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Dangerous Money

Dangerous Money (1946)

October. 12,1946
|
6.3
|
NR
| Crime Mystery

A treasury agent on the trail of counterfeit money confides to fellow ocean liner passenger, Charlie Chan, that there have been two attempts on his life.

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BootDigest
1946/10/12

Such a frustrating disappointment

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SpuffyWeb
1946/10/13

Sadly Over-hyped

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Steineded
1946/10/14

How sad is this?

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Humaira Grant
1946/10/15

It’s not bad or unwatchable but despite the amplitude of the spectacle, the end result is underwhelming.

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biorngm
1946/10/16

Review - Dangerous Money, Released 10-12-46 Greed is the central theme, with murder following, because of the rapacity. According to Charlie Chan, the hot or stolen money got loose through the ruthless process of war, renegades raid the cash and steal the loot. The money was described as hot money by the federal agent, currency was circulating among the Pacific islands, that was purloined from multiple sources at war's end. Each scoundrel in the movie had the edacity to fill his own coffers with someone else's gains, including American currency and art objects. --- Charlie Chan is destined for Sydney from his Honolulu home on a passenger-cruise ship, when he is met by Scott Pearson, U.S. Treasury Agent. The agent has had his life threatened twice, thrice with a near-miss talking to Chan, finally he meets his maker minutes later, at the hands of the killer. The agent was tracking hot money, so-described by the Treasury man, and later, quoted by the varlets on board. Charlie becomes involved due to Pearson's murder. Between the time of the killing at sea and before the ship leaves Samoa, after its 24-hour stop, Charlie is able to uproot all the guilty parties. --- Charlie tells the ship's Captain, there are only two clues given us by Pearson's log: a Mr. Lane and Samoa. The Captain adds Pearson told him, he was worried leaving Honolulu, he was going to finish his work on Samoa. Pearson must have thought the stuff was taken to Samoa. Chan comments to the Captain, money seems to be traveling with Mr. Lane to Samoa, because agent's murder indicates Scott was approaching prey; essentially, getting closer to the crooks, including his own murderer. --- Charlie talks to all the active parties in the salon immediately after the federal agent was killed with a knife to the back. The murderer is on board the ship, money is stashed likely on Samoa, the mission is to capture all the guilty parties, major and minor, while in port for the twenty-four hour stay. Some suspects are eliminated by the knife killer, some need to be caught with their hands in the stolen loot. --- The process begins with Chan catching the bad guys when one jumps overboard, two are killed, and the assistants literally stumble over the stashed, stolen currency and art objects. The ship's brig has to be brimming with prisoners after Charlie uses his guile and pistol to catch everyone. A definite watch is in order for anyone to enjoy how the plot thickens and the criminals are caught. --- I liked this movie for several reasons: the main character was in the majority of the scenes, and right from the start, i.e. Charlie Chan. It was indeed a mystery, whereby nobody knew who the murderer was until the last few minutes of the show, i.e. the actual killer was not obvious; identified only at the end. There were numerous bad guys, one was considered a minor conspirator, one killer, there were plenty of characters involved in the central plot, clues were limited, really limited. The story was centered in two primary locations, i.e. on shipboard and in one Samoan port city, at two locations, an inn and a ichthyology museum. The museum artifacts, i.e. fish species, were stuffed with cash. Also found, objects of art included a Gauguin painting, were stolen from a private collection. The killer uses a projectile device to launch daggers, sent very accurately, to their intended targets. The killer is also disguised as a married woman, the primary suspect, the killer's fake-husband, named by the original Treasury Agent trailing the criminal was Lane and Murdock was the killer. There some loose ends and some nonsensical scenes, or at least scenes not essential to the plot. Why does Charlie need his chauffer on a cruise, e.g. for the rental car in any port-of-call? Showman Kirk contacted Rona Simmons' father in London to arrange the journey-cruise from Hawaii to Samoa, because there are certain objects once stored in banks in Manila? Why was Kirk killed? Burke? Greed would be answer to the killings on Samoa. Why share the bounty with any more people than absolutely necessary.

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shakspryn
1946/10/17

Ocean-going steamships and trains make great settings for 1940s mysteries. Charlie didn't have any adventures in a train, but this is the second on a ship--the third if you count the docked sailing ship in one of his outings. Toler is outstanding as always, in one of the greatest ongoing screen characterizations of an ideal film detective: clever, humane, with a sense of humor and of justice. It's his ability to make Chan so very likeable which really elevates these films, putting them, on the whole, on about the same level as the great Universal Sherlock Holmes films with Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce. And Toler never had the support of a truly first-rate, all-pro actor, as Rathbone had in Bruce. This movie is pure fun. Lots of action. The humor is sometimes very corny, but that's part of the charm. Highly recommended!

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classicsoncall
1946/10/18

"Dangerous Money" is an aptly named Charlie Chan film in which Sidney Toler's character investigates a pair of murders relating to illegal trading in "hot money" and stolen art. The action takes place aboard the S.S. Newcastle heading to Australia via Samoa. Along for the ride are Number #2 Son Jimmy (Victor Sen Yung) and assistant Chattanooga Brown (Willie Best). Charlie doesn't have much time to solve the case as he's committed to another investigation on arrival in Sydney. Be prepared for more uncomfortable racial insinuations, as Jimmy converses with Chattanooga via walkie talkie using the code names "Chop Suey 108" and "Pork Chop 711". Once again Chan/Toler demonstrates his dancing skill in a film; in "Red Dragon", he cut a mean rumba, here he slows it down a bit, but still quite smoothly with a shipboard waltz. Passenger Rona Simmonds (Gloria Warren) and ship's pursar George Brace (Joseph Allen) are hiding a secret for which she is being blackmailed. She is traveling with false papers, smuggled on board in an attempt to identify art stolen from her banker father. International businessman P.T. Burke (Dick Elliott) uses his position to extort a valuable necklace from Simmonds, but as we've seen before, there is another villain masterminding the action from a loftier height. He is flushed out by Charlie in a convenient "lights out" scene intended to add to the confusion. I have to admit, it's difficult to follow most Charlie Chan films without keeping a personal scorecard, and even so, the revelation of the killer almost always comes as a surprise. Chan himself best expresses this in a line from the film - "Kangaroo reaches destination also by leaps and bounds".

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pbalos
1946/10/19

Much of the action takes place on a ship. Typical acting for a Chan flick with some comedy provided by sidekick Chatanooga. Not one of the best Toler movies, but not the worse. Poor direction and weak story line. Might be alright for a rainy day.

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