By Ed Garea
The
Scarlet Clue (Monogram, 1945) - Director: Phil
Rosen. Writers: George Callahan (s/p). Based on characters created by
Earl Derr Biggers. Cast: Sidney Toler, Mantin Moreland, Ben Carter,
Benson Fong, Virginia Brissac, Robert Homans, Jack Norton, Janet
Shaw, Helen Devereaux, Victoria Faust, I. Stanford Jolley, &
Charles Wagenheim. B&W, 65 minutes.
In
1942, 20th Century
Fox pulled the plug on its long-running Charlie Chan films. A
combination of below-par scripts and falling box office returns
combined to convince studio execs to discontinue the once highly
popular series. But Charlie Chan wasn’t done - not quite yet.
Sidney Toler, who inherited the role of Chan after Warner Oland’s
death in 1938, shopped the property around until he found a taker in
Monogram Pictures. Beginning with Charlie
Chan in the Secret Service in
1944, Toler would play Chan 11 times for Monogram before his death in
1947. Roland Winters would then take over the role of Chan for six
additional films until the series finally ended in 1949.
While
Fox regarded the Chan series as inexpensive “B” features, they
nevertheless took a certain amount of care with their production. The
plots may have been silly, but the direction (mainly by H. Bruce
Humberston) was excellent, the pacing was sharp, the dialogue crisp
and witty, and a most featured a good cast, including such actors as
Boris Karloff, Ray Milland, Ricardo Cortez, and Cesar Romero. The
result was a charming, comfortable series of films that go down in
Hollywood history as one of the best “B” series, along with MGM’s
Andy Hardy and Dr. Kildare films, and Universal’s Sherlock Holmes
series.
Monogram,
however, was a different story entirely. The studio had neither the
time nor the finances to polish the Chan films. They were simply
B-movies, average at best, nearly unwatchable at worst. The only
change Monogram did make to the existing formula was to provide
Charlie Chan with a chauffeur. Moreland was assigned the role of
Birmingham Brown, Chan’s driver and added comic relief for Number
Three son, Tommy (Fong).
This film opens with Chan now working for the federal government and on
the trail of a spy ring after secret government radar plans, aided by
Captain Flynn (Homans) of the NYPD. Unfortunately, Flynn tails Chan’s
one lead to the ring, a scientist named Rausch (Wagenheim), a little
too closely; the result being that Rausch’s mysterious, unknown
boss has him knocked off.
Chan
discovers that the killer has given the police the slip and escaped
in a car. Getting the license plate number, he traces it to owner
Diane Hall (Devereaux), a radio performer who had reported it stolen
earlier that evening. Accompanied by assistants Birmingham Brown and
son Tommy, Chan visits the Cosmo Radio Center, where he finds a
bloody heelprint identical to that left at the crime scene.
Meanwhile, studio manager Ralph Brett (Jolley) telephones the spies’
ringleader, who uses the Western Union telegram service to advise
Brett to be more careful, lest he meet the same fate as Rausch.
Later,
Chan visits the Hamilton Laboratory, located in the same building as
the radio center. He is told of numerous failed attempts to break in
and steal the radar plans from the laboratory’s safe. Chan informs
then that he had placed phony radar plans in the safe, just in case
the spies should succeed.
Meanwhile,
actress Gloria Bayne (Shaw), having found Brett’s matches in the
stolen car, deduces he’s the killer the police are looking for and
tries to blackmail him into giving her better parts in the future.
Shortly afterward, she is dispatched in front of witnesses, including
Chan; her cause of death unknown. Realizing that Chan is onto him,
Brett asks his boss for help in escaping. He is directed to a service
elevator, where the spy kills him by activating a trap door. Upon
finding Brett’s body on an upper floor (a nice touch, considering
the trap door would send him right down to the basement), Chan has an
impersonator call the spy leader. Thinking Brett is still alive, the
leader once again directs him to the service elevator, where Chan
discovers the trap door.
Chan
goes on to question the people who worked with Brett and Gloria,
including Diane, who is acting in a dreadful soap opera at the
studio. The sponsor of the show, Mrs. Marsh (Brissac) resents Chan’s
intrusions and lets him and the police know in no uncertain terms.
She also spends her time giving the producers a hard time about the
quality of the show, proving to be an obstacle to Chan because of her
obstinacy.
Diane
is the next to go, killed in the same mysterious way as Gloria. She
is followed by performer Willie Rand (Norton), who is killed while
taping a television show after telling Chan that he may have
uncovered some information crucial to the case. Investigating
further, Chan discovers that a poisonous gas, activated by nicotine
when the victim lights a cigarette, is the cause of death for Gloria,
Diane and Willie.
After
a thorough search of the building, the spy leader's office is found.
When the leader returns, Chan, Tommy, Birmingham and the police chase
him through the radio studio, only to see the leader meet death by
the trap door when trying to use the elevator to escape. In the
basement of the building, they discover the dead body of Mrs. Marsh,
the ruthless radio sponsor, who turns out to be the spy leader. Chan
declares the case solved.
The
Scarlet Clue is one of the better Chan films from Monogram,
with a steady hand from director Rosen. The director simply used
the sets from the previous Chan film, The Jade Mask (the
weather chamber was used as a gas chamber in the earlier film).
