Sony has made an effort to publish the albums with the original cover art, which is a little something back to the collectors of the charm of the original LPs, although this certainly can not so very successful at the small-format CDs, like putting in the collection Vinyl had reissued.
The song selection on the CDs also corresponds largely to the original LPs, which of course also means that there is no bonus material, such as alternative versions, outtakes, etc., is available. Such it was in the 90s even in the double features, but they are hard to get today. However, I think you have to take at this low price this smear in purchasing.
Accordingly, you should not be expected with the accompanying material. The Box is a modest booklet in containing an essay about Elvis in Hollywood, written by the English journalist Gordon Minto. Minto gives his readers no information that would not previously have been well-known; as a serious Elvis collector one would have more information about the recording sessions and the participating musicians desired. In addition, the booklet contains the synopses still represented by the films soundtracks and finally a CD for CD track listings. The whole thing is quite appealing presented in four-color printing.
Producer of the whole enterprise is Ernst Jorgensen, owe the fans since the '90s, the great Elvis reissues that have finally all the scrap that was thrown after Elvis' death on the market replaced.
The sound quality is very neat, sonically better than the double features from the 90s. As Remastering Engineer distinguished Vic Anesini of the New York Battery studios responsible, a name that guarantees definitely for quality remastering area.