7/10
Fu Manchu has a diabolical plot to destroy his nemesis!
21 June 2017
Warning: Spoilers
In a remote corner of China the diabolical criminal mastermind Fu Manchu has dynamited the pass leading to the province and sent word to the authorities suggesting there was an earthquake. Free from outside interference he plots his revenge against his nemesis; Assistant Commissioner Nayland Smith of Scotland Yard. This scheme is inevitably devious; he has kidnapped a doctor and his daughter and forced him to perform plastic surgery on a man to change his appearance so that he looks like Nayland Smith. He then arranges for the real Nayland Smith to be kidnapped and replaced while on holiday in Ireland. While the real policeman is put in a crate bound for China the imposter commits murder and is put on trial… killing Nayland Smith won't be enough for Fu Manchu; first he must be thoroughly discredited in the eyes of the world. Meanwhile it emerges that a senior member of the American criminal underworld is heading to China to talk to a potential leader of world crime.

I first watched the Fu Manchu films as a child in the seventies and this is the first one of the series that I've watched since then. Watching again it is clear that this is far from a classic film but it is rather fun. In this day and age it would be unacceptable to have a European playing a Chinese character but Christopher Lee does do a fine job as the diabolical Fu Manchu; thankfully he doesn't attempt a dodgy 'Chinese' accent. Douglas Wilmer does a solid job as Nayland Smith, and his doppelganger, although the real policeman spends much of the time in captivity and the copy is unspeaking and emotionless. Tsai Chin impresses as Fu Manchu's daughter, a character who is clearly a chip off the old block. The story is pretty silly… but then it wouldn't have been interesting if Fu Manchu had done the obvious thing and just had Nayland Smith disposed of. The action scenes are decent in a fairly bloodless way; certainly not too violent for younger viewers. Overall it is a bit dated but I rather enjoyed it; perhaps for nostalgic reasons but also because it was rather fun.
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