Rosen, who began his directorial career in 1915, worked mainly for
independent studios such as Invincible, Mascot, and Republic before
settling in at Monogram. In the ‘30s he directed good films like
Dangerous Corner (1934) for RKO, and The
President’s Mystery (1936) for Republic, with a story by
FDR himself (!). Now he was directing B-level assembly line features
for the bottom of the bill. His last feature was The Secret
of St. Ives in 1949 for Columbia. He passed away in 1951.
George
Callahan was a screenwriter who never graduated beyond the B’s
before going into television. He wrote several other Monogram Chans
in addition to this one. The rather unusual murder method - a toxic
gas in a thin glass tube or (as here) a plastic capsule that kills
the victim when the vessel is broken and the gas inhaled - goes back
to Charlie Chan in Egypt (1935), although Callahan
probably took the concept from Monogram’s 1938 Mr. Wong -
Detective. However, he gives it a neat little twist in that the
gas is harmless until the victim decides to smoke, in which case it
interacts with nicotine to become fatal. Since practically everyone
smoked back in the ‘40s, it was not out of the ordinary. But there
are potential ideas in the script that go unrealized. Case in point
is the charwoman Hulda Swenson (Faust, with a really rotten Swedish
accent) for the radio station, who always seems to be around when
something is going down. Is she the killer, or even a suspect? No, at
the end it’s lamely revealed that in fact she is a British agent
working with Chan to uncover the spy ring.
Another
case in point is going to all the trouble to build a prop-laden
laboratory and a studio with both a radio and television station that
end up as merely background scenery. Much could have been done with
these settings, but Monogram is content to use them merely as window
dressing.
What
it lacks in plot, it must make for with characters. Toler is his
usual phlegmatic self, slower than in his Fox days, but not yet
reaching the level when the intestinal cancer that killed him took
hold, and he gets off his aphorisms with his usual verve. One of his
best lines, courtesy of screenwriter Callahan, comes when son Tommy
says he had an idea, “but it’s gone now.” Toler replies,
“Possibly could not stand solitary confinement.” He also comes up
with a quick ad lib after accidentally being shocked by the
electrical equipment in the laboratory.
Fong,
for his part, is adequate as Tommy, getting into trouble as he tries
to solve the case for his father. He began his film career as in
extra in 1936’s Charlie Chan at the Opera. Although
he would play the role of Tommy Chan six times in the Monogram
series, Fong also appeared in such notable films as Thirty
Seconds Over Tokyo (1944), Flower Drum
Song (1961), Girls! Girls! Girls! (with
Elvis Presley, 1962), Our Man Flint (1966),
and S.O.B. (1981) in addition to innumerable guest
appearances on television.
It’s
Moreland, however, who walks away with this movie; not that there’s
much to walk away with. He steals every scene he’s in, as his
quick, witty repartee keeps us in the movie, especially when it
begins to lag, which is to say, often. He also has a couple of
splendid scenes with nightclub partner Carter, as the two of them
perform a hilarious double-talk routine where one finishes the
other’s sentence. It’s every bit as good as Abbott and Costello’s
”Who’s on First?” routine, and the tragedy is that we can only
see it in a B-picture from a Poverty Row studio. Moreland, who
appeared in all 15 Monogram Chans, saw his move career end when the
series concluded in 1949. The emerging civil rights movement and its
subsequent shift in America’s consciousness caused Moreland’s
humor to be assigned to the trash bin as stereotyping and demeaning.
It wasn’t until the 60s that he began to work regularly, appearing
with such artists as Bill Cosby, Diahann Carroll and Melvin Van
Peebles.
All
in all, The Scarlet Clue is a decent time-passer,
especially for hardcore Charlie Chan fans. It tends to be rather slow
and dull at times, but there are some exciting moments and plot
devices that should keep our interest. An entertaining chapter in the
Chan saga, though well below the level of the Fox Chan movies.
The Monogram Chans get little or no respect because of the lingering prejudice against everything Monogram, so it's nice to read an appreciative survey of this film. The methods of murder and the gadgetry in the George Callahan scripts appear pretty outlandish, but no more so than the Fox entries with Toler and Warner Oland. Most people seem to like THE SHANGHAI COBRA (1945) best when it comes to the Monogram Chans, but I find myself coming back to THE SCARLET CLUE.
ReplyDeleteFrom Ed:
DeleteI agree with you about the lack of respect given the Monogram Chans. When Sidney Toler brought the series to Monogram, the first Chans were very good; in fact, on a par or better than the later films for Fox. THE SCARLET CLUE is among my favorite Monogram Chans. I also like the addition of Mantan Moreland to the cast, as it provided an entertaining boost. As time went on, the films inevitably declined in quality, but were still very watchable.
I also agree with you about the lack of respect given Monogram in general. It may comfort you to know that while American critics were deriding their product as inferior, French director Jean-Pierre Melville and critics Francois Truffaut and Jean-Luc Godard, who later directed some of the most influential films of the French New Wave, were strongly influenced by Monogram's style. Godard dedicated his first film to Monogram, and Truffaut's second film could have passed for a Monogram product. To ignore this little studio is to ignore its strong influence on French cinema.
I love most of the Charlie Chan films...and like the rest. The main ingredient in all of the Monogram films was Toler. As long as he was on....the film worked. The Shanghai Cobra, The Jade Mask, The Scarlet Clue, The Chinese Cat, etc. ...all were entertaining. The biggest drawback to me ....were the obvious budget cutbacks in production.... but some of the story lines were outstanding. Sidney, as must we all, aged. Only when he became ill did the quality drop off. But for his hard work ....I applaud Sidney with highest regards. The Monogram Chan films, IMO, were excellent!
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