Shadows Over Chinatown

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Directed byTerry O. Morse
Written byRaymond L. Schrock
Ralph Bettinson (uncredited)
Based onCharacters created
by Earl Derr Biggers
Produced byJames S. Burkett
Shadows Over Chinatown
Directed byTerry O. Morse
Written byRaymond L. Schrock
Ralph Bettinson (uncredited)
Based onCharacters created
by Earl Derr Biggers
Produced byJames S. Burkett
StarringSidney Toler
Victor Sen Yung
Mantan Moreland
CinematographyWilliam A. Sickner
Edited byRalph Dixon
Music byEdward J. Kay
Production
company
Distributed byMonogram Pictures
Release date
  • June 27, 1946 (1946-06-27)
Running time
64 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Shadows Over Chinatown is a 1946 American mystery film directed by Terry O. Morse. The film stars Sidney Toler as Charlie Chan, and features Victor Sen Yung as Number Two Son Jimmy and Mantan Moreland as Chan's chauffeur.

Late one night, Charlie Chan is shot at a San Francisco bus station. While on a missing-persons case, he investigates a series of sensational slayings—publicized as "the torso murders," in which only the victim's torso remains at the crime scene. Chan is assisted officially by detective Jeff Hay and police captain Allen, and unofficially by his Number Two Son Jimmy and chauffeur Birmingham Brown.

Cast

Production

The working title was The Mandarin Secret.[1] The Shadows Over Chinatown title had been coined in 1940 for Doomed to Die, one of Monogram's Mr. Wong mysteries, but discarded at that time.[2] Doomed to Die was written by British author Ralph Bettinson, who had also written the 1939 British film The Torso Murder Mystery. The theme of The Torso Murder Mystery[3] is reused in Shadows over Chinatown, although Bettinson receives no screen credit.

The 72-year-old Sidney Toler had been diagnosed with terminal cancer, but insisted on continuing his commitment to the film series. The studio accommodated him by granting him prolonged breaks, and staging the scenes so as not to tax his strength. According to Mantan Moreland, "Mr. Toler couldn't stand for very long and had to rest a lot. I told him he should be in a hospital. And he said to me, 'Manny, if I quit the picture I'll put all these people out of work.'"[4] Toler is seated during much of the film, and the character being wounded spared the actor from extended movement. Although Toler remains the central actor, some of the action is diverted to Jimmy (Victor Sen Yung) and Birmingham (Mantan Moreland). To lengthen the running time of the film, a two-minute prologue was added, detailing the workings of a bureau of missing persons. None of the film's featured players appeared in this sequence.

Reception

References

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