Every year for the last few I dream of going to Tiki Oasis but never make it and every year when it ends I find myself thinking, "Maybe next year..." This year's event, which ended yesterday, had an 80s theme which I'm not sure I get but the following article I'm posting tries to explain it:
Showing posts with label Tiki Oasis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tiki Oasis. Show all posts
Monday, August 12, 2019
Tiki Oasis 2018 - South Seas Cinema
Monday, August 12, 2019
Ok, I realize I'm a year late in posting this and I thought I had at least mentioned Tiki Oasis last year but I guess that is not the case. Anyway, I have a love of old movies but I haven't seen too many with a South Seas theme except for South Pacific.
The following is information from the Tiki Oasis website regarding last year's event:
"Our homage to “South Pacific” was launched with the help of the Los Angeles based group “South Seas Cinema.” South Seas Cinema is a motion picture genre that is set on tropical islands of the Pacific. More specifically the isles of Oceania (Polynesia, Melanesia and Micronesia), or using the “Hollywood” definition – any tropical Oceanic isle."
"If you can’t travel to a tropical paradise, at least you can watch it on the big screen and imagine you are there. Like Tiki bars, Hollywood recreated an environment of the South Seas for the similar purpose of allowing the landlocked urbanite to escape the concrete jungle, if only for a couple hours. While visiting Tiki bars and Polynesian supper clubs, Americans cast themselves as the stars of their own South Seas movie. The Hollywood stories (Hurricane, Mutiny on the Bounty, South Pacific), the film sets (bamboo huts and waterfalls), the special effects (like backdrops and dioramas), all enabled the creation of the same environment in the Tiki Lounge."
"The SSC genre is anchored by documentaries like Jack London’s Adventures in the South Sea Islands (1913) or Moana (1926) or Kon-Tiki (1950) that give a glimpse of Western man’s excursions into the Pacific Islands. It also includes action movies such as The Hurricane (1937), Wake of the Red Witch (1948), or She Gods of Shark Reef (1958)."
"And musicals such as Waikiki Wedding (1937), Song of the Islands (1942), Pagan Love Song (1950), or Elvis’ 1960s Hawaiian trilogy of Blue Hawaii; Girls, Girls, Girls; and Paradise Hawaiian Style plus dozens more movies that ensured the islands were in our ears as well as our eyes and our hearts."
"The pinnacle of South Seas Cinema is the Rodgers and Hammerstein movie musical South Pacific (1958), from the James A. Michener book that dealt with Colonialism and racism, as well as the classic Romanticism of idyllic tropical islands."
"We were honored to host esteemed members of the South Seas Cinema organization including the premiere Hawaiian Pop Culture historian DeSoto Brown’s “Hollywood’s Pacific War”; Ed Rampell’s “Sex in South Seas Cinema”; Matthew Locey’s “South Seas Musicals”; Luis I. Reyes’ “Hollywood Icons of Tiki Cinema.”"
"We had so many entertaining seminars one could barely see them all! Ron Ferrell’s “The Golden Age of South Seas Cinema”; Kathy Zuckerman & director Brian Gillogly present “Accidental Icon”; as well as presentations from: adam foshko, bailey pryor, Beachbum Berry, Blair Reynolds, Brandon Kleyla, Brother Cleve, Bbop Burnie, Charles Phoenix, Daniele Dalla Palo, Darren Bradley, David Marley, Di’Lovely, Domenic Priore, Eric Hainline, Eric October, Eve Bergeron (Trader Vic’s), Humuhumu Trott, Jason Henderson, Jason T. Smith, Jeff Cioletti, Jo Weldon, Karen Finlay, Kelly Merrell, Kiki Lovelace, King Kukulele, Lola Demure, Mike Skinner, Miss Mia (Denmark), Nani Maka / Randy Avon, Nicole Pacheco, Ram Udwin, Richard Greene, and Stefan Kéry (Sweden). We featured the San Diego premiere of a new film by Iguana Productions “Dr. Trimrose’s Cannibalistic Sex-Crazed Blood Island of the Tiki-Bot”."
"The Tiki Oasis lobby featured a South Seas Cinema poster exhibit. “Pagan Island” star Nani Maka hosted a showing of the film, complete with Q&A and a hula dance! A WWII uniform exhibit by Anthony Ardisone also gave a nod to the movie “South Pacific.” And the true stars of SSC, Tikis that have appeared in films, were on exhibit on loan from classic decor suppliers Oceanic Arts!"
Friday, August 11, 2017
Tiki Oasis 2017 - International Intrigue
From the Tiki Oasis website:
"Intrigue abounds at Tiki Oasis this year. Imagine sampans drifting across the Banda Sea. Expect spies and their agencies to conduct counterintelligence resulting in entertainment for all. Our agents have traveled the world bringing back art, rum, and entertainment from countries around the globe.
You might envision yourself to be Marco Polo traveling the Silk Road; executing an impossible mission as an agent of T.I.K.I. en route to Constantinople via The Orient Express; touring your Jensen Interceptor or a Monteverdi High Speed over the Alps; riding a Rickshaw through Tokyo chasing agents of A.L.O.H.A.; crossing The Black Sea, the Red Sea, the Caspian Sea, or the Bay of Bengal; or hopscotching the globe from Stockholm to New Amsterdam to Shanghai. If you seek International Intrigue and aspire to join a den of spies, then Tiki Oasis in San Diego is your destination. Don appropriate duds, grab your favorite Tiki mug, hop in your hot air balloon and join us for three days and four nights of fun."
Friday, August 19, 2016
Tiki Oasis 2016 - Party On Monster Island
Tiki Oasis began yesterday with the theme Party On Monster Island. Not sure what monsters and tiki culture have to do with each other? Here's what their web site says:
"How do Monsters and Tiki go together? From rubber Godzillas tearing apart the South Seas to surfin, Go Go dancing Frankenstein and Wolfman, creatures have always been lurking in paradise. This year Tiki Oasis celebrates our monster brethren from King Kong (1933), Godzilla and Creature From the Black Lagoon (1954) to the famous monsters of Hollywood (1932-1950s)."
"Like lovers of Polynesian Pop, many of the classic monsters we know share the Modern Primitive ethos. Some were discovered in mysterious, exotic, tropical lands but others originated in urban areas and frolicked with average humans."
"While Godzilla loved to visit major metropolis' like Tokyo he lives on and originates from Monster Island."
"The original king of the jungle King Kong was a modern primitive and could be seen cavorting on major architectural landmarks when he wasn't picking up on chicks in his hometown. Even the Creature from the Black Lagoon left the Amazon and visited the U.S. The classic city monsters made famous in films (The Mummy, Frankenstein, Dracula, Wolfman, The Invisible Man) later got hip to the times and joined the beach/dance party scene. Not only did monsters leave their remote islands and come to the beaches, the Hollywood monster crowd there their own shindig."
Seems like a stretch to me me, but, hey, tiki culture something of a stretch itself, so, sure, why not?
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