Hawaii (1966)

Hawaii (1966)

Taglines: James Michener’s novel reaches the screen.

Hawaii movie storyline. In 1819, young Prince Keoki Kanakoa appeals to the Yale Divinity School to bring Christianity to the Islands of Hawaii. Newly ordained minister Reverend Abner Hale is among those who volunteer, but all missionaries must be married. Abner, zealously devoted to his religious studies, was raised in a strict, cold Calvinist household, and believes romance or pleasure is sinful.

As Abner lacks marriage prospects, Reverend Dr. Thorn introduces him to his young niece, Jerusha Bromley, a beautiful and pious New England girl. Jerusha is in love with Captain Rafer Hoxworth, a whaler away at sea who has apparently forgotten her. When a packet of Hoxworth’s delayed letters arrive, Dr. Thorn intercepts and hides them.

Abner is stunned by Jerusha’s beauty, but socially awkward, makes numerous gaffes. Despite this, Jerusha encourages and accepts his proposal. Abner and Jerusha marry, and along with the other missionaries and Keoki, depart for Hawaii, enduring a harrowing ocean voyage of seasickness and treacherous conditions sailing around Cape Horn. Abner has difficulty with marriage, believing love and passion are sinful. The ship arrives in Lahaina, Maui, where Keoki is reunited with his parents and sister.

Hawaii (1966)

The missionaries are shocked by what is considered the islanders’ sinful ways. Half-naked girls freely have sex with sailors and the natives worship Hawaiian idols. Worse, Keoki’s father, Kelolo, is both the husband and biological brother of Keoki’s mother Malama Kanakoa, the Aliʻi Nui (ruler) whom the natives consider a “sacred person”. Incest is believed to maintain a pure royal bloodline, and Keoki is expected to marry his sister, Noelani, who will one day become the Ali’i Nui. However, Keoki, waiting to be ordained a Christian minister, rejects this, creating discord within his family.

Abner and Jerusha remain in Lahaina while the other missionaries continue on to Honolulu. Before learning about Christianity, Malama demands Jerusha teach her to write English to communicate with the outside world. The Hales live in a grass hut and work to build a church. Jerusha works to help the natives and tries to end disfigured or deformed infants being drowned after rescuing an infant with a facial birthmark.

After a difficult labor, Jerusha, aided by Abner, gives birth to her first child, a son named Micah. Afterwards, Abner, emotionally moved over the birth, professes his great love to Jerusha. He later recants somewhat, believing it sinful to love anyone as much as God. Abner baptizes his first convert, a young Hawaiian girl named Iliki who was given to the Hales as a servant.

Hawaii is a 1966 American epic drama film directed by George Roy Hill and based on the novel of the same name by James A. Michener. It tells the story of an 1820s Yale University divinity student (Max von Sydow) who, accompanied by his new bride (Julie Andrews), becomes a Calvinist missionary in the Hawaiian Islands. It was filmed at Old Sturbridge Village, in Sturbridge, Massachusetts, and on the islands of Kauai and Oahu in Hawaii.

Hawaii Movie Poster (1966)

Hawaii (1966)

Directed by: George Roy Hill
Starring: Julie Andrews, Max von Sydow, Richard Harris, Gene Hackman, Jocelyne LaGarde, Carroll O’Connor, Jocelyne LaGarde, Manu Tupou, Elizabeth Logue, John Cullum, George Rose
Screenplay by: Daniel Taradash, Dalton Trumbo
Production Design by: Cary Odell
Cinematography by: Russell Harlan
Film Editing by: Stuart Gilmore
Costume Design by: Dorothy Jeakins
Set Decoration by: Raymond Boltz Jr., Edward G. Boyle
Art Direction by: James W. Sullivan
Music by: Elmer Bernstein
MPAA Rating: None.
Distributed by: United Artists
Release Date: October 10, 1966

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