Charlie Chan's Chance

1932 film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Charlie Chan's Chance is a 1932 American pre-Code murder mystery film, the third to star Warner Oland as detective Charlie Chan. It is based on the 1928 novel Behind That Curtain by Earl Derr Biggers, who also contributed to the film. The film is considered to be lost.[1]

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Charlie Chan's Chance
Directed byJohn G. Blystone
Written byEarl Derr Biggers (novel and suggestions)
Barry Conners
Philip Klein
Produced byJoseph H. August
StarringWarner Oland
Alexander Kirkland
H. B. Warner
CinematographyJoseph H. August
Edited byAlex Troffey
Production
company
Distributed byFox Film Corporation
Release date
  • January 1932 (1932-01)
Running time
73 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
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Plot

Charlie Chan is attending a police convention in New York City; he is an intended murder victim here, but avoids death by chance. To find his would-be-killer(s), Charlie must outguess police reps from both Scotland Yard and New York City Police.

Cast

Cast notes:

Critical reception

Film critic Mordaunt Hall wrote in The New York Times that Chan "again proves himself to be the king-pin of criminologists," and that although the story is "somewhat confused," it has "some ingenious scenes, particularly one in which a vengeful Oriental hopes to kill Charlie Chan, but is foiled by a cat." Hall further noted that "Oland is the mainstay of this picture."[2]

See also

References

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