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Blue Hawaii Poster

Blue Hawaii

Ecstatic romance... Exotic dances... Exciting music IN THE WORLD'S LUSHEST PARADISE OF SONG!
1961 | 102m | English

(8079 votes)

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Popularity: 4 (history)

Details

Chad Gates has just been discharged from the Army, and is happy to be back in Hawaii with his surf-board, his beach buddies and his girlfriend.
Release Date: Nov 22, 1961
Director: Norman Taurog
Writer: Hal Kanter, Allan Weiss
Genres: Comedy, Music
Keywords musical, hawaii, tiki culture, romcom
Production Companies Paramount Pictures, Hal Wallis Productions
Box Office Revenue: $4,200,000
Budget: $2,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Backdrops

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Elvis Presley Chad Gates
Joan Blackman Maile Duval
Angela Lansbury Sarah Lee Gates
Nancy Walters Abigail Prentice
Roland Winters Fred Gates
John Archer Jack Kelman
Howard McNear Mr. Chapman
Steve Brodie Tucker Garvey
Christian Kay Beverly Martin
Iris Adrian Enid Garvey
Hilo Hattie Waihila
Jenny Maxwell Ellie Corbett
Pamela Austin Sandy
Darlene Tompkins Patsy
Lani Kai Carl Tanami
Jose De Vega Ernie Gordon
Frank Atienza Ito O'Hara
Ralph Hanalei Ping Pong (as Tiki Hanalei)
Gregory Gaye Paul Duval (uncredited)
Bess Flowers Restaurant Patron (uncredited)
Gene LeBell (uncredited)
Patti Page Woman Paddling Canoe Near Hotel (uncredited)
George DeNormand Gen. Anthony (uncredited)
Flora Hayes Mrs. Maneka (uncredited)
Lillian Culver Matron (uncredited)
Lenmana Guerin Bit Part (uncredited)
Name Job
Norman Taurog Director
Hal Kanter Screenplay
Terry O. Morse Editor
Sam Comer Set Decoration
Edith Head Costume Design
Wally Westmore Makeup Artist
Michael D. Moore Assistant Director
Tom Parker Technical Advisor
Allan Weiss Story
Joseph J. Lilley Original Music Composer, Conductor
Charles Lang Director of Photography
Hal Pereira Art Direction
Walter H. Tyler Art Direction
Frank R. McKelvy Set Decoration
Nellie Manley Hairstylist
Charles Grenzbach Sound
Bill Wistrom Sound Editor
Philip Mitchell Sound
Jack Mintz Dialogue Coach
John P. Fulton Visual Effects
Warren Low Supervising Editor
W. Wallace Kelley Second Unit Director of Photography
Name Title
Hal B. Wallis Producer
Paul Nathan Associate Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 18 29 12
2024 5 20 26 12
2024 6 18 36 10
2024 7 17 35 9
2024 8 18 46 11
2024 9 15 24 10
2024 10 16 35 6
2024 11 13 26 8
2024 12 11 26 7
2025 1 12 23 8
2025 2 9 13 3
2025 3 5 12 1
2025 4 2 3 1
2025 5 1 4 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 1 1 0
2025 8 2 2 1
2025 9 3 4 2

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Reviews

Wuchak
7.0

_**Elvis goes to Hawaii**_ After a two-year enlistment in the service, Chad Gates (Presley) returns home to Hawaii, but prefers the genuineness of the Polynesians and blazing his own trail to being the heir to his parents’ pineapple plantation. With his half-Caucasian/half-Polynesian girlfriend ( ... Joan Blackman) he tries his hand as a tour guide. Angela Lansbury is on hand as the amusingly snooty mother. “Blue Hawaii” (1961) was the first and easily the best of three Elvis flicks set in Hawaii, followed by “Girls! Girls! Girls!” (1962) and “Paradise, Hawaiian Style” (1966). Actually, it ranks with his better movies, like "Kid Galahad" (1962), “Roustabout” (1964) and “Viva Las Vegas" (1964). Several things make this one work: The magnificent locations, the trivia about Hawaii & Hawaiians, the compelling story, the serious-but-fun vibe and, of course, the music. Speaking of which, this one has more songs than usual. On the downside, the female cast could’ve been better, although winsome Blackman is a’right. Nevertheless, the subplot about Chad (Elvis) being the tour guide of an attractive school teacher (Nancy Walters) and five teenage girls is entertaining, especially the shenanigans with the curmudgeonly lass (Jenny Maxwell). The film runs 1 hour, 42 minutes and was shot in Hawaii and Paramount Studios, California. GRADE: B

Jun 23, 2021
Geronimo1967
6.0

I'd been watching this for ages before I realised that it was actually the real life Angela Lansbury (aged 35) playing Elvis's mother - he being 25 years old at the time! A bit of much needed cinematic licence in this otherwise really rather staged romantic comedy that doesn't really do anyone any f ... avours. Having returned from Germany, "Chad" is at a loss as to what to do. He doesn't want to join the family fruit business, preferring to work with girlfriend "Maile" (Joan Blackman) - much to the chagrin of the aforementioned mum. Sorry, mom. "Maile" is a tour guide showing off all the beautiful sights of Hawaii. That's when he encounters the teenage "Ellie" (Jenny Maxwell) who takes a mischievous shine to him, causing no end of havoc between everyone, her teacher "Abigail" (Nancy Walters) and a bout of fisticuffs with just about the entire island! He's undoubtedly a charismatic man to watch but an actor he isn't. His renditions of "Blue Hawaii" and "Can't Help Falling in Love" demonstrate clearly that he can't lip-sync very well either. Lansbury adopts a squeaky accent and looks like she's having some fun, but the rest of it is all too rigid and unnatural looking - I think some of the cyclorama photography was just on a loop and even I know that you have to change chords playing an ukulele. I guess the star's timetable didn't allow Norman Taurog to spend too much time finessing what is just essentially a feel-good film for the star, but this is all pretty standard and unremarkable fayre from everyone.

May 25, 2024
Geronimo1967
6.0

I'd been watching this for ages before I realised that it was actually the real life Angela Lansbury (aged 35) playing Elvis's mother - he being 25 years old at the time! A bit of much needed cinematic licence in this otherwise really rather staged romantic comedy that doesn't really do anyone any f ... avours. Having returned from Germany, "Chad" is at a loss as to what to do. He doesn't want to join the family fruit business, preferring to work with girlfriend "Maile" (Joan Blackman) - much to the chagrin of the aforementioned mum. Sorry, mom. "Maile" is a tour guide showing off all the beautiful sights of Hawaii. That's when he encounters the teenage "Ellie" (Jenny Maxwell) who takes a mischievous shine to him, causing no end of havoc between everyone, her teacher "Abigail" (Nancy Walters) and a bout of fisticuffs with just about the entire island! He's undoubtedly a charismatic man to watch but an actor he isn't. His renditions of "Blue Hawaii" and "Can't Help Falling in Love" demonstrate clearly that he can't lip-sync very well either. Lansbury adopts a squeaky accent and looks like she's having some fun, but the rest of it is all too rigid and unnatural looking - I think some of the cyclorama photography was just on a loop and even I know that you have to change chords playing an ukulele. I guess the star's timetable didn't allow Norman Taurog to spend too much time finessing what is just essentially a feel-good film for the star, but this is all pretty standard and unremarkable fayre from everyone.

May 25, 2024
Geronimo1967
6.0

I'd been watching this for ages before I realised that it was actually the real life Angela Lansbury (aged 35) playing Elvis's mother - he being 25 years old at the time! A bit of much needed cinematic licence in this otherwise really rather staged romantic comedy that doesn't really do anyone any f ... avours. Having returned from Germany, "Chad" is at a loss as to what to do. He doesn't want to join the family fruit business, preferring to work with girlfriend "Maile" (Joan Blackman) - much to the chagrin of the aforementioned mum. Sorry, mom. "Maile" is a tour guide showing off all the beautiful sights of Hawaii. That's when he encounters the teenage "Ellie" (Jenny Maxwell) who takes a mischievous shine to him, causing no end of havoc between everyone, her teacher "Abigail" (Nancy Walters) and a bout of fisticuffs with just about the entire island! He's undoubtedly a charismatic man to watch but an actor he isn't. His renditions of "Blue Hawaii" and "Can't Help Falling in Love" demonstrate clearly that he can't lip-sync very well either. Lansbury adopts a squeaky accent and looks like she's having some fun, but the rest of it is all too rigid and unnatural looking - I think some of the cyclorama photography was just on a loop and even I know that you have to change chords playing an ukulele. I guess the star's timetable didn't allow Norman Taurog to spend too much time finessing what is just essentially a feel-good film for the star, but this is all pretty standard and unremarkable fayre from everyone.

May 25, 2024