Hong Kong
1952 · Movie · 94 min. · United States
Trailed by a game little cast, the stars meander around against some faked, pleasantly hued Chinese backgrounds, in a story by Winston Miller involving a war orphan and a valuable statuette. Had Mr. Miller's idea been tightened and enacted like a house afire, the result might have been a mildly satisfactory little adventure yarn. But Lewis R. Foster's pedantic direction enshrouds the whole thing in deadly familiarity, harmless though it may be. Mr. Reagan plays an ex-G:I: drifter in his own solid citizen style, laboriously drawling every tattered slang utterance in the books. The casting of gorgeous Miss Fleming as a mission teacher is hard to swallow, even with a jawful of popcorn, but the lady acquits herself with cryptic restraint. Nigel Bruce and Lady May Lawford fill in as a pair of bumbling British colonials. A sparkling little Chinese lad named Danny Chang, as the orphan, has all the luck, being either too young to know what is happening or just too gentlemanly to say.
Direction Lewis R. Foster
Cast Ronald Reagan · Rhonda Fleming · Nigel Bruce · Marvin Miller · Mary Somerville · Lowell Gilmore · Claud Allister · Danny Chang
Soundtrack Lucien Cailliet
Screenplay Winston Miller · Lewis R. Foster
Cinematography Lionel Lindon
Original title Hong Kong
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Not rated (FilmAffinity)
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