
| Flaming Star | |
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Theatrical release poster |
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| Directed by | Don Siegel Michael D. Moore |
| Produced by | David Weisbart |
| Written by | Clair Huffaker (novel) Clair Huffaker Nunnally Johnson |
| Starring | Elvis Presley Barbara Eden |
| Music by | Cyril J. Mockridge |
| Cinematography | Charles G. Clarke |
| Editing by | Hugh S. Fowler |
| Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
| Release date(s) | December 20, 1960 |
| Running time | 101 min. |
| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
Flaming Star is a 1960 western film starring Elvis Presley, based on the book Flaming Lance (1958) by Clair Huffaker. A dramatic role, it is said that Elvis Presley gave one of his best acting performances as the half-breed "Pacer Burton." The film's working title was Black Star. It was directed by Don Siegel.
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Elvis Presley plays Pacer Burton, the son of a Kiowa mother and a Texas rancher father. Along with his half-brother, Clint, the four of them live a typical life on the Texas frontier. Life soon becomes anything but typical when a nearby tribe of Kiowa begin raiding neighboring homesteads. Pacer soon finds himself caught between the two worlds, part of both but belonging to neither.
The soundtrack was not released as an album as the film contains only two songs; only "Flaming Star" was released on an EP entitled Elvis By Request - Flaming Star to coincide with the film's release. Two other songs, "Britches" and "Summer Kisses, Winter Tears", were originally scheduled to be part of the movie but in the end were not included. "Summer Kisses" was released on the Elvis by Request EP and would later appear on the compilation album Elvis for Everyone five years later. "Britches" and "Cane and a High Starched Collar" (the second song to actually be included in the film) would not be released until after Presley's death as part of RCA Records' A Legendary Performer series. An early version of "Flaming Star", using the film's working title, "Black Star", was also recorded and not released until the 1990s.
Flaming Star was the first Presley film not to have a full soundtrack release in either LP or EP form (although the Elvis by Request release come close). This would happen again in 1961 with Wild in the Country, and become standard procedure for Presley's later films, beginning with Stay Away, Joe.
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