Product Details
American Experience: The Massie Affair

American Experience: The Massie Affair
Directed by Mark Zwonitzer

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Product Description

In the early years of the 20th century, at a time when the U.S. Navy dominated Hawaii, Americans thought of the islands as a Pacific Paradise. But in 1931, an explosive incident shook the semblance of tranquility and exposed growing racial tensions. The alleged rape of a white woman by a group of Hawaiians led to violence and murder. The Massie affair inflicted a wound on the psyche of the Hawaiian people that has yet to heal.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #82434 in DVD
  • Released on: 2005-04-19
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.78:1
  • Formats: Color, DVD, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 60 minutes

Customer Reviews

Punching Bag Needed, after Seeing This!5
I'm not surprised to hear this tragedy called the Massie Affair just like the Dreyfus Affair. Both dealt with prejudice and biased court cases against oppressed men. Here, a divorcing, mentally-unstable white woman accuses five Asian and Polynesian men of raping her. Her relatives kill one of the Native Hawaiian men wrongfully accused. Instead of condemning the killers, the majority of white Americans in HI and on the Mainland supported them. In fact, supposed good-guy Clarence Darrow represented the murderers.

The documentary has a diverse array of experts speaking, including men and women, whites, Native Hawaiians, and multiracial persons. Haunani Kay-Trask, the author of the outstanding "Notes of a Native Daughter" which even author Alice Walker praised, is interviewed her. She looks older than I had expected. It was interesting to see her speak about history, rather than current cultural criticism.

I thank PBS for making this documentary. When they arranged the "American Experience" series, it appears that they wanted to show the awful, as well as the noble, aspects of American history. This documentary shows that non-black men of color have been lynched in this country just as black men have. This series do not just posit slavery and Japanese interment as the only scars in American history; this country has many blemishes.

No fault to the producers, but this documentary was incredibly difficult to watch. Emmett Till's body was recently exhumed for forensic evidence. These two facts point to how many men of color have died at the hands of majority Americans defending notions of "white womanhood." Mrs. Fortescue reminds me of Ruth DeWitt Bukater, the elitist, redheaded mother in the "Titanic" film. The facts here are very much like the 1994 tragedy where a Caucasian woman named Susan Smith drowned her two sons and lied that a Black man had done it.

This was an important work discussing Hawaiian history. My heart goes out to the Native brothers over there. This was powerful, though incredibly disturbing.

Excellent, and important5
It's important for everyone to understand that our world is situated in history, politics and economy. This film explains, in a heartbreaking way, why some sentiment still exists in Hawaii that is considerd anti-haole.

Viewers are given an overview of Hawaii in the 1930's, as well as before it was annexed and became a U.S. territory. This lays the foundation for the event described, and provides an explanation as to how events played out as they did.

To write further information or detail would be a disservice to the film and to the producers. I would encourage anyone with an interest in history or social sciences to watch this. You will be disturbed, and you will not be the same.

Clarence Darrow's Most Unusual Case4
This is quite an informative documentary film about what was perhaps the most unusual case ever defended by famed attorney Clarence Darrow, best known for the Scopes and Loeb-Leopold cases. It also offers a unique glimpse at the military's racism in 1930s Hawaii. All in all, it is a fine social document and an important piece of history.

Martin Shackelford