
In 2026, the world will encounter Elvis Presley in a form never experienced before. Not as a distant memory or a tribute framed by time, but as a presence that feels alive and immediate. EPiC opens a doorway into a moment once thought unreachable, where Elvis does not belong to history, but to now.
Built from rare concert footage that remained unseen for decades, EPiC brings these fragments back with extraordinary care. Every image has been restored to reveal clarity, movement, and intensity that were once hidden by time. What was fragile and incomplete now breathes with energy, making Elvis feel startlingly close.
Shaped by the creative vision of Baz Luhrmann, EPiC avoids explanation and narration. It does not retell a life story or analyze a legacy. Instead, it places you directly inside the experience. The camera shares the audience’s point of view, capturing what it felt like to stand there, waiting, watching, holding your breath between notes.
Sound and image have been rebuilt with precision, transforming old film into something vivid and alive. This is not an exercise in nostalgia. It is a restoration of presence. Watching EPiC feels less like observing the past and more like stepping into a living moment that was nearly lost.
For those who have loved Elvis for a lifetime, it feels like meeting him again. For new audiences, it is a first encounter filled with wonder. EPiC does not attempt to recreate Elvis. It simply allows him to exist once more, if only briefly, in sound, motion, and feeling.