THE CREEPING BRIDE: Shady importer/exporter and "high-class con man" Albert Raybold is stabbed in the heart with a fork (!!) one night in a private booth at the Peking Café in San Francisco's Chinatown. A number of the restaurant patrons are suspects: Raybold's secretary George Mason (Andy Devine), international tea dealer William Ward, businessman Claude Palmer, restaurant manager Quong Su, and restaurant owner (and presumably tong elder) John Yee. Details surrounding Raybold's dirty dealings complicate things as it is learned that he was in the midst of a transaction to sell fighter planes to Communist rebels in Fuzhou at the time of his death-- $70,000 of the rebels' money held by Raybold has gone missing, as has a packet of incriminating letters written to him by a mysterious Woman in Black (Valerie Hobson) and a valuable jade ring.



The Chinatown
Squad was a special unit of the San Francisco police organized in the
late 1870s that was re-activated in 1921 in the midst of concern with
the alarming number of homicides in that neighborhood linked to tong
control of prostitution, narcotics, smuggling, gambling, illegal
immigration, extortion, and municipal political corruption. But in this
movie the squad comes across like a bunch of inept clowns, a day late
and a dollar short for whatever is going on. McLeash's mugging is
especially grating; at one point, he takes a pratfall off of the
Sausalito ferry pier while tailing Lacey and Yee. A darker
murder-mystery melodrama about Chinatown's crime world would've been a
better fit for SHOCK!-- CHINATOWN SQUAD is very light-weight.


January 7th EDIT: Thanks to doctor kiss for emailing me the following shots of Lyle Talbot from JAIL BAIT, confirming for me that this was the source for Screen Gems publicity photo.)
Probably the only saving grace here for Universal horror-movie lovers is Valerie Hobson as Janet Baker, the black-clad mystery woman. Hobson was supposed to be all of 18 years-old in 1935; immediately previous to CHINATOWN SQUAD, Hobson had appeared in BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN and WEREWOLF OF LONDON.

After
its syndicated release through SHOCK! and right up until 1979,
CHINATOWN SQUAD appeared on television mostly in the morning and late
afternoon time-slots. When it did show up at night, it was often as just
a late show movie rather than part of a named "Shock Theater" or
"Creature Feature" program. But it did make it into those showcases
every once in a while. In an essay called "'Shock Theater' Memories," writer Rich Scrivani (I recommend his 2006 book Goodnight, Whatever You Are! My Journey with Zacherley, the Cool Ghoul) recalls: "Occasionally
the supernatural aura of 1958 would be dispelled when some questionable
entries would run. Titles like CHINATOWN SQUAD […]
padded out the series. While we can enjoy them for their place in
Universal history now, they were unwanted intruders at the time, tepid
'B' mysteries, holding no interest whatsoever for kids who wanted
monsters."
* * *
Added Commentary, Newspaper Ads, etc.
MIREK: I enjoyed this film a bit more than CREEPING BRIDE regarding the constant ribbing and puns of the Talbot character. (Interesting last name, too!) But I was also interested in a minor player who doesn't get mentioned in the credits: Toshia Mori, who worked in smaller roles, but managed to take over the legendary Anna May Wong in THE BITTER TEA OF GENERAL YEN. She had already worked on two films with Wong, though in minor roles. Since she was born in Japan, one wonders if the Pearl Harbor attack and subsequent war with Japan had any negative repercussions for her. In CHINATOWN SQUAD she plays a telephone operator in Chinatown who has several speaking lines to Talbot and is one of the more memorable people in this film. Also on hand is James B. Leong, an actor who has a very lengthy list of very small parts in Hollywood. This after trying to get a Chinese-American production company started on the West Coast.
MIREK: I enjoyed this film a bit more than CREEPING BRIDE regarding the constant ribbing and puns of the Talbot character. (Interesting last name, too!) But I was also interested in a minor player who doesn't get mentioned in the credits: Toshia Mori, who worked in smaller roles, but managed to take over the legendary Anna May Wong in THE BITTER TEA OF GENERAL YEN. She had already worked on two films with Wong, though in minor roles. Since she was born in Japan, one wonders if the Pearl Harbor attack and subsequent war with Japan had any negative repercussions for her. In CHINATOWN SQUAD she plays a telephone operator in Chinatown who has several speaking lines to Talbot and is one of the more memorable people in this film. Also on hand is James B. Leong, an actor who has a very lengthy list of very small parts in Hollywood. This after trying to get a Chinese-American production company started on the West Coast.
Spokane Chronicle, Jun 7, 1935
Honolulu Star Bulletin, Oct 19, 1935
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