Blood & Orchids (TV Movie 1986) Poster

(1986 TV Movie)

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7/10
The Honolulu Boys.
rmax30482326 June 2004
It's 1937 in caste-divided Hawaii and Madeleine Stowe is raped and beaten horribly in the woods by her husband's best friend, another Navy officer. Four Hawaiian kids find her nude on the road, drive her to a hospital, and are frightened off by personnel who assume they're the ones who did it. They're arrested by a Captain in the HPD, Kris Kristofferson, and brought to trial for rape, deadly assault, battery, mayhem, and speaking with an accent. Stowe's husband, a Lieutenant (jg) on a destroyer murders one of the kids in court. The others are beaten by a handful of rednecks on the destroyer's crew. Stowe finally breaks down on the stand and admits the kids didn't do it, much to the dismay of her Mom (Jane Alexander) who has been coaching her. Better to have four kanakas get it in the neck than one haole officer. Now, however, Stowe's husband is imprisoned. The guy knows nothing about his wife's having an affair and assumes the kids were guilty. Bring in the expensive Jewish lawyer from the states, the seventyish Jose Ferrer with the sexy wife one third his age.

It's a fascinating lesson in colonial social structure. It's a good deal like the South was at the time. It echoes the incident involving the Scottsboro Boys.

It would have been nice if the story had stuck closer to the central plot but it wanders all over the place, bumping crazily into subplots as it meanders along like a drunken sailor on Hotel Street. I expect we could have done without the affair between Kristofferson and Bergman's wife, Sean Young, which doesn't tell us anything we need to know about either character except that they are heterosexual.

The script doesn't help too much. Too many pious speeches. Kristofferson to Alexander: "Just because your grandfather came here on a ship and stole this land from the people you think you OWN it." Alexander is a fine actress and has already shown us through her icy disdain for ordinary people that she thinks she owns it. It's like having someone tell you, "I was so thirsty the next morning that I put away a lot of H2O -- that's water." We know, we know. Sometimes the script get so hallucinogenic that it's almost trippy. Sean Young is stretched out in the bed, sweaty and exhausted, and tells her lover: "You make me feel new again. It's as if you'd just minted me."

Man, though, is Sean Young a knockout. Whew. So is Madeleine Stowe with her skewed lips and coal-black irises. Kristofferson can't help being his old laid-back self and he's a little hard to believe when he explodes with rage. Authority figures from Texas don't blow their tops when they threaten you. They smile as they tell you how they're going to reach down inside your throat, grab your pyloric sphincter and pull your guts out through your mouth. Jose Ferrer gives a sympathetic performance as the sick but spunky and intelligent defense attorney who isn't about to give up his sexpot wife, even as he's passing out from hypoglycemia or something.

The four Hawaiian kids are okay. Their defense attorney is barely adequate. He's supposed to appear bumbling at first and he succeeds. But when he bears down on a witness he still seems tentative, as if unwilling to be rude. Two performances are standouts. Haunani Minn brings real spirit to the role of the Princess, and she's given some hefty insights. Some might call it overacting but what a breath of fresh air. Her performance -- the things she does to the English language, the melodies she uses to inform it -- reminds me of Bela Lugosi's Dracula. It's compelling ham. The other outstanding performance is given by the actor who plays the Chief of Police. No, not Charlie Chan. This is a white guy, Kristofferson's boss. He only has one or two scenes and they are clichés. Every responsible cop who is searching for justice has to have a boss telling him to lay off. This boss is unforgettable. I have seen more kinetic energy flow through the animatronic figures in Disneyland's Hall of Presidents. He stands there, chewing Kristofferson out, and he does not blink, his face is without expression, he does not wave his arms or move his hands or his body and he does not breath. Nothing moves but his mouth. When paint wants to dry it must watch HIM. He alone is almost worth sitting through the movie for. William Russ is Stowe's husband. I have seen far more convincing performances in a community college in St. George, Utah.

Flowers play an important part in this movie and they should. You can smell their scent at sea while the islands themselves are still over the horizon. The movie has blood as well as orchids. It also has a lot of sexual intrigue. (We'll let the derivation of the word "orchids" go, for now.) See this one. It's long and has some irrelevant patches but the case itself is interesting enough to keep you watching.
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8/10
The stink of corruption
bkoganbing1 November 2018
Blood&Orchids is loosely, very loosely based on the notorious Thalia Massie rape case and the subsequent trials that came out of it. The film takes a hard look at the racism that prevailed among the white colonizers.

