Back in the late 1860s, there was a great demand for copra (the dried meat of coconuts) in order to obtain its oil. Small islands such as Yap in the South Pacific, were fought over by trading companies to get exclusive rights to these coconuts. In His Majesty O'Keefe (1954), Captain David O'Keefe gets caught in the copra fever and decides to defy the large trading companies of Germany and Spain and claim the island of Yap for his own mercenary ends.
O'Keefe (Burt Lancaster) first comes to the island when he is washed ashore after a band of mutineers toss him off his own ship. He sees all those palm trees on Yap as his opportunity to make his fortune but the people of the island don't want to work. They see no need to.
Herr Tetins (Andre Morell), the representative for a German trading company, has his office on the island and becomes good friends with O'Keefe. He warns him that there is no way to make the people work for copra, but O'Keefe finds a way. He obtains his own ship from Hong Kong and helps them quarry for Rai stones on the island Palau, over 200 miles away. Normally, the Yap natives traveled in outriggers to this island, quarried the stone, and then sailed back with many men dying along the way. O'Keefe makes it easier for them to quarry the stone and transports the men and their stones back to Yap in his ship. The people are grateful to him until he tells them that they must harvest copra because they are indebted to him now. His trickery enrages Boogulroo, one of the leaders of the island, who becomes a threat to him later on.
His Majesty O'Keefe was released by Warner Brothers and was co-produced by Burt Lancaster who paid to have the picture filmed on the beautiful island of Fiji. It's an enjoyable "Boy's Own Adventure" style yarn complete with fistfights, island uprisings, and even the beautiful native girl (Joan Rice). The island scenes never become monotonous because O'Keefe keeps making trips back to Hong Kong, where his partner Mr. Tang (Philip Ahn) resides. Lancaster was known for his athleticism, and he certainly had it on display in this film, climbing up coconut trees or swinging from high ropes.Dimitri Tiomkin composed a fitting theme to the picture and a great supporting cast (including Benson Fong and Abraham Sofaer) make this an overall thoroughly enjoyable film, one with a good lesson about greed.
Click here to read about the real captain David O'Keefe in this Smithsonian Magazine article from 2011.










