Waikiki (2020) Poster

(2020)

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7/10
Haunting
tygerpax14 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
So freaking angry as IMdB has trashed my review 3 friggin' times while I broke away to look up actor names! I've wanted to find this film online since I heard about it on NPR in 2020. It wasn't anything what I expected; it was worse. Kea is a woman so ripped apart from her own land she goes mental. I saw this movie only through a 12-hour window provided by my sponsorship of the National Museum of the American Indian. A (liberal) co-worker told me this movie was complete nonsense. There was no reason to preach about what native Hawaiians endure when an Mexican migrant woman in California goes through the same abuse. Well, a Mexican woman in CA isn't held up as a tourist attraction inside her own land where the only jobs she can get are ones in the tourist industry which barely considers her above an ornament of "savage" life made civilized. I've read of this same treatment in "National Geographic" just last year in an article about how indigenous Hawaiians are losing their culture , so this isn't one liberal director crying out. Honestly, I don't know how to rate this film. I gave 7 out of 10 stars just because I think it's brutal and honest, but I can't say I can stomach watching it again. When I realized Kea's mental state, I started crying.
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9/10
Moody, dark, beautiful broken dreams in paradise
honeythatsok2 December 2020
It's always a surreal experience seeing a film that takes place in your neighborhood. This is a gorgeously rendered yet stark portrait of modern day Waikiki. It's the Vegas of the pacific and the cost of living is sky high. Wages are some of the lowest and plenty of people work three jobs while living paycheck to paycheck. The job is to sell paradise while never having time to enjoy it ourselves.

Many indigenous cultures view The Earth as Mother and it is our life purpose to care for her and thrive in our environment together. It is a symbiotic relationship. The current system of market based capitalism where everything is for sale to the highest bidder is incompatible with this ancient belief.

The fact that there are so many homeless Hawaiians living on the streets in Hawaii is a disgrace. This film will show you why, but more importantly it will make you feel the pain of being disconnected from your homeland and history while still living on the Land. In Hawaiian, the Aina.

Aloha Aina. Love for the land.

Waikiki does a good job of not spelling out its message while you watch it, but if you allow yourself to feel the pain of its protagonist, you will leave the idea of Elvis's Blue Hawaii behind and step into a new understanding of Hawaii in 2020.
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10/10
Phenomenal
COOKIEAHEEMAWNAH5 January 2021
This will forever change all of Hawaii cinema. Finally someone said it. Everything we all know exists here and no one talks about it. Thank you.
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