Help! I'm addicted to the Orland/Toler Chan films! I can't stop watching them over and over again along with the Karloff Mr. Wong films, although Keye Luke did his best as Wong in one film. I may have to start a Charlie Chan addiction support group lol.
The Writers of these Charlie Chan Movie, Did not get the Credit that they deserved etc.Some of the best Stories etc. Nothing on today except Columbo can match it etc.
Also let's not forget the famous fictional Japanese secret agent ( Mr.Moto ) created by the American author John P. Marquand portrayed by Peter Lorre between 1937 and 1939. Really worth a look see.
@@mizpahboy7513 It occurred to me only yesterday when I read your comment that there are TWO of him, the other one being Mr. Wong (probably Chinese?) played by Boris Karloff and created by an American writer. Don't get uptight at my ignorance! People just come away sometimes with impressions alone, very often incorrect impressions. I didn't even know a thing about Charlie Chan until late 2019, except vague impressions: that he was a private detective, had a good-looking nephew or son or something, who, interacting with a hilarious black chauffeur, many years ago made my daughter, 9 or 11 or so, nearly choke herself laughing whenever she was able to catch a Charlie Chan flick on TV late at night. She is a great laugher, like some people just are, and Charlie Chan movies used to send her over the edge. I'm going to search and watch Moto and Wong very soon. Thank you for pointing them out, I can't wait.
@@mizpahboy7513 try the actual Mr Moto novels excellent. i had five in one volume .. lost w my library and home gentrification in miami ruthless the marlow / "operative" novels also Excellent ! one Operative (name Never used!) became kurosawa's Yojimbo which became For a few dollars more... if i remember correctly Yojimbo was Three Channel audio. ! the War "killed" Mr Moto...
I remember watching these on Saturday afternoons on our local TV station with my mom. They always made her feel nostalgic for the days she had originally watched them in theaters. Now they make me feel nostalgic for the times I sat there and watched with my mom and she reminisced about her childhood.
Toshia Mori, credited as Shia Jung, plays the contortionist who was the love interest of Charlie Chan’s son. Her career was not too long but she was always memorable in her roles.
Great classic clean movie... 85 years old and still entertaining! You don’t need a lot of flash and special effects when you have a great story. Well done 👍
Thanks for posting! I deeply enjoy the Chan films w/Orland & Luke although Toler & Moreland are great too. Have watched same so often find humble self using Chan-isms in daily speech: "Thank you so much", "Contradiction, Please", "Wise fly stay out of gravy", et al. Great films! Strangely soothing.
What's always stands out with this Chan flick, is that it's the longest duration, for one to see the whole family. And as such, especially with the Brasno's appearing, the genuine looks of amazement by the smaller Chan children, when looking at them- (Brasno's) priceless!
My thoughts exactly. Usually, all we get is a picture of them. In this wonderful movie, we not only see them, but they are all part of the show with lines! Fantastic!
I remember watching CC alternating with Sherlock Holmes movies on Sundays WGN, channel 9 from 12 noon to 1:30 PM. Really enjoyed them. Thank you for such excellent films. Appreciate their great quality.
As time goes by and getting older by the minute, I find myself watching films from a bygone era. It's great to find all the old gem's.i do like to watch charle Chan movies a specially the ones with Warner Orland and Sydney toller in. Brilliant y👍😁😊🤩
Watched all the Charlie Chan movies when much younger and they are even better now! Thank you for these special gems. They don’t make movies this marvelous anymore!
Charlie Chan never gets old IMHO. Once I watch them all. I take a bit of a break, than start enjoying them all over again. TY for sharing. Much Appreciated Many Blessings 🙏🇺🇸
Thank you so much for bringing these Charlie Chan movies to YT. As a teenager & then young lady, I was able to watch a couple of the Oland/Toler "Charlie Chan" movies on "The Late Show" TV program in the mid to late 1960's. Unfortunately, I was only able to watch 3 "Charlie Chan" movies back then; I really appreciate being able to watch the others here in YT. Thank you.
The only times I know are in "The Black Camel" (1932,) this film "Charlie Chan the the Circus" (1936,) and "Charlie Chan in Honolulu" (1938.) I don't suppose they used the same actors from the 1932 movie for this one, however.
Poirot and Chan would have gotten along beautifully. :) really a good film. (some of them are so full of holes and just plain silly stuff.). Key Luke is my favorite son. he had a great sense of timing and humor. :)
I agree. A classic, expertly-produced gem. Contradiction, please. Apparently you don't screen that many movies and series because there are some amazing recent productions you've clearly missed. I recommend reviewing web pages specializing in the best of a given genre, like mysteries, and pages listing Oscar nominees/winners. In the past decade alone there have been at least 30 expertly-produced, directed, written, acted, shot, and edited films well worth your while.
maybe the best one to actually see all the children. There was the meal scene in "Charlie Chan In Honolulu', which showed a full table, with the eldest daughter at the hospital, and of course no.2 son Jimmy, while no.1 son Lee was off at college. I love the emphasis by Charlie, on college for his older children. The best I can deduce, is that Jmmy and Lee attended USC, while the eldest daughter has no mention in any of the movies, of attending college. Actually, she's giving birth in Honolulu- so who knows about her college situation. Fun though, to try and connect dots, even if they're not meant to be.
