Daughter of the Tong (1939) Poster

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6/10
Brent Fun To Watch In This Otherwise So-So 'B' Flick
ccthemovieman-110 September 2008
This is an old "B" crime movie if there ever was one, straight out of the 1930s. This was released in 1939 but it looks and feels more like 1931. The acting isn't bad but it's closer to Ed Wood-type '50s material than to Casablanca. In the first half of the film, the story drags too much. You'd think that would be almost impossible in a film that's less than an hour long, but it's true. For much of the first 30 minutes, nothing happens, but it picks up in the second half with hokey barroom-brawl-type fights and a car chase in the country.

The story is a simple one: an FBI agent goes undercover to get a crime boss. The twist is that "Carney," the crime boss of San Francisco's Chinatown, is a woman and the FBI doesn't know that. By the way, nobody is the gang is Asian.

The man pretending to semi-famous crook "Gallagher" from the east who has just escaped from the Atlanta prison, has his work cut out for him: another guy - "Lefty" (gee, what a unique name for a criminal) from Atlanta is there and could blow our man's cover. Playing the FBI good guy is Grant Withers ("agent Ralph Dickson"). Gallagher was only recruited because the local heat was on Carney and she preferred someone else running the show for awhile in case the law won. Then, she wouldn't implicated since she and the new guy had no connections.

I wish "Carney" had a bigger role because Evelyn Brent is very good in here, very mysterious, beautiful and her dialog is fun to hear. Unlike "Muggsy," one of her gang members who is too nice a guy to be a thug, Brent's character is tough and edgy.

The transfer quality on this Alpha Video disc is horrible, like a bad VHS tape.
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6/10
Carney - the Illustrious One!!!
kidboots14 May 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I agree with one of the reviewers - this film definitely has an early 30s feel about it. An F.B.I. (as a wit says during the movie - "free board indefinitely!!!") operative Alf Dixon (Grant Withers) goes under cover to infiltrate the gang responsible for killing his friend. He bears an uncanny resemblance to one of the thugs that escaped from prison - all he needs is a scar across his cheek.

The gang is run by Oriental temptress, Carney the Illustrious One. Evelyn Brent was the epitome of sultriness (or sulkiness according to some people!!!) and she is excellent as Carney. She started in films in 1914 and was a star in both England and America. She had a very varied career until her career ended in the late 40s, excelling in crime movies. She had starred, along with George Bancroft in "Underworld" (1928), one of the first gangster movies.

The surprise for Dixon is that Carney is a woman - a slinky seductress, who rules her gang with a will of iron - "fools, idiots, simpletons!!" she mutters, when things go wrong at the end. Dorothy Short and Dave O'Brien (who were married in real life) play a young brother and sister - he is caught up in the gang, she is trying to help him. The F.B.I. ask for her help in catching Carney - they still have no idea that Carney is a woman. Dixon has met her and calls her "Mrs. Fu-Manchu" - he doesn't realise he has trifled with the boss!!!

There is a super car chase - a 1930s "Bullit" style and lots of fist fights. All in all it is a very action packed programmer with Grant Withers at his always reliable best.

Recommended.
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6/10
Preposterous yet better than you'd expect
joepm289 October 2022
Here we have "Daughter of the Tong" which in 53 minutes manages to pack in a lot more than most of today's movies do in 90 minutes or more. The whole plot is so 1930's in a B movie film noir way. Today, this would barely make it as Law & Order episode unless it was more luridly done up. Basically, your standard crime caper involving the nefarious doing of the Chinese Tong in San Francisco. Evelyn Brent stars as the mysterious Carney aka The Illustrious One aka "The Daughter of the Tong". She's running a crime racket yet it's about to get some hurt from some little heard of outfit called the FBI. The plot holes are gigantic yet the cast is great and manage to make this in to a decently suspenseful and, both intentionally and unintentionally, humorous film. I really enjoyed it, so 6 stars.
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Okay Programmer
dougdoepke8 August 2019
Thanks to the movie's extended prologue I now know who the FBI is. Like most Americans, I was in serious doubt. Kidding aside, the prologue is rather odd in its assumptions, even for 1939. All in all, there's nothing special about this 60-minute programmer that mainly dramatizes the agency at work in stopping an Asian smuggling ring. It appears the culprits smuggle people into the country inside sealed boxes who apparently breathe by magic. Anyway, despite the title, the flick's not very ethnic, Loo being the only real Asian, and with no real presence of a tong.

Story-wise, Withers goes undercover to penetrate the gang and its mysterious mastermind, Carney. But to us viewers, the culprit's pretty apparent from the outset. Don't worry, though, if things slow down there's always a brawl available- I hope the guys got double pay for all the acrobatics. And catch the great Richard Loo already planning his many sinister roles in WWII, along with Dave O'Brien taking a break from six-shooters and cowboy hats. On the other hand, it's too bad Brent didn't make a stronger try at acting evil since she really looks the part. The best part to me was the well-crafted car chase over mountain roads that's worthy of a more expensive production. Anyway, the flick's an okay action feature for a slow evening, but nothing more.
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3/10
Worth watching if you like old cars and humor
Tony-25227 July 1999
This is a classic non classic. It has a simple plot of Hollywood's "B" movies of the time and is predictable in its outcome from the go. Never the less it is fun to watch, with the old cars and bad stunts and its standard (this type of movie) plot. The acting is almost laughable in some places, but this is what makes this movie so much fun to watch. It truly reminds me of the hundreds of movies i went to as a kid, prior to the arrival of television.
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3/10
Gong Tong
wes-connors7 July 2009
"An F.B.I. operative goes undercover to infiltrate a gang responsible for killing one of his fellow agents. Bearing an uncanny resemblance to the man suspected of being the killer, the agent succeeds in finding the leader of the murderous gang. Known as 'The Illustrious One', this Asian femme fatale controls her gang ruthlessly from the luxury of her space in the Oriental Hotel," according to the DVD sleeve's synopsis. Scar-faced Grant Withers (as Ralph Dickson) stars in this silliness masquerading as a gumshoes verses Asians in San Francisco gangster picture. It isn't even remotely convincing. The highlight is the 1930s Los Angeles area location footage involving Mr. Withers and Dave O'Brien (Jerry Morgan) in a car pursuit. Villainess Evelyn Brent (as Carney), who is inserted into the chase, has some fun with her lines.

