was like ā€˜You know, I’ve written a poem about Elvis.’ So he went and got it and read it.ā€

As they finished the documentary, ā€œwe were like, well, how do we end it?ā€ Luhrmann says. Film editor Jonathan Redmond, who had worked with U2 previously, ā€œspontaneously put it in and we thought, yes, a poem.ā€

Bono previously paid tribute to Elvis in a 2004 essay he wrote for Rolling Stone’s Immortals issue, in which he described Presley as ā€œthe blueprint for rock ā€˜n’ roll.ā€

ā€œThis was punk rock. This was revolt,ā€ Bono wrote. ā€œElvis changed everything āˆ’ musically, sexually, politically. … Interestingly, the more he fell to Earth, the more godlike he became to his fans.ā€

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: ā€˜EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert’ ends with surprise Bono tribute

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Source: ā€œAOL Entertainmentā€

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