South Pacific (1958) Movie Review
South Pacific (1958) Review
"South Pacific (1958)" Overview

Rating: NR
1958
Cast and Crew
Director : Joshua LoganProducer : Buddy Adler
Screenwiter : Paul Osborn
Starring : Rossano Brazzi,Mitzi Gaynor,John Kerr,Ray Walston,Juanita Hall,France Nuyen
This is an embarrassing statement for a man to make but I think that South
Pacific is one of my favorite old movies. As an art form, the musical is
dubious at best. And Joshua Logan was not one of the great Hollywood directors
-- as demonstrated by the film's uneven pacing and use of colorful camera
filters during certain intense scenes.
So why is this movie a classic? Because it was produced soon after WWII, when
even Hollywood war romances had a serious edge. Because it was filmed on
location (well, Hawaii, I think) and in full Technicolor glamour. And because
the occasion brought out the best in Rodgers and Hammerstein, when the
songwriting team wrote poignant and thoughtful lyrics put to classic melodies.
The musical was based on James Michener's novel, which was based on Michener's
tour of duty in the Pacific. So the novel, musical, and movie all have more
authenticity than is typical of musicals or war movies (or Michener novels).
Most of the script's pathos and drama stem from the forced clash of American
and island cultures, and the film captures the tragedy of war without on-camera
blood. The romance between an American sailor and a Tonkinese island girl is
an interesting case of Hollywood tackling a sensitive subject head-on. The
movie's treatment of racism is not its greatest strength, but still is less
awkward than a lot of movies that won plenty of Oscars.
A few years ago, I read an article in the New York Times accusing Rodgers and
Hammerstein musicals of being inferior to today's musicals because no lead
character ever dies in them. I'm not sure that the number of dead bodies
should be the only criterion for judging art -- was Die Hard 2 a thousand times
better than Citizen Kane? -- but the Times reporter was guilty of sloppy
reporting, because one of the leads in South Pacific does, in fact, die at the
end of this movie. That's still a low body count by today's standards, but
there's enough drama in this film to make it clear that the filmmakers, and
their audience, knew that war is hell.
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Review by David Bezanson
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