9/10
Pig out with Bing, Shirley, Martha, Bob, Wolford, and the natives in this very entertaining B&W musical comedy
22 March 2013
Warning: Spoilers
The film credits omitted one of the main players: Wolford: Arkansas bumpkin Bob Burn's pet mini pig, who accompanies him everywhere and is frequently seen throughout. Zany Martha Raye even claimed he won first prize in a dog show, to pay for Bob's jail bail. This was the second and last film pairing of Martha and Bob, again cast as an impromptu pair of slow-witted clowns. Unlike their first pairing, Bob doesn't get to play his unique 'bazooka' musical instrument, thus Wolford serves as his unusual 'prop'. When the stolen sacred necklace the gang is trying to return to the natives is dropped by butterfingers Georgia Smith(Shirley Ross), it lands around Wolford's neck, below. Startled, he runs off into the forest. Bob gives a sampling of his 'championship' hog calling talent, resulting in the appearance of a mob of pigs, along with Wolford. When Martha tries to imitate Bob, it sounds like Johnny Weismuller's Tarzan call, and the pigs all scatter.

As in her first Paramount film, Martha gets to do one of her zany vaudeville-styled songs, entitled "Okolehau", which is the name of the native alcoholic drink, usually made from tubers of the Ti shrub, which was also very important in providing leaves for their roofs and skirts. Martha had a good swing of this liquor before her performance, as part of the celebration surrounding the return of the stolen black pearl necklace. It was hoped this would placate the angry spirit causing Pelee volcano to rumble. but Pelee blew her top anyway, causing the native priest to declare the necklace a fake. Incidentally, the infamous Pelee , which 'blew its top' in 1902, killing many thousands, is in the eastern Caribbean, not Hawaii, where the volcanoes spew non-explosive magma, having little dissolved gases, which are the cause of explosive eruptions.

Judging by their names,probably few of the 'natives' were genuine, or at least were not full-blooded. This includes a young Anthony Quinn. Nonetheless, most do come across as genuine, and we are treated to a number of festivals, with much singing and dancing. The actors never got to Hawaii, the film being shot mostly in the LA Arboretum or studio. However, periodically, clearly we do have shots of the real Hawaii in the background.

The screen play often makes little sense. Why did Bing, as publicity manager of a Pineapple firm, have to reach to Birch Falls,Iowa, to find a 'Pineapple Princess', flown in for a 3 week publicity campaign, promised a romantic time, as well??. It's never explained why Martha apparently accompanied her, as her roommate? Soon after arriving, Georgia inexplicably complains she is bored and is thinking of soon leaving, bad publicity for Hawaii's tourism image! So, Bing is hauled off his fishing yacht, and told to do something to prevent Georgia from leaving. He organizes an evening serenade with some native men, and himself as the chief singer of "Blue Hawaii". Yes, long before Elvis claimed it as his own, this classic was composed for this film and was sung twice, as well as during the opening credits. Eventually ,Martha, not Georgia, emerges from the bungalow, enthralled that she has been serenaded, and jumps into Bob's arms. Bing is not impressed, and leaves to work on his yacht, near the ticket booth for the ocean liner China Clipper. I'm not aware of any actual ocean liner by that name, but Glenn Martin famously inaugurated trans-Pacific air service just the year before this film was made, with its three China Clippers! In fact, when Georgia's suspicious boyfriend, back in Iowa, rushes to find out what Georgia is up to, he presumably arrives via a China Clipper, seen overhead in one shot! Anyway, Bing meets Georgia while working on his boat, and they have a humorous, if inauspicious, introduction, in which he discovers that she is the real Pineapple Princess. By inadvertently getting mixed up in the stolen black pearl necklace affair, Georgia misses the ship home. Bing proceeds to make her stay memorable, beginning with a repeat of his "Blue Hawaii". Of course, when it's time to go home, she has to choose between Bing and her old stuffy boyfriend : a close call, with Bing requiring an accomplice.

Ralph Rainger and Leo Robin did a commendable job with the scores, which included all but the academy award-winning "Sweet Leilani", composed a few years earlier by Hawaii-based Harry Owens, in honor of his new daughter. Bing insisted that it be included, over the vehement objections of producer Hornblow. Although memorable, I'm surprised "Blue Hawaii" didn't win the award instead! Shirely Ross(as Georgia) was also a good singer, if lacking much charisma. Besides accompanying Bing with "Blue Hawaii", she does ""In a Little Hula Heaven" on her own, and reprises "Sweet is the Word for You", after Bing initiates it, as their romance heats up. Bing also sings one song, presumably Nani Ona Pua, in the native language.

I can see why some people might be put off by Martha Raye's or Bob Burn's brands of humor, as dated. It's difficult to imagine Shirley as a woman Bing would get too excited about. Plenty of the native women were better looking and more pleasant, and Martha was way more charismatic. I would have preferred Betty Grable, who was with Paramount then, grossly under-appreciated, and would be paired with Martha as sisters the following year. Despite the often nonsensical screenplay, it's mostly a fast-moving fun time.
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