Feature version of the 1936 serial "Shadow of Chinatown."Feature version of the 1936 serial "Shadow of Chinatown."Feature version of the 1936 serial "Shadow of Chinatown."
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Bela Lugosi
- Victor Poten
- (archive footage)
Bruce Bennett
- Martin Andrews
- (archive footage)
- (as Herman Brix)
Joan Barclay
- Joan Whiting
- (archive footage)
Luana Walters
- Sonya Rokoff
- (archive footage)
Maurice Liu
- Willy Fu
- (archive footage)
Charles King
- Grogan (a thug)
- (archive footage)
William Buchanan
- Healy (a thug)
- (archive footage)
Forrest Taylor
- Police Capt. Waters
- (archive footage)
John Cowell
- Willie
- (archive footage)
James B. Leong
- Wong
- (archive footage)
Henry T. Tung
- Dr. Wu
- (archive footage)
George Chan
- Old Luce
- (archive footage)
Moy Ming
- Wong's Brother
- (archive footage)
John Elliott
- Ship's Captain
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Harrison Greene
- Major Foley
- (uncredited)
Henry Hall
- Dr. Zander
- (uncredited)
Robert F. Hill
- Rooftop Fight Spectator
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Merchants in the Chinatown district are targeted by evil European business people intent on taking over their territory. The obvious answer? To hire a mad scientist of course! An inquisitive male/female duo investigates and try to thwart the dastardly plan.
Shadow of Chinatown was edited into feature length from a fifteen part serial of the same name. It's only real selling point nowadays is its star actor Bela Lugosi. But before anyone gets too excited about this, it has to be said that it's a very lacklustre performance from the Hungarian star. Even by 1936 he was slumming it in cheap undistinguished b-pictures like this one. I've seen a few films from various eras that were made from editing episodes of serials together and, with few exceptions, they usually end up being really poor. This one is no exception to this general rule and ultimately is a pretty forgettable viewing experience.
Shadow of Chinatown was edited into feature length from a fifteen part serial of the same name. It's only real selling point nowadays is its star actor Bela Lugosi. But before anyone gets too excited about this, it has to be said that it's a very lacklustre performance from the Hungarian star. Even by 1936 he was slumming it in cheap undistinguished b-pictures like this one. I've seen a few films from various eras that were made from editing episodes of serials together and, with few exceptions, they usually end up being really poor. This one is no exception to this general rule and ultimately is a pretty forgettable viewing experience.
Feature version of a serial of the same name has Bela Lugosi turning tables on a woman who hired him to help with her evil plans in Chinatown while a reported and her beau hunt down the villains.
One of the few things worse than this movie is the full length serial version. That monstrosity put me to sleep with its wild over length (15 chapters with enough plot for 2) and the same poor production values that make this film just as bad. I've seen almost every sound serial ever made, but the original serial was a chore and a half to get through and I never finished it (its one of the few). I have no idea what possessed me to try the feature version other than, perhaps selective amnesia about the original. Here the story unfolds in approximately one fifth the time but its a hopeless mess with an attempt to get a good portion of the "good bits" into it. Making matters worse is the cheapness of the film, this was an independent production and had a limited budget. There's tons of stock footage, almost no music and a technical quality (especially the sound) thats lacking.
In the "of note" column, and its not really a good thing, is the fact that this stands as one of the worst performances Bela Lugosi ever gave. I'm not even sure its a performance. Even in the final days Bela was never this disconnected to what he was doing. Its mind numbingly awful. Fortunately he's not alone since a good many of the other actors are clearly collecting a pay check not to act. Herman Brix, who would soon change his name to Bruce Bennett and move on to better things does give a performance, even if its phoned in.
Bad film lovers may want to see this on fast forward, but otherwise I'd avoid it at all costs.
One of the few things worse than this movie is the full length serial version. That monstrosity put me to sleep with its wild over length (15 chapters with enough plot for 2) and the same poor production values that make this film just as bad. I've seen almost every sound serial ever made, but the original serial was a chore and a half to get through and I never finished it (its one of the few). I have no idea what possessed me to try the feature version other than, perhaps selective amnesia about the original. Here the story unfolds in approximately one fifth the time but its a hopeless mess with an attempt to get a good portion of the "good bits" into it. Making matters worse is the cheapness of the film, this was an independent production and had a limited budget. There's tons of stock footage, almost no music and a technical quality (especially the sound) thats lacking.
In the "of note" column, and its not really a good thing, is the fact that this stands as one of the worst performances Bela Lugosi ever gave. I'm not even sure its a performance. Even in the final days Bela was never this disconnected to what he was doing. Its mind numbingly awful. Fortunately he's not alone since a good many of the other actors are clearly collecting a pay check not to act. Herman Brix, who would soon change his name to Bruce Bennett and move on to better things does give a performance, even if its phoned in.