*** Daughter of the Tong (8/28/39) Raymond K. Johnson ~ Grant Withers, Evelyn Brent, Dave O'Brien
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2/10
Yet another terrible Poverty Row schlock-fest
planktonrules20 February 2010
By the way, this DVD was released by Alpha Video---a company which sometimes releases some wonderfully obscure titles (mostly public domain) but which NEVER cleans up the prints or adds closed captions. In other words, the DVD production values are strictly 3rd-rate...at best. In this case, the sides of the picture are all clipped off--like someone videotaped it right off TV and missed the edges. It's also super-fuzzy and washed out--making it a chore to watch.

This film has a very strange title in many ways. A 'Tong' is a Chinese mob that was strongly associated with assassinations and violence at the early part of the 20th century. However, there are almost no Asians in the film and the supposed leader of the Tong is a joke. Evelyn Brent sports a black wig and is supposed to be a Chinese mob boss--even though she seems about as Chinese as Eva Gabor--and Miss Gabor's accent sounded a bit closer to Chinese!! The plot involves the FBI infiltration of the Tong as well as the story of a man who is trying to escape from the mob's clutches. None of it is particularly interesting and the film seems much, much longer than its 53 minute running time, as it's dreadfully dull entertainment.

By the way, I referred to this as a 'Poverty Row' film. This is a nickname given to the tiniest studios during the 1930s and 40s and they usually didn't even have their own studios--renting space in a major studio at night. This means that this Metropolitan Picture was probably, for most indoor scenes, filmed at nigh. Production values and quality at most of these low-rent studios was generally very low, though on occasion they made dandy films...and this is certainly not one of them!!
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3/10
Just as Boring as Most Television
Hitchcoc10 November 2009
An FBI agent (apparently something fairly new), a crime boss, a little Asian profiling and xenophobia, a few crooks, some cars, a couple chases, and nothing the least bit memorable. I watched this as part of a collection because I'm curious about the this period in film history. These were probably made in a week and offered a bit of diversion in the midst of the depression and before we got into the war. We have a couple strong women, one on each side, and a plot that's not the least bit interesting. There's no suspense and no great question to be answered. It's no more nor less than it was meant to be. The performances are OK but there's that deep moral fervor that seems to permeate everything. Just another film.
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3/10
Short and silly crime film
Red-Barracuda23 October 2010
The FBI hires a man to impersonate a convict who in turn will infiltrate a Chinese crime gang.

Daughter of the Tong is another cheap and cheerful Poverty Row production. Like most of these films it's derivative and not especially good. The story is pretty silly and senseless. But there are some worthwhile elements to the production. Firstly, the villainess played by Evelyn Brent is quite a striking presence, even if she looks seriously unOriental. She makes a nice change from the typical male crime bosses you would expect in most of these productions, and she does have a pretty cool look. The other notable part of this film is the extended car chase, which is pretty dynamic by the standards of these old creaky movies. But other than these two aspects the film is not overly of interest. I must say though that it's far from the worst in this type of movie and its short running time is certainly not a bad thing, as it never out-stays its welcome.
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6/10
Lady Crime Boss vs the FBI
wetcircuit16 June 2023
Props to Evelyn Brent for playing this role as George Raft -- in fact many choices seem to deliberately ignore the out-dated 'yellow peril' tropes implied by the title.

Despite a wig and some eye makeup Brent is no dragon lady. She delivers every line in a gangster monotone with a gun in her hand -- decidedly un-feminine and tough. She never seduces or simps, and there's no 'caught between worlds' diatribe. She's too busy plotting how she'll murder her next business partner.... Even her kimono has shoulder pads!

Her ONE Asian henchman, played by Richard Loo (often cast to subvert stereotype by being very American) is commanded to perform an 'oriental manicure', and instead of an elaborate Fu Manchu torture scene we get what looks like an actual manicure, complete with nail-clipping sounds.... I'm now obsessed with the idea that all lady gangster movies should replace the ubiquitous 'rough up the detective' scene with a 'force the detective to trim his nails' scene.

While it starts as a 'yellow peril' -- most of the action takes place in the Oriental Hotel (HQ for human trafficking, obviously) with an un-convincing import/export business in the front parlor -- no one seems interested in resolving that story.... By '39 tastes had shifted to organized crime and political corruption so the production feels patched together and the script almost incoherent, climaxing as noisily as they could afford: car chases, gun shootouts, and 2-fisted brawls.

It's a B-movie from a B-studio. If you watch with low (no) expectations you might be amused by a film struggling to figure out its genre, and an unapologetic lady crime boss performance by Brent which somehow isn't sabotaged by the goofy script.
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4/10
Okay if you run across it
dbborroughs18 January 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Evelyn Brent plays an Asