A shipwrecked sailor, originally from Brooklyn, is washed up on the shores of the tropical island of Wally-Wally. The natives of the island welcome him with open arms. He immediately falls i... Read allA shipwrecked sailor, originally from Brooklyn, is washed up on the shores of the tropical island of Wally-Wally. The natives of the island welcome him with open arms. He immediately falls in love at first sight with a girl who he learns is the princess of the island, who is betr... Read allA shipwrecked sailor, originally from Brooklyn, is washed up on the shores of the tropical island of Wally-Wally. The natives of the island welcome him with open arms. He immediately falls in love at first sight with a girl who he learns is the princess of the island, who is betrothed to the local volcano, which she understands is her fate for the good of the island. ... Read all
- Princess of the Island
- (as Winifred Shaw)
- The Witch Doctor
- (as Andre Beranger)
Featured reviews
** (out of 4)
Technicolor short from MGM has a shipwrecked sailor (Warren Hymer) washing on shore of an island where the locals believe they have to give their Princess (Wini Shaw) to the volcano. The street-talking, NYC native decides he loves the Princess so he tries to win her heart. This film is like so-many early Technicolor films in that it's great to watch for the colors but everything else is pretty much lacking. The actual story is rather lame and it's doubtful anyone will fall for the love story going on. I think it's fair to say that everyone knew the important thing was the color so the story, direction and musical numbers were mailed in. We get two or three musical numbers but not a single second of any of them are entertaining or worth viewing. At twenty-minutes the film goes on way too long without anything interesting happening. Shaw and her rather provocative top are nice to look at but Hymer's mugging of the screen isn't all that charming. As many bad things that are here I must still recommend the movie for those who are interested in the early color films. The entire "look" of the film is marvelous and we get some really beautiful looking scenes including the colors at the top of the coconut tree. You'll certainly notice the scene when it happens because the colors are simply amazing.
At least, it's in color. There is a lot of brown aside from the blue sky. The colors are ok, but they're not popping enough. The greens need to stand out from the browns. Most of the screen is a dull earth tone color. It's an interesting look into early Technicolor.
In this Vitaphone short, Warren Hymer plays a sailor who washed up on some Polynesian island. He instantly falls in love with the island princess, which is a serious problem since she's already been promised as a sacrifice to the Volcano god! But Warren is determined and by the end of the picture, he's pretty sure he's finally gotten the girl. What did he REALLY get? Watch the picture!
This is a pleasant little picture but unlike most of the other color shorts, the emphasis is on story...not the singing and dancing. Mind you, there is some of that but the real emphasis here is on the comedy...and with a lovely joke at the end of the movie. Well worth seeing.
Despite a certain amount of production numbers and mugging on the part of Hymer, the point of a lot of these early Technicolor shorts was to show off the Technicolor process. In this one, the dominant theme is variations on earth colors, browns and greens -- even the flowers are distinctly brownish -- to show off the naturalistic aura of the South Seas and the rather boring good taste of Natalie Kalmus, the ex-wife of Technicolor's founder. Eventually she was shipped off to Britain, where her advice was ignored by Powell and Pressberger.
Still, Miss Shaw is pretty and the chorines dancing the hula are graceful. There's also some interest in this as a technical artifact in the evolution of color in the movies.
Did you know
- TriviaVitaphone production reels #7234-7235.
- Quotes
A Shipwrecked Sailor: You mean that someday she's gotta marry that volcano?
The Princess' Father: It is our tradition that one favored by the gods must marry the volcano to appease its wrath.
A Shipwrecked Sailor: Gee, imagine that dame married to a volcano! There's sure gonna be a lot of smoke around *their* domicile.
- ConnectionsEdited into Musical Movieland (1944)
- SoundtracksLove Song of Kalua
(uncredited)
Written by M.K. Jerome
Played during the opening credits and often throughout the picture
Performed by Wini Shaw
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Broadway Brevities (1935-1936 season) #16: King of the Islands
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime17 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1