Bad film lovers may want to see this on fast forward, but otherwise I'd avoid it at all costs.
Originally, "Shadow of Chinatown" was a four hour plus serial and was then condensed to the length of a full-length film...much, much shorter at only 71 minutes. Now you would THINK this would make the film fast- paced and interesting...and you'd be thinking wrong! It still manages to be sluggish and dull...and probably not worth your time. Imagine how bad it would be watching the UNCUT serial version!
The Dragon Lady wants to ruin the local Chinese-American merchants in order to get rich. So, she hires the crazy Eurasian chemist/inventor, Poten (Bela Lugosi) to do his evil best and create a tong war.
The film is filled with faux Chinese folks who are obviously just American actors made up to look kinda Chinese. This was sadly the norm at the time but doesn't help the film at all. It also is full of terrible acting...so bad that leading man(?) Herman Brix ('Bruce Bennett') is far less wooden than the rest. Overall, a difficult to watch and impossible to enjoy film. You could EASILY do better!!
The Dragon Lady wants to ruin the local Chinese-American merchants in order to get rich. So, she hires the crazy Eurasian chemist/inventor, Poten (Bela Lugosi) to do his evil best and create a tong war.
The film is filled with faux Chinese folks who are obviously just American actors made up to look kinda Chinese. This was sadly the norm at the time but doesn't help the film at all. It also is full of terrible acting...so bad that leading man(?) Herman Brix ('Bruce Bennett') is far less wooden than the rest. Overall, a difficult to watch and impossible to enjoy film. You could EASILY do better!!
Shadow of Chinatown (1936)
** (out of 4)
Feature version
European businessmen want the China trades shut down so they hire a madman (Bela Lugosi) to destroy Chinatown. This was originally a 15-part serial but this here is the feature version of that and it isn't too bad. I haven't seen the serial version but the feature runs pretty fast, although you're left with a lot of stuff that doesn't make sense due to all the editing that was done. Sometimes these feature versions can be good but this isn't one of them. Another bad thing is the performance from Lugosi who really sleepwalks through his role. Had he gone over the top then that would have made the film somewhat better.
** (out of 4)
Feature version
European businessmen want the China trades shut down so they hire a madman (Bela Lugosi) to destroy Chinatown. This was originally a 15-part serial but this here is the feature version of that and it isn't too bad. I haven't seen the serial version but the feature runs pretty fast, although you're left with a lot of stuff that doesn't make sense due to all the editing that was done. Sometimes these feature versions can be good but this isn't one of them. Another bad thing is the performance from Lugosi who really sleepwalks through his role. Had he gone over the top then that would have made the film somewhat better.
"A group of Chinese merchants and importers are the target of a European import firm that uses a beautiful Eurasian girl and a mad scientist as the means to put them out of business. A newspaper reporter and her dashing boyfriend learn of the problems the Chinatown businessmen are dealing with and decide to investigate," according to the DVD sleeve's synopsis.
"Shadow of Chinatown" is a feature length version of the recently released 15-part serial; its shortened length is a welcome digestion, considering the lack of quality on display.
Super hypnotist Bela Lugosi (as Victor Poten) is more stupefying than hypnotic. Though Mr. Lugosi gets top billing, Bruce Bennett stars (as Martin "Marty" Andrews); and, he is a serviceable serial hero. Joan Barclay and Luana Walters add feminine wiles. The players appear to have blocked their scenes, and know their lines well enough for a quick read through. Mr. Bennett has some good fighting scenes; for example, the one atop a building, with Charles King. There is a semi-cool car chase, with 1930s automobiles and an old "Stop"/"Go" traffic signal.
"Shadow of Chinatown" is a feature length version of the recently released 15-part serial; its shortened length is a welcome digestion, considering the lack of quality on display.
Super hypnotist Bela Lugosi (as Victor Poten) is more stupefying than hypnotic. Though Mr. Lugosi gets top billing, Bruce Bennett stars (as Martin "Marty" Andrews); and, he is a serviceable serial hero. Joan Barclay and Luana Walters add feminine wiles. The players appear to have blocked their scenes, and know their lines well enough for a quick read through. Mr. Bennett has some good fighting scenes; for example, the one atop a building, with Charles King. There is a semi-cool car chase, with 1930s automobiles and an old "Stop"/"Go" traffic signal.
Did you know
- TriviaThis film is one of over 200 titles in the list of independent feature films made available for television presentation by Advance Television Pictures announced in Motion Picture Herald 4 April 1942. At this time, television broadcasting was in its infancy, almost totally curtailed by the advent of World War II, and would not continue to develop until 1945-1946. Because of poor documentation (feature films were often not identified by title in conventional sources) no record has yet been found of its initial television broadcast. Its earliest documented telecast in New York City took place Sunday 25 June 1950 on WATV (Channel 13).
- ConnectionsEdited from Shadow of Chinatown (1936)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 11m(71 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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