Madeline Stowe lying naked on a side road and all beaten up is found by four Hawaiian youths and brought to a hospital. In a case of no good deed goes unpunished the four kids are arrested and held for rape.

Stowe is the daughter of the powerful sugar plantation owner Jane Alexander who with her partner Richard Dysart are a pair of big movers and shakers in Hawaii. They try and manipulate the justice system in their favor. Stowe is also married to navy captain William Russ and she was out stepping on him, having an affair with another officer.

The Hawaiian kids prove to be a convenient scapegoat for many people, but when they are not convicted Russ in open court has snuck a pistol in and shoots one of the four kids.

Sparing no expense Alexander and Dysart bring over to Hawaii noted criminal defense attorney Jose Ferrer to defend Russ. Ferrer's character is based on Clarence Darrow who in his last big case got a big fee for defending Thalia Massie's husband who did the same thing in real life.

Kris Kristofferson stars as a Hawaiian homicide cop who can't stand the stink of corruption and has been looking to unravel the frame up of the Hawaiian kids. He also falls for Ferrer's much younger wife Sean Young.

When I wrote my review of the film Hawaii I said then and say again Hawaii was sadly caught between the westward expanding America and the eastward expanding Japan. The white planters are a privileged class that enjoy their privileges to the max and we sure see that here.

This is a fine made for TV films that should have gotten a theatrical release.
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10/10
Excellent writing, wonderful acting,
HereInVA7 May 2001
"Blood and Orchids" (TV mini-series, 1986) is evocative of its time (1930s territorial Hawaii) and place (its rich plantations). I saw this fine mini-series when it appeared originally, drawn to it by Jane Alexander and by its theme of racial conflict and excellent pre-reviews.

Jane Alexander plays a cold, wealthy plantation-owner who exerts her belief that the white "newcomers" to Hawaii have a divine right to exploit native Hawaiians who spend 12 to 16 hours a day in her fields under harsh conditions. She has a daughter (Madeleine Stowe) married to a Navy Lieutenant, but it is her husband's best friend whom she loves.

This man betrays both her and the husband, assaulting her. In order to protect her daughter and maintain her status as a wealthy socialite, Jane Alexander forces her daughter to accuse native hawaiian boys of battery and rape. This unleashes a series of dramatic (in the best sense) events that are surprising and shocking and seen largely through the eyes of a tough, aloof detective, played by Kris Kristofferson.

Unlike many "epics," the viewer will have no problem keeping the 15-20 major characters straight. From an exiled Hawaiian princess and a native lawyer returning from the US mainland to race-hating sailors and plantation supervisors, the characters are drawn clearly and superbly acted.

I saw "Blood and Orchids" recently after 15 years of thinking about it off and on. It holds its place as one of the great television mini-series.
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Great true-story suspense/drama based in Hawaii.
therica19 December 1999
I saw this movie just after having lived in Hawaii and was there during the filming. I got to see some of the original locations and heard the story. It's fairly inflaming, knowing how the locals were so racially abused at times especially during WWII era by some military personnel and this movie illustrates that sad truth, as well as the fact that sometimes sexual bias and prejudices are used to advantage in order to avoid the truth and allow the innocent to suffer. The acting is really great too, note the fine list of actors contributing their efforts.
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9/10
WELL ACTED AND ATMOSPHERIC
anitaken9 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
The overarching story of this miniseries is a very loose adaptation of the Thalia Massie case, which took place in Hawaii in that period before WWII and eventually statehood when unfounded accusations of a heinous rape was used as a defense to a charge of homicide, inflaming racial tensions between native Hawaiians and the rich "haoles" who sat pridefully atop the economic and social systems in the former Sandwich Islands.

