IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
On a freighter going from San Francisco to Shanghai Mr. Moto solves mysteries caused by a gang of smugglers.On a freighter going from San Francisco to Shanghai Mr. Moto solves mysteries caused by a gang of smugglers.On a freighter going from San Francisco to Shanghai Mr. Moto solves mysteries caused by a gang of smugglers.
Sig Ruman
- Nicolas Marloff
- (as Sig Rumann)
Frederik Vogeding
- Curio Dealer
- (as Fredrik Vogeding)
Philip Ahn
- Switchboard Operator
- (uncredited)
Richard Alexander
- Ivan - Doorman
- (uncredited)
Lloyd Allen
- Nightclub Trombonist
- (uncredited)
William A. Boardway
- Ship Passenger
- (uncredited)
Dudley Brooks
- Nightclub Pianist
- (uncredited)
George 'Red' Callender
- Nightclub Bassist
- (uncredited)
Marcello Estorres
- Ship Passenger
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaMr. Moto's hangover remedy: lemon juice, pinch of salt, 1 egg, 4 dashes orange bitters, 1 jigger Worcestershire sauce, 2 tsp sugar, absinthe, fill to top with gin. Stir. Drink.
- GoofsWhen Mr. Moto photographs Gloria in Honolulu, she is looking directly into the camera, but when he shows the photograph to the police chief in Shanghai she is looking away from the camera at Bob who is obscuring half the photograph even though he was standing beside Mr. Moto, not in front him, and thus should not be in the photograph at all.
- Quotes
Kentaro Moto: Half the world spends its time laughing at the other half, and both are fools.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Cinema's Exiles: From Hitler to Hollywood (2009)
Featured review
This was the first of the eight Mr. Moto movies but not necessarily the best of the early group, although not bad. I thought the second and third ones were the best of the first grouping of four. This got bogged down a little too much early on with Thomas Beck's infatuation with Virginia Field ("Gloria Danton"). In subsequent Moto movies, the romance angle was lesser and Moto featured more, which is better. However, some of the sappy guy's lust for his girl turns out to tie in with the head crook, so all is not lost in having to sit through the dull romance spots. (Dull because the dialog was affected, especially Beck's as "Bob Hitchings," the son of the shipping magnate and the man pursuing Gloria.
When the script featured the crime angle (smuggling), as in the beginning and in the last 25 minutes, it's interesting and gets involving. The long break in the middle of the film makes it easy for the viewer to lose track what exactly is going on here: who is smuggling what. We have to piece things together again when the action re-gains in the last third of the film. There is an interesting twist near the end and we hear Mr. Moto sum everything up a la Charlie Chan.
The exotic setting is Shanghai and viewers can enjoy the hectic sets with lots of people running to and fro; obnoxious British and Americans making racist statements to the locals, treating them as insignificant young kids and, of course, all the Asians played by the Anglos. That was part of '30s Hollywood, and you just accept it.
The last 40 percent of this movie makes up for any shortcomings and makes the viewing worthwhile. Mr. Moto is definitely one cool guy, who seems to have it all - except height. Peter Lorre was just great playing this role and I hope I get the opportunity to see all eight feature films in the series. I always enjoy his disguises, too, even though they don't fool us for a minute!
When the script featured the crime angle (smuggling), as in the beginning and in the last 25 minutes, it's interesting and gets involving. The long break in the middle of the film makes it easy for the viewer to lose track what exactly is going on here: who is smuggling what. We have to piece things together again when the action re-gains in the last third of the film. There is an interesting twist near the end and we hear Mr. Moto sum everything up a la Charlie Chan.
The exotic setting is Shanghai and viewers can enjoy the hectic sets with lots of people running to and fro; obnoxious British and Americans making racist statements to the locals, treating them as insignificant young kids and, of course, all the Asians played by the Anglos. That was part of '30s Hollywood, and you just accept it.
The last 40 percent of this movie makes up for any shortcomings and makes the viewing worthwhile. Mr. Moto is definitely one cool guy, who seems to have it all - except height. Peter Lorre was just great playing this role and I hope I get the opportunity to see all eight feature films in the series. I always enjoy his disguises, too, even though they don't fool us for a minute!
- ccthemovieman-1
- Jan 23, 2008
- Permalink
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Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Mr. Moto und der Schmugglerring
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 10 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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