Hawaii's Last Queen
- Episode aired Jan 27, 1997
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
38
YOUR RATING
Photos
Anna Deavere Smith
- Narrator
- (voice)
Tennant Mcwilliams
- Self - Historian
- (as Tennant McWilliams)
Storyline
Did you know
- GoofsThe narrator says that the U.S. Marines came ashore with Gatling Guns and Revolving Cannons. In fact, a Gatling Gun is a Revolving Cannon, so this statement was inadvertently repetitive.
- SoundtracksSongs of Liliuokalani
courtesy of Wa Nui Records
Featured review
Straightforward, well-told and sad
Straightforward, well-told and sad, this documents how American business interests, and then the government slowly took Hawaii away from the Hawaiians. It's a tale too little known and discussed.
Queen Lili'uokalani comes off as quite an impressive and even heroic figure, trying to keep alive her culture and protect her people, without resorting to violence. Whether that was the right approach is debatable. At least one historian in the film argues that if the Hawaiians had put up some sort of armed resistance before the Americans were too ensconced they might have backed down. But I'm not sure I believe that's the case. Once it was clear there was wealth to be had, given the expansionist and racist tendencies of the era, the Queen may well have been right and just avoided a wholesale slaughter, or the kind of active genocide the Native Americans of the mainland had faced. I'm not sure popular American opinion would have sided with these brown-skinned 'others', even if violence had drawn more attention to the situation. Nor that the Hawaiians had anywhere near the arms or numbers of people to win such a war.
It's the tale of a monarch spending much of her life facing a series of lose-lose propositions in the name of progress and imperialism, and desperately trying to do the best she could with dignity and grace. A piece of American history too easily forgotten. Well worth seeing.
Queen Lili'uokalani comes off as quite an impressive and even heroic figure, trying to keep alive her culture and protect her people, without resorting to violence. Whether that was the right approach is debatable. At least one historian in the film argues that if the Hawaiians had put up some sort of armed resistance before the Americans were too ensconced they might have backed down. But I'm not sure I believe that's the case. Once it was clear there was wealth to be had, given the expansionist and racist tendencies of the era, the Queen may well have been right and just avoided a wholesale slaughter, or the kind of active genocide the Native Americans of the mainland had faced. I'm not sure popular American opinion would have sided with these brown-skinned 'others', even if violence had drawn more attention to the situation. Nor that the Hawaiians had anywhere near the arms or numbers of people to win such a war.
It's the tale of a monarch spending much of her life facing a series of lose-lose propositions in the name of progress and imperialism, and desperately trying to do the best she could with dignity and grace. A piece of American history too easily forgotten. Well worth seeing.
helpful•20
- runamokprods
- Dec 16, 2012
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