The early on dancing from the dwarfs was sensational. They ended right on the final beat. Whoever cast for this film was spot on brilliant [except for the gorilla!].
The gorilla is, of course, an actor in a suit. His name was Charlie Gemora and, like most gorilla men, he built his own suits (he was a sculptor, painter and designer). He performed in movies with Laurel & Hardy, the Marx Bros., Abbott & Costello... He was the Martian in the 1953 movie "War of the worlds" and made the Martian "suit" as well... He had a very long and amazing career. His daughter made a documentary about him, which I highly recommend, "Charlie Gemora: uncredited".
One of the top ten episodes I think. Like a circus dream. All gone, ghosts on digital engrams. Confirmation that the past isn't just an echo but real. Valid, wonderful!
It's got to be better than my "Thank you veddy much," adopted by my OCD from that TAXI show on television that I almost never even watched. I say we ALL do what Jerry Kokich does, OMG I would so love to see it, and get tickled over the reactions he gets. Imagine if hundreds of us did it.
Same here along with several other Chan-isms including "Contradiction please", "So sorry", "Sponge have holes but it holds water", "Wise fly avoid gravy" & wat too many others lol.
I've been watching ( charlie chan) ever since i was a little girl with my family when i was growing up Most my are gone but I still watch the movies i'm soon to be 69 and I still enjoy watching all the black and white movies Thank you for sharing your videos with all of us
📺 oh yeah, now I remember watching Charlie Chan movies as a young kid with my grandfather. Now I'm like in my middle-aged. I actually enjoy these type of movies more than the ones that they show on television today. These Charlie Chan ones were great to watch and enjoyable. I just wish they still had them on regular tv yet. It was either saturday or sunday afternoons that they played them. can't exactly remember. Nevertheless I enjoy them and I had fun watching these types of movies.
@Larry Carmody CMD about 415 years ago robert cawdrey compiled a book called a dictionary which defines words for people. Open it uo. It doesn t give you cancer
These movies have a special charm, no doubt, and I adore them for the unique gems they are. However, there have been many 100's or more wonderful films made since which are neither tawdry as one poster stated nor otherwise unfit for viewing. In fact, they're great & a few even feature brilliant detectives and other characters of a unique, memorable nature. A few of 100's of examples include Murder on the Orient Express (both the 2017 & 1974 versions), Clue, Knives Out, Murder Mystery, Gosford Park, and that's just a few recent mystery films of note. Check an Oscar nominees/winners page or a review site for additional gems waiting to be discovered.:)
alexa penn Seems like they made (pretty much) the entire movie such a wonderful family ideal environment --- aside from the murder stuff however even Son #2 is "helpful" in hlping "POPS"! Such a fun movie though.....lol cheers alexa From Gordon and Leona PS Have you watched any ther Charlie Chan
alexa penn : I agree 100% . Warner Oland was the serious , quite polite Detective. I prefer Oland to Toler but love them both ! Toler movies with Birmingham Brown and Brother or Carter were great but totally different styles. This episode in particular is notable for many reasons . Not only do we see Chan's wife , she also speaks . Many Circus characters are in the movie " Freaks " . A movie that terrorized many and stopped being shown . To me , all Chan movies are classics .
@@filmactorgordwelke This is #1 son Lee, played by Keye Luke. #2 son, Jimmy, played by Victor Sen Yung, became Charlie's clumsy-but-keen assistant after Warner Oland's death and Sidney Toler took over as the titular Chan. In the films they explained that Lee went off to art college. Jimmy fancied himself a detective but could never live up to Lee's abilities, which never fully matched but were much closer to Charlie's.
You mean the two little people who did that dance at the beginning? I thought they were just children, maybe about 12 or 13, who were trained dancers. Their voices sounded different though. They could not have been dwarves. They might have been midgets. But I think they were children playing a role. Very very good dancers.
Good movie. Number #? son didn't annoy as much as usual. Bring Charlie back. Better than the crap on TV now. Thank you RU-vid and Netflix. I'm seriously thinking of ditching my TV connection.
