The daughter of a pineapple plantation owner in Hawaii sets her sights on a married English engineer.The daughter of a pineapple plantation owner in Hawaii sets her sights on a married English engineer.The daughter of a pineapple plantation owner in Hawaii sets her sights on a married English engineer.
- Awards
- 2 wins total
Featured reviews
clara bow's beauty and wonderful appeal are the chief reason to watch this film. "hula" is not quite up to par with clara's best films but it is still enjoyable. she dances, she rides her horse, and pursues the man that she loves. this film is just over an hour in length and was directed by future oscar winner victor fleming (gone with the wind).the film moves quickly and clara bow has lots of screen time. if you like clara, i would reccomend "hula."
OK Clara Bow silent film from 1927, it's a spin-off of Rain, with Bow playing the half-Hawaiian wild daughter of the local pineapple king who falls in love with the staid English engineer--Clive Brook. Bow competes with the local widow (Arlette Marchal) for his attentions, but both women get a big surprise when his wife shows up (Patricia Dupont). The predatory wife is ready for a divorce until she discovers he might be on the verge of a fortune. Bow settles her hash fast.
Bow has personality to spare and has a few great scenes: her opening nude bath, her hula in a grass skirt, and the dog rescue scene with Bow and Brook doing their own stunts.
Note: the IMDb credit list is wrong. The film credits (from the DVD I have) list Patricia Dupont as playing Mrs. Haldane---not Margaret Truax as listed on IMDb.
Bow has personality to spare and has a few great scenes: her opening nude bath, her hula in a grass skirt, and the dog rescue scene with Bow and Brook doing their own stunts.
Note: the IMDb credit list is wrong. The film credits (from the DVD I have) list Patricia Dupont as playing Mrs. Haldane---not Margaret Truax as listed on IMDb.
Clara Bow (Hula Calhoun) is daughter of plantation owner Albert Gran (Bill Calhoun), who is mainly interested in playing cards and boozing with friends. She's interested in riding in the countryside until engineer Clive Brook (Anthony Haldane) shows up to build a dam. One of her father's friends Arlette Marchal (Mrs. Bane) then competes for his attentions. His wife Maude Truax (Margaret Haldane) shows up for the contrived finale.
Lots of 'pre-code' elements like nude bathing.
Wonderful location shooting in Hawaii.
Lots of 'pre-code' elements like nude bathing.
Wonderful location shooting in Hawaii.
Many of the reviews and comments I have read about this movie say that this is a rather stale film and performance by Clara Bow. Although the story-line was rather typical of Clara's later silents, I still find it somewhat heart-stirring and incredibly fun. Clara plays a happy-go-lucky Hawaiian girl who will stop at nothing to win the man she loves...never mind that this man is married! Clara's lack of modesty was shocking in the day, but I believe it lends to the sweetness and general fun of the movie. Though definitely not a brilliant story-line (quite typical, actually), this movie is a nice showcase of Clara's ability to make the audience laugh.
A vehicle for the "It Girl" Clara Bow, "Hula" showcases the talents of its ever-vivacious star but is an otherwise generic melodramatic romance that veers towards racism in its cultural appropriation of Hawaiian culture. At least, it's short, with a runtime barely over an hour. Bow plays the titular Hula (of all the names), who falls in love with the chin-dimpled but married Anthony (played by Clive Brook). There's also another woman who's not his wife interested in Anthony, and she completes the love triangle until the wife shows up. Then, she conveniently leaves, and the wife takes her place as Hula's competitor. Hula does do some crazy, life-threatening things to win her man's affections, though (i.e. Nearly falling over a waterfall, falling off a horse and blowing stuff up with dynamite).
Hollywood's premiere flapper type, Bow's star persona is reworked here by having her unconventional and wild behavior explained as having been influenced by the natives (although besides a cameo by surfing legend Duke Kahanamoku, with an insulting intertitle of him speaking broken English, hardly a native is to be seen). This includes her scandalous outfits or lack thereof (the film begins with Bow swimming nude), her riding a horse inside and, of course, her namesake dance.
Hollywood's premiere flapper type, Bow's star persona is reworked here by having her unconventional and wild behavior explained as having been influenced by the natives (although besides a cameo by surfing legend Duke Kahanamoku, with an insulting intertitle of him speaking broken English, hardly a native is to be seen). This includes her scandalous outfits or lack thereof (the film begins with Bow swimming nude), her riding a horse inside and, of course, her namesake dance.
Did you know
- TriviaClara Bow's nude swimming scene was hugely controversial, with many other actresses refused to include her in their social circles.
- Quotes
Harry Dehan: You are a woman now, Hula--ready to love!
Hula Calhoun: Hula will know when she's ready for love!
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Love Goddesses (1965)
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $436,342
- Runtime
- 1h 4m(64 min)
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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