Hong Kong Nights (1935) Poster

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5/10
A Majority Of Viewers Will Not Often Return For This Not For The Particular "B" Movie Undertaking.
rsoonsa15 June 2008
Tom Keene, cast here as Tom Keene, an agent of an unidentified United States Government department who receives his assignments through auspices of the American Embassy in Hong Kong, is but seldom out of danger during the course of this low-budget action programmer that is loaded with exciting incident but hindered by a cluttered storyline. After being handed a photograph of a dangerous gun running suspect who is purportedly supplying weapons to Chinese insurgents, Keene spots the villain, Gil Burris (Cornelius Keefe), in a gambling club accompanied by his fiancée, Trina Vidal (Wera Engels), whose beauty dazzles Tom, despite the company that she apparently is keeping. These three, along with Tom's loutish sidekick Wally (Warren Hymer) are the evident principals in the scenario, but the actual linchpin of the tale is a somewhat enigmatic Mister Wong (Tetsu Komai) whose alliance with the rounder Burris is due to flaws in judgement upon his part rather than to possessing an evil core. Wong, who comes from a village into which Burris is intending to smuggle arms, ammunition and explosives, wears a bracelet, given him by a respected elder as means of bringing good fortune to its new wearer, this ornament becoming the vector propelling the storyline as Keene, representing the Forces of Good against those of Evil, covets the unique adornment. This largely episodic location melodrama is never less than watchable, but hardly distinguished, with the work's most interesting portions being those that contain stock footage of Hong Kong, filmed during the 1920s, including live action scenes at that city's famed polo ground, although most of the film is shot upon the hoary Mack Sennett lot off Ventura Blvd. in Studio City, California, before it was acquired by Republic Pictures. This is Tom Keene's first film following his most well-known appearance, as lead in King Vidor's OUR DAILY BREAD, and he is effective and in fine physical trim as a G-Man for this picture that is dubious entertainment at best. Acting honours go to willowy and beautiful Engels, whose native bent for comedy is barely touched upon here in a movie that caused her to decide that returning to her home nation, Germany, would be preferable to continuing with her career in "Poverty Row" affairs such as this Walter Futter produced piece that was also the determining element behind director E. Mason Hopper's resolution to retire from the motion picture business. The film, although fast-moving, is poorly edited as is apparent from its release upon an Alpha DVD that includes no extras and, as it has not been remastered, there is only mediocre sound quality in addition to a good many visual elisions.
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4/10
Tom Keene Plays Tom Keene
boblipton15 September 2017
Tom Keene plays Tom Keene. He is an American agent of some description, sent to Macao to pursue suspected gunrunner Cornelius Keefe. He falls in with Wera Engels, who is dumping Keefe, because he is keeping secrets from her.

Keene is nominally aided by Warren Hymer who, like most of his movie roles, is of no use to anyone. He spends a lot of his time cracking eggs. Although it's interesting, I suppose, to see Keene in a lead role which does not include a horse, this movie looks as if it is a three-reeler that the producer, exploitation specialist Walter Futter, expanded by means of news reel footage from Hong Kong that he picked up on the cheap and had his unnamed editor cut into the movie. There is a sequence in which several of the principals talk in the middle of a polo match that is very poorly paced.

Tetsui Komai is present because, presumably, they needed an actor who matched his general description. Tom London is there. I suppose Keene told him he had a leading role and London showed up thinking it would be a western.
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5/10
Disappointing!
JohnHowardReid24 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
PLAYERS: Tom Keene (himself), Wera Engels (Trina Vidor), Warren Hymer (Wally), Tetsu Komai (Wong), Cornelius Keefe (Burris), Tom London (Blake), Freeman Lang (Captain Evans).

Director: E. MASON HOPPER. Screenplay: Norman Houston. Story: Roger Allman. Photography: Arthur Reed. Art director: Charles Gardner. Producers: Walter Futter and Charles Kimball. Executive producer: Walter Futter.

Not copyright by Futter Productions. U.S. release through First Division: 15 September 1935. Filmed at Mack Sennett Studios and on locations in Los Angeles' Chinatown and Catalina Island. 62 minutes. (Available on an Alpha DVD).

COMMENT: Here's another cowboy hero in civvy street - and playing himself too. Well, maybe that's not quite correct. Let's just say that actor Tom Keene is playing a character called Tom Keene (same spelling and everything) in this tale of tong warfare and gun-running in exotic Macao and Hong Kong.

Joining our Tom are the lovely Wera Engels, the insufferable Warren Hymer, the suitably sinister Tetsu Komai and that ever-reliable henchman, Tom London.

By the humble standards of the independent "B", it's all quite lavishly produced. But the direction by E. Mason Hopper, one of the major talents of the silent era, is somewhat jerky and reveals only a few glimpses of the talent that guided such Goldwyn and/or Hearst pictures as Dangerous Curve Ahead (1921) with Helene Chadwick and Richard Dix, The Glorious Fool (1921), again Chadwick and Dix, The Great White Way (1924) - the original Cain and Mabel, one of the films on my Most Wanted list - and Janice Meredith (1924).
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3/10
This probably wouldn't play very well in China!
planktonrules20 October 2021
"Hong Kong Nights" is a cheapo film that is set in Honk Kong and Macao. When seen today, the film is a bit cringe-inducing, as most of the Chinese folks are treated like servants. They are also either evil or a bit dumb...or at least the leading lady believes when her rickshaw driver doesn't understand English! Show this to a Chinese friend...and you might just see their head explode!

The film stars Tom Keene as, of all people, a guy named Tom Keene. His lady love is Trina (Wera Engels) and Keene is assisted by the dim-witted Wally (Warren Hymer...in a very typical sort of role). Keene is working for the US government searching for illegal arms smuggling and Trina just happens to be involved with one of the suspects.

I noticed that IMDB pointed out that Hymer just disappeared from the movie about 75% of the way through it. Considering he had a terrible reputation as a nasty drunk, I wonder if he was tossed off the picture and they just finished it without him.

So is it any good? Not really. It's pretty stagy and dull. Not a terrible film...but not a good one either.
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4/10
Your standard, every day "American saves the day!" B picture.
mark.waltz21 March 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Plenty action packed but cliched and stereotypical, this low budget programmer features Tom Keene as an obvious American in Hong Kong who discovers a smuggling ring while on duty, one of the terrorist variety. Even though it's set in Hong Kong, it's very apparent that the focus is on non-Asians being in charge, whether the good guys (Keene and sidekick Warren Hymer) or the sleazy villain (Cornelius Keefe) selling grenades to the highest bidder. He's so vile that he traps Keene and girlfriend Wera Engels in a cave filling up with water on a deserted island. There are some nice twists involving that, but this is a programmer a very typical plotting that really has no surprises even though it's photographs decently and often humorous because of Hymer and the interaction between Gene and Engles.
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7/10
Nice Historical Relic
Goloh21 July 2004
Rating a film nearly 70 years after it is made would seem like a fool's errand but I live in Hong Kong and was hoping a copy of this film would eventually surface, and it did. With nearly every cinematic cliché thrown into the mix, and a story loosely wrapped around illegal weapons and a bracelet with nine lives, it's great fun to watch even if the storyline is confusing. It doesn't matter. There are a few background scenes of old Hong Kong; the language they speak really isn't Chinese; there are almost no ethnic Chinese in the film; and the print quality is terrible. Again, it doesn't matter. It has its moments, and anyone aware of the few old films with Hong Kong themes would want to see this and compare them. Now if only Ronald Reagan's old Hong Kong film would come along ...
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