I haven't had cable in 4 years. As a huge sports fan, it's the only time I miss it. But it was either nearly a three hundred dollar a month cable bill or my sports. Fuck you, Comcast!
toroon01 001 got rid of cable about 5 years ago & I haven't missed it for a second since I have internet svc & can watch much more interesting stuff whether on You Tube, Netflix (for which I do have a subscription) and a few other places. Who needs TV...cable, broadcast or otherwise?? PS: not crazy about all these TV-type series that have been showing up on Netflix like weeds lately, but they still have some good movies (along w/many duds) which is why I end up watching RU-vid more (best thing for here is to avoid the comments as much as possible; at least on about 99% of the videos!)
Brasno's appeared in a " Little Rascals" short about full sized people who wished to ɓe children again . First time to see this Charlie Chan movie .😊❤😊
Only for the last four years, have I discovered these movies. (I'm 67) Maybe a zillion years ago, on an afternoon Saturday movie, if so I don't recall. The recitation by both Charlie's (Warner/Toller) of Chinese proverbs (Confucius) are priceless- especially the movie "Charlie Chan/Desert Castle", where Toller has some great exchanges with the 'star gazer' Saturina. A great respite from today's highly polarized country.
Thanks Fran Cardenes I could watch this Charlie Chan movie I'm so happy I'm so happy there's five that I can't hear those five I could not watch thanks Fran so much this is fantastic I'm so happy I'm gonna watch it right away❣💓🤗💛💕🙋🏼🇨🇦
@Donna Hanson Thank you. It is beyond tiresome, it is EXHAUSTING, how so many RU-vid "ex-perts" know everything about famous people, certainly more than their mothers knew. What else do we want to know? Let's ask Donald.
@@Carly8Corday So, it's bad to learn new information? Others sharing trivia or facts related to a post is exhausting? How? And if so, what compels you to read on?
The snake charming scene was funny. Snakes are not charmed by the noise, but by the thump of the foot which keeps the beat and the movement of the flute. Vibration and movement. The sound is for the public.
johnny peace. Yes, you're right, it's not the sound of the music the snake is interested in but rather the thump of the charmer's foot & the charmer's swaying movement. Snakes don't hear sounds as we do but they have sensory organs we don't have. As a child I was taught how to walk in the woods in ways that would let snakes know I was coming, giving them time to hide or to leave & thus avoid a confrontation with a human who might well hurt or kill them. There were lots of snakes in the forest surrounding our house, including several kinds of rattlesnakes as well as copperheads & (in boggy areas & around ponds) lots of water moccasins. In fact, occasionally a rattlesnake would come into our yard, which wasn't fenced & was more like a natural clearing than a typical yard with a lawn & a few trees, the snake not realizing it was near a human dwelling till it ran into a human. But rattlesnakes are not aggressive toward humans, preferring to avoid a confrontation which often ends with the snake being killed. I often played in the woods alone or with my dog, but my parents never worried because there was no real danger (no other humans to harm me), as I'd been taught how to avoid surprising or disturbing the snakes by walking in a way to let them know I was coming. In fact, I never ran into a rattlesnake in the woods, although there were plenty. One year we had pygmy rattlesnakes nesting & breeding in the shed behind our house, along with nesting black widow spiders, which I had fun watching until my parents realised & smoked them all out. But the cobra generally used by traditional snake charmers is not so shy & non-aggressive as the rattlesnake, with cobras being responsible for human deaths in India in numbers that shock us to learn of. And unlike the rattlesnake, whose bite is very rarely fatal to humans even if untreated, a cobra's bite can kill a human. Still, I think deaths due to cobra bites in India & elsewhere are usually connected with the expansion of human habitation into the snake's natural habitat.
Indeed he was sorry for leaving him out, I was commenting on that one Charlie Chan film. Victor Sent Yun was a fine Jimmy Chan #2 son, and he and Mantan Moreland made a fine comic duo. He was an excellent dramatic actor when given the roles. Sadly today he is all but forgotten except for Bonanza and Charlie Chan fans. Speaking of Bonanza, Pernell Roberts gave his eulogy and paid for his funeral. He was in real life and he was an excellent chef in real life. Sorry didn't to leave out. Thanks for mentioning this fine actor.
Good fun! Francis Ford, who played Mr. Gaines, was the brother of famed director John Ford. Francis Ford may be best known to American audiences as the “dying” man in The Quiet Man. Ford appeared in almost 5OO movies going back to 1909!
Everything they write these days, authors' first task is, "How do we deal with cell phones this time?" You'll notice a major setback scene has to occur early on, like cell phones dropping into toilets. The "excuses" for "Why doesn't he just use his cell phone?"are becoming deft and confident. Audiences just want it dealt with, and quickly, so they can heat the popcorn and relax. Writers might start to feel good about fishing old manuscripts out of the discard bin in the garage.
Favorite Charlie Chan line; "Curiosity responsible for cat needing 9 lives". Excellent movie - and Keye Luke had some great comedic moments, and some good suspense & action scenes. Fantastic flick!