Four young Hawaiian men are enjoying their time off from their jobs as laborers on a vast sugar cane plantation owned by a rich and influential white man who is a part of the power structure. They spend some time at the beach, drinking beer and skinny dipping. And then they pile into a car belonging to the sister of one of the men and head off to a party where they hope to meet some girls. En route, they stumble upon a brutally beaten young woman - naked, bleeding profusely, and barely coherent. They would prefer not to have anything to do with her; it is dangerous for a native man to have anything to do with a white woman unless she is his employer, and even then, he is expected to be obsequious. But one of the young men takes pity on the young woman and insists that they take her to the local hospital, where they nervously deposit her and quickly leave. They are unaware that she is not just any young haole woman. She is Hester Murdoch (Madeline Stowe), the daughter of Doris Ashley (Jane Alexander), the rich, cold, imperious "Empress" of the local Pacific Heights white community, living in regal comfort on an estate so splendid, it has a name - Windward. Hester has been recently married to a naval officer - Lieutenant Lloyd Murdoch (William Russ) - but she is in love with, and unfortunately about three months pregnant by, Lloyd's fellow officer and best friend, Bryce Parker, who is not about to let a marital scandal ruin his chances for promotion. When Hester refuses to consider an abortion, he is the one who beats her senseless and leaves her by the side of the road. Doris Ashley detests Bryce Parker, but she is determined not to have any sordid scandal threaten her social position. Using a combination of cajoling and intimidation, she forces her daughter to accuse the four young native Hawaiian men of brutally raping her, and with that as the circumstance under which a "therapeutic" abortion is legal, she eliminates any evidence of her daughter's extramarital affair.

This is the central plot around which the action takes place. Doris Ashley's initial antagonist is a captain in the Honolulu Police Department named Curtis Maddox (Kris Kristofferson). He is the one who arrests the young men and takes them into custody following Doris Ashley's accusation on her daughter's behalf. There is no question that the two women would have to do something so outlandish as to come to the police station; Maddow brings the accused men to the hospital to be confronted and identified. Maddox is played by Kristofferson as one of the moody, aloof loners that he does so well. Maddox has problems of his own as one of the ordinary resentful white civil servant types who rank above the natives, class-wise, but who serve at the pleasure of the people at the top. His boss, Commander Fairly, is a political hack who makes his life miserable. He has an existing relationship with a waitress at a local diner, but she's about had it with him because he really isn't capable of commitment. Maddox isn't particularly concerned about the plight of the young men, but he is so disgusted by his own cavalier treatment at the hands of Doris Ashley, he has a bit more incentive to put a spoke in her wheel with respect to the rape case. Ashley's other antagonist is Tom, a young, educated native who is just starting out in his practice of law. He volunteers for the pro bono work of defending the accused young men. His stature grows as he gains confidence, but in the midst of the trial, Lt. Murdoch -- enraged by Tom's dogged questioning of Hester and by the firm denial of guilt by the principal defendant -- pulls out a gun and shoots the defendant at point blank range, killing him instantly. That act ends Part 1.

In Part 2, the rich haoles, believing that their continuing dominance hinges on an acquittal of Murdoch based on an unwritten law that a man has the right to defend his wife's honor, decide to bring in Walter Bergman (Jose Ferrar), an elderly but brilliant lawyer based upon Clarence Darrow, who in fact did act as defense in the Massie case. It was his last case. Bergman accepts the assignment for a hefty fee and brings with him his beautiful young wife, Lenore (Sean Young). Their relationship seems a good deal more paternal than marital (and in fact, in one of the departures from the original script, of which I have a copy, Bergman, who is a widower in the script, is characterized in the miniseries as never having been married). The restless young wife encounters the loner policeman, who is clearly smitten, and before long they are engaged in a hot affair, which they mistakenly believe that the husband does not know.

Ultimately, the rich power brokers do not succeed, primarily because Hester Murdoch does not have the ability to emulate her ruthless mother. She cannot sustain the pretense. During Bergman's summary remarks, she breaks down and screams that the young men are innocent. Her husband is duly convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to ten years. After she and her mother are arrested by Maddox on the grounds of perjury and conspiracy, Hester commits suicide, hanging herself in the shower - unable to live with her guilt over aborting her baby. Lawyer Bergman, apparently playing quite manipulatively with his wife's sense of duty and loyalty, has her agree to end the affair with the policeman and return with him to Washington, D. C. and their life there. Our last glimpse of the police captain is standing alone on the quay watching the woman he loves sail out of his life. And then the credits roll.

That's the plot is a rather tight nutshell, leaving out many characters and interrelated subplots which fill the four hours air time with some good acting, pre-war atmosphere. And food for thought concerning racism. The miniseries was pretty well-received by both the critics and the viewing public. However, there were a number of critics who thought the love affair between the cop and the wife was contrived and superfluous. I disagree. I think the inclusion in the script of a love affair between the two humanized the policeman, who was a bit on the cold side. And the casting of the beautiful Sean Young as Lenore gave us a tender portrait of a young woman suddenly discovering that her sheltered life has a bird-in-the-gilded cage quality. The initial script has Lenore crying out to her manipulative husband, who has purchased tickets for that very day without telling her, "But I love him." It is painful to watch those hopes and dreams quashed.

