Yvette Mimieux & Charlton Heston have some sibling issues in "Diamond Head." |
Diamond Head, the “sprawling saga”
of spoiled plantation owners and struggling Hawaiian locals, has often been written
off as a glossy soap. Diamond Head is
damn soapy, for sure. But it’s not synthetic Ross Hunter soapy. Nor is it stylized
like Douglas Sirk’s sudsy cinema. Diamond Head
was taken from the same-named novel by Peter Gilman, who covered Hawaii as a
reporter, and gives it some authenticity. The '63 film is set in 1959, when
Hawaii became a US state.
The social issues & characters' issues of "Diamond Head" was in the vein of "Giant." |
Spoiler alerts for soap opera plot points ahead!
What’s surprising
about Diamond Head is how outspoken
it was for a mid-century mainstream movie regarding racism, white patriarchy, division
of wealth, and sexism. I'm looking at this film thru 2022 eyes, but there's
some pretty sharp commentary by characters who question the late ‘50s status
quo.
Charlton Heston as the aptly nicknamed "King" in 1963's "Diamond Head." |
The film stars
Charlton Heston as the nicknamed "King." Need I tell you who plays
the pineapple plantation owner? Over the opening titles, Heston's Richard
Howland is riding his white horse along his kingdom, and when he sees a plane parked
near his manse, he gives a small, smug smile. King knows the visitors are
politicos, courting him to run for state senator. Heston is a tad less surly
than usual, but is well-cast as the alpha male, with snide quips to his
political ass-kissers. Throughout Diamond
Head, King orders everyone around and runs roughshod over anyone who
opposes him.
Yvette Mimieux is Sloane, who wants to marry a Hawaiian man in "Diamond Head." |
This happens to be the same day his sister is coming home from college. Sloane is played by Yvette Mimieux, in perhaps her most spirited role. Their parents are dead and the siblings are unusually close. There also seems to be an age difference between them, almost 20 years in real life. He seems more like her father, who was alive in the novel. However, princess Sloane has a surprise for big brother King.
James Darren is the even-keeled brother who Yvette Mimieux loves in "Diamond Head." |
She plans
to marry childhood friend Paul Kahana, who's Hawaiian. He's played by '60s
heart throb James Darren. King sees himself as a benevolent ruler, as long as
everyone knows their place. The Howland siblings are the last of their line and
King doesn't want mixed blood inheriting their empire, since it's been in the family
for over 100 years. King seems to forget that the Hawaiians were there just a
bit longer than that. There are echoes of Giant
with the reactionary alpha male who likes to get his way, doesn’t like change, and
tolerates the locals. Instead of a willful wife, King has a strong-willed
sister in Sloane.
"King" has just given sister Sloane an expensive graduation gift in "Diamond Head." |
Paul Kahana's older half-brother
Dean is brought in to talk him out of marriage to Sloane. He is also half-Hawaiian,
played by recent Oscar winner George Chakiris. No fan of the puffed-up
patriarch, island doctor Dean tells King that the real problem is he does not
want any man in his sister's
bed!
George Chakiris is Dr. Dean Kahana, half-brother to James Darren's Paul in "Diamond Head." Here, he spars with Heston's "King" over Sloane, left. |
Paul and Dean's
mother, Kapiolani, has been married to both a white man and a Hawaiian, and doesn't
approve of mixing races, either. But knowing firsthand that love transcends
race, she gives her blessing. The beloved matriarch is played by the great character
actress, Aline MacMahon.
Aline MacMahon plays the mother of the Kahana brothers and Elizabeth Allen plays the aunt of Sloane in "Diamond Head." |
The King's widowed
sister-in-law Laura doesn't approve either, who is more garden variety white
superior. She's played by lovely Elizabeth Allen, who becomes more empathetic
as the film goes on. Like her niece, she idolizes King as well, and marks time
hoping he'll see how much she loves him.
However, King Richard
is a hypocrite, since he's having a secret affair with a Hawaiian woman, Mai
Chen, played by France Nuyen. An even bigger surprise comes when she tells him that
she's pregnant. Let's just say Heston's King doesn't take the news well. He’s
stone cold about commitment, as his wife and children were wiped out in a tidal
wave, leaving him emotionally unavailable, except for secret trysts.
France Nuyen's Hawaiian lover looks as if she'd like to stick that cigar up plantation owner Charlton Heston's back 40 in "Diamond Head." |
What's contrary about
this movie is while it's outspoken about race issues, the stars that play Hawaiians
are just about everything but: James Darren is Italian and George Chakiris is
Greek, and seem to be sporting tan makeup; Aline MacMahon was white and given
the brown-face treatment; and France Nuyen is French-Asian. Still, these
actors all give good performances, without going over the top. While I think
today's politically correct casting goes overboard at times, this '63 film is
at the other end of the pendulum, when box office was the determining factor to
casting actors. Hence, a star got cast as various nationalities, as did Diamond Head hunk George Chakiris, who
won his Oscar for playing a Puerto Rican.
George Chakiris glares & Charlton Heston scowls as their characters react to their engaged siblings' sexy Hawaiian dance in "Diamond Head." |
Yvette Mimieux & James Darren go Hawaiian in "Diamond Head." |
When Mai’s drunken brother
tangles with King at Paul and Sloane's engagement party, Paul fatally tries to
break it up. From here, Sloane and King clash, especially when she rebounds
with Paul's brother! More soapy scenes ensue, but what makes the movie
intriguing is how direct it is in addressing various social issues. Sloane
zings back at some of the male characters' judgment of her behavior as sexist,
and she can also admit to her own privilege. The King knows he’s more or less having
his cake and eating it, too, regarding his retrograde race relations while also
involved with a Hawaiian woman. Yet, he falls back on the old “that's the way
it's always been” argument. Chakiris' character and others call out the King
for thinking he's above reproach. What's especially timely is King, who had to
be courted into running for senator, now stubbornly refuses to drop out,
despite being involved in an accidental killing and getting a Hawaiian woman
pregnant! Heston plays hard-headed hubris wonderfully.
