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Charlie Chan in the Secret Service

Charlie Chan in the Secret Service (1944)

February. 14,1944
|
6.2
| Comedy Crime Mystery

Charlie Chan is an agent of the US government working in Washington DC and he is assigned to investigate the murder of the inventor of a highly advanced torpedo. Aiding Chan is his overeager but dull-witted son Tommy and his daughter Iris.

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Pluskylang
1944/02/14

Great Film overall

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Intcatinfo
1944/02/15

A Masterpiece!

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Hayden Kane
1944/02/16

There is, somehow, an interesting story here, as well as some good acting. There are also some good scenes

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Marva
1944/02/17

It is an exhilarating, distressing, funny and profound film, with one of the more memorable film scores in years,

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hwg1957-102-265704
1944/02/18

The first film in the Monogram Studio's Charlie Chan series after 20th Century-Fox had given up the the franchise. A scientist is killed and the plans of his torpedo stolen just before he could greet several people who have come to his house for a cocktail party. The head of the Secret Service (who sits in an office with 'SECRET SERVICE' written on the door!) tasks Charlie Chan to solve the crime and find the plans. Which he does of course. Apart from some plot holes it is a fair mystery mainly set in the scientist's house and passes the time nicely.Sidney Toler as Chan is his usual urbane self, slowly prodding and pushing to get to the truth. He is supported by his No. 2 daughter Iris and his No. 3 son Tommy played respectively by Marianne Quon and Benson Fong. The film also sadly introduces into the Chan series Mantan Moreland as Birmingham Brown, which I thought was a retrograde step as this fine actor and comedian is reduced to unfunny mugging and rolling of eyes. It would have been better to utilise one or two of Chan's numerous offspring instead of Brown. In this film Quon and Fong are fine as the comic relief as were previous actors in the series like Keye Luke and Victor Sen Yung. With fourteen Chan children there were plenty to choose from!

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csteidler
1944/02/19

Sidney Toler is fine as always but the budget has noticeably shrunk in this first series entry produced by Monogram Pictures. It's not that the plot or the dialog are especially weak....it's just that many scenes and conversations do not really appear to have been rehearsed. Benson Fong and Marianne Quan are silly but fun as number three son Tommy and number two daughter Iris. Their famous father is now in Washington on a wartime assignment and the kids are visiting: "Secret service, huh?" Fong notes. "Bet Pop needs my help if he wants to keep this job." The plot concerns a scientist developing plans for some special bombs that he tests in a tub of water in his laboratory. He has dinner guests but never makes it from the lab down to the dining room—"He's dead and the plans are missing" about sums it up when Mr. Chan arrives on the scene, having been assigned to investigate. All of the guests are suspects…which of them are spies? The complicated murders are done using electrical and magnetic tricks, which Chan eventually works out with both assistance and interference from his kids. Mantan Moreland has a couple of good lines as a guest's employee; soon the series would find him in a larger role as Chan's chauffeur but here he merely gets a few scenes of comic relief. It does look hastily put together and includes some uncertain performances and odd pauses...but hey, it's not meant to be anything fancy. Enjoyable if unspectacular.

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blanche-2
1944/02/20

The always enjoyable Charlie Chan (Sidney Toler) works to find out who murdered an inventor and stole his invention in "Charlie Chan in the Secret Service." This film, from 1944, introduces the character of Birmingham Brown (Mantan Moreland). In this, he plays the chauffeur of one of the party guests.A scientist who is working on an invention to protect Allied ships from torpedoes is being protected by Secret Service. However, on the night he's having a party, he refuses to greet his guests surrounded by Secret Service, so he doesn't want them around. He is almost immediately killed and his invention stolen! Charlie, number three son Tommie (Benson Fong) and daughter Iris arrive to solve the case.This plot was re-used with different McGuffins several times. I don't watch Charlie Chan for the plots, which is a good thing. I like the characters, Charlie's proverbs, and Charlie's relationship with whatever son is along and Birmingham.This particular story is perhaps more incongruous than others in that the inventor is working in his home and has a dinner party filled with suspicious characters, and doesn't want the Secret Service. It has one of those scenes of everyone gathered in the living room for the big reveal - and it could be any one of them.Fun, though I could have done without Iris Chan (Marianne Quon), not a particularly good actress.

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Spondonman
1944/02/21

I'm pretty sure there wasn't a Chan film made that I didn't like: I preferred Oland to Toler and Fox to Monogram but am more than happy (maybe even keen!) to watch a Toler Monogram effort. They all transported you to a world of more or less cultured baddies, each hiding a thousand secrets which Charlie (and us of course) has to work his way through. Usually, as in this case, to find the murderer from a roomful of shifty twitching eyes.Electrical scientist murdered and the secret plans stolen, Charlie with a little ... help from offspring Tommie and Iris has to decide which of the house guests did it. The Monogram house's hanging drapes and thick carpets lend a nice atmosphere to the mystery. Only gripes: the incongruously brash and childish music track and the continual visual reference to a Watching Evil Eye from a Dark Place.Watched from the Chanthology DVD and with the widescreen TV set to mild zoomview meant it was like the first time again for me seeing this, an experience I'd have to recommend and one I want to repeat with the other titles in the set.

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