Except I'm not buying it. The script implies that the two lovers are equally distraught over the ending of their idyll - that the emotional exhaustion in the eyes of the man left behind on the pier is matched by the tremulous-on-the-edge-of-tears demeanor of the luminous Lenore on the upper deck. They are equally heartbroken. I don't believe it for a minute. I think the lovely Lenore has used the policeman. Whatever passion she may actually have had for him is more than overshadowed by her desire to remain Mrs. Walter Bergman, standing there in her smart, stylishly expensive clothes (complete with a fur piece). Our hero may actually have provided her first awakening to the possibilities; she may actually have been "made new" as she claims. If so, I don't think he will be the last. Maddox himself seems to almost understand this. When Bergman confronts him in his office, taunting him as being only a "hick flatfoot," Maddox says "if it hadn't been me, it would have been someone else." Bergman may have been in the beginning moments of a diabetic coma, but he is a wily, determined man who clearly views his wife as one of his possessions. He makes it clear "I'm not giving her up." So the series is not just about racism. It's about class as well. Although I think the cop is honestly devastated by the loss, he has gained something from the experience. He has discovered that he himself is capable of passion - something that was not particularly apparent before. And he has told off his rich "mentor," - defying his oppressors with integrity and courage. He is in a better place.

It was a good miniseries - a cut above usual television fare. There are a few duds in the cast - Lloyd Murdoch (who seems too listless to have done something so momentous as to kill someone is open court), and Commander Fairly (Maddox's awful boss) - but others, such as the dynamic and lyrical Princess, are exceptional even in small parts (the look that the Princess gives Doris Ashley as she passes her on her way to a seat in the courtroom, could strip paint).
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5/10
This movie is farcical. ***SPOILERS AHEAD***
hollywoodjim30 August 2007
Warning: Spoilers
After watching this movie I wanted more info. Wiki to the rescue. This movie couldn't have been FURTHER from the truth. Read it for yourselves. Almost everything is revised or "tailored" for convenience and marketability. Many things irked me but pay particular attention to the fact that Thalia committed suicide (as in the movie) but she did it in 1963 on the mainland. Not in her mother's shower after the trial! AND WHO THE HELL IS POLICE CAPTAIN CURTIS MADDOX? And there was a shooting, but NOT IN THE COURTROOM. Purely sensational. Mr. Katkov should be ashamed, what a prostitute he was/is.

Below is one paragraph, see the whole short article here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massie_Trial In February 1986, CBS-TV aired a four-hour miniseries produced by Lorimar Productions titled Blood & Orchids, written for television by Norman Katkov, who based his teleplay on his own novel of the same title. Though Katkov said that he based his novel on the Massie Affair, his novel and teleplay bear only a superficial resemblance to actual fact. Katkov changed all the names of the principal characters and added other characters for whom no historical warrant can be found (most notably, Police Captain Curtis Maddox, supposedly the one conscientious law-enforcement officer who ever investigated the affair). Katkov's story also departs significantly from actual historical events in many ways, not least of which is making the murder of Kahahawai look like a crime of passion rather than the cold-blooded murder that it actually was--and also laying all the blame on Lieutenant Massie and not on Grace Fortescue, the true instigator of Kahahawai's murder.

I got to admit, I liked the movie a lot more before finding out the real story. It does have a nice look, if not a little heavy-handed in the wardrobe department. KK goes through the whole movie (remember, this is Hawaii) in a freshly pressed 3-piece suit, vest fully buttoned and jacket permanently affixed to his body. And the stupid fedora, give me a break. They want you to believe no one wore shirt sleeves I guess.

5 out of 10 for the moderate entertainment value. Still worth a watch.

hollywoodjim@gmail.com
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Provides important insights into the under-pinnings of Hawaiian society.
baw-117 June 2002
As someone who has both worked and played in Hawaii, I consider this to be one of just a few films that tell a good story and at the same time let the viewer know about the history and social levels of Hawaii. All persons who travel to Hawaii for vacation fun should see this reality-based film.
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