Charlton Heston's "King" decides to run for senator in "Diamond Head." |
Director David Green
may be the reason that Diamond Head
is direct about the issues discussed in the film. Green is the director of The Mark and A Patch of Blue, which deal with societal topics. The British
director seems to have gotten uniformly good performances out of the cast, as
well.
Charlton Heston as King, clashing w/ favorite subject, his sister, in "Diamond Head." |
Heston isn't as sneering
and sullen as he later became, but he's still well-cast! Charlton’s King has
some subtle moments, as when he recounts his family's sudden death or reacts to
his later son's birth. Heston uses his physicality to show King’s privileged
attitude, as if the world revolves around him. Heston uses his trademark
scowls, side eyes, and curt line readings to great effect. Yet, occasionally,
King is shown to be caring, under all the attitude, and Heston conveys that
well. It’s also to the star’s credit that he was willing to play such a role; off-camera,
Heston was actively involved with civil rights. Noteworthy, Charlton Heston was
37 when Diamond Head filmed and he’s
at the absolute peak of his physical prime here. That Roman coin profile is put
to good use as King!
Yvette Mimieux is lovely and spirited as rich girl Sloane in "Diamond Head." |
Yvette Mimieux, who
often played child-like characters, gets to tap into that childishness here as
the headstrong Sloane. Yet, she also stands up to the bull-headed men in her
life, which reminded me a bit of Elizabeth Taylor in Giant, when she snaps back at the alpha males around her. At 20,
Yvette is quite beautiful here, as well as beguiling.
George Chakiris as Dean, the half-Hawaiian doctor in "Diamond Head." |
George Chakiris and
James Darren may be the hunkiest brother act in movie history. And both aged
beautifully and are still alive at this writing, 90 and 86, in 2022! Chakiris
gives a strong performance as the coolly appraising brother, who has come up
the hard way as a half-Hawaiian. He holds his own against Heston’s hot-headed
character quite well. And Chakiris and Yvette Mimieux make a handsome couple,
though their characters spend most of their time quarreling. Darren’s brother
is more good-natured and while not the most exciting role, James makes him
likeable and it’s a jolt when he’s killed.
James Darren as Paul Kahana, a Hawaiian who wants to marry outside his race, in "Diamond Head." |
Aline MacMahon was
warm and authoritative as the Kahana brothers’ mother. This wasn’t her first
exotic role, either. Aline played Chinese along with Katharine Hepburn in Dragonseed! Elizabeth Allen and France Nuyen do their
best, playing thankless characters who suffer for being in love with Heston’s
insufferable King.
Aline MacMahon plays Kapiolani, the Kahana brothers' mother in "Diamond Head." |
The production takes
advantage of location shooting with Diamond
Head and there’s a great Johnny Williams score. In fact, the only major
fault with this epic is the sudsy incestuous brother-sister angle. The makers
of this movie could have dropped this titillating subplot, which serves no real
purpose, but seemed to be trendy during the ‘60s: The Last Sunset, Bunny Lake
is Missing, Secret Ceremony, etc.
Yes, it was a “shocking” selling point of the book and movie, but the film
could have dug even deeper into the more universal issues of racial and sexual
equality, and power and wealth. The one truly camp moment is the water fall
dream sequence. Sloane dreams of her younger days, when she skinny dipped in
her favorite fall. First, she tries to cajole George Chakiris’ Dean to join
her. He just stares morosely. Then James Darren’s Paul walks into the
water—fully clothed!—to join. After he kisses her, Paul steps back, and he
becomes Heston’s King—also fully dressed. Naturally, Sloane wakes up startled! And while some may find the engagement
Hawaiian dirty dancing camp, too, beautiful Darren and Mimieux acquit
themselves well, I think.
First Sloane dreams of her dead fiancee in "Diamond Head..." |
Then the late lover morphs into sister Sloane's brother, in "Diamond Head." |
If you can get past
the whitewashing of the “Hawaiian” characters and the soapy incest subplot, Diamond Head is well worth watching.
What real Hawaiians looked like in "Diamond Head," as extras! |
A decade later,
Charlton Heston was in full sullen and sneer mode as the cynical cop in the
futuristic Soylent Green. My take
here: https://ricksrealreel.blogspot.com/2018/03/scenery-chewing-main-course-of-soylent.html
One last shot of that on-screen charmer, Charlton Heston! From "Diamond Head." |
Beautiful Yvette, after her fairly recent death her house was put up for sale and I saw all the pictures of it. Talk about Shangra-la! It looked gorgeous.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful Yvette. After she died her house was for sale and I looked at all the pictures of it. Talk about Shangra-la, it was gorgeous. She made her own little paradise.
ReplyDeleteChakiris and France Nuyen - two of the screen's great beauties! Need to see this, as I am also an avid Heston fan!
ReplyDelete-C
Hi Chris, it's definitely worth a watch. A very handsome cast, and some adult attitudes among the soap suds. And beautifully filmed, worth a look! Cheers and Happy Holidays, Rick
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