Here's why Elvis Presley thought 1967's Clambake was his worst movie. After Elvis achieved international fame as a singer during the 1950s, it didn't take long for him to start appearing in movies. He made his debut in a supporting role in 1956 western Love Me Tender, for which he also performed several songs. Elvis' manager Colonel Tom Parker soon saw to it that the singer regularly appeared in movies marketed around his stardom, including Jailhouse Rock and Blue Hawaii.
Elvis — who Kurt Russell has played many times — had hopes of becoming a respected dramatic performer too, but his movie career soon gave way to a string of copy and pasted musicals. The singer was well paid for these efforts and many were hits, but his interest in movies visibly waned as the years went by — as did their overall quality. By the end of the 1960s, the singer had given up on dreams of making quality dramatic movies, with his last acting performance being 1970's Change Of Habit, where he played Dr. John Carpenter.
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1967's Clambake was Presley's 25th movie and cast him as a rich heir to an oil tycoon who decides to trade places with a water-ski instructor at a Florida hotel. This is where he becomes a rival to a rich playboy portrayed by Incredible Hulk star Bill Bixby, falls for Shelley Fabares' Dianne and learns what it's like to live a non-privileged life. In terms of Elvis's movies, Clambake is very by the numbers and lacks energy. It doesn't help the star clearly wants to be elsewhere, and later on, Elvis labeled Clambake his worst movie.
Clambake marked the last time Elvis was paid $1 million for a movie, and it was later revealed he only agreed to it because he was in debt.
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