🎬 Documentary

Ke Kulana He Mahu: Remembering a Sense of Place

⭐ 9.0/10 2001 1h 7m Dir. Brent Anbe

About this movie

Our contemporary political struggle over gay marriage supplies the framework for this engrossing 2001 documentary about the acceptance of homosexuality in native Hawaiian culture. Directors Kathryn Xian and Brent Anbe piece together interviews with historians and gay and trans activists to show that the Hawaiians' communal society included neither the nuclear family nor European sexual morality. In the 19th century tribal chieftains adopted Western law, a failed attempt to protect the country from colonization, but before that most children were raised in extended families and many chiefs had male lovers; the Hawaiian word for gay sex also means “safe sex,” because it precludes conception.

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9.0/10 1 votes

Quick facts

Year
2001
Runtime
1h 7m
TMDB Rating
⭐ 9.0/10
Votes
1
Genre
Documentary
Director
Language
EN
🎭 Documentary 🎬 Brent Anbe

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Questions about Ke Kulana He Mahu: Remembering a Sense of Place

Ke Kulana He Mahu: Remembering a Sense of Place has a runtime of 1h 7m (1 hour and 7 minutes).
Ke Kulana He Mahu: Remembering a Sense of Place was directed by Brent Anbe and released in 2001.
Ke Kulana He Mahu: Remembering a Sense of Place is a Documentary film (2001).
Ke Kulana He Mahu: Remembering a Sense of Place has a TMDB rating of 9.0/10 based on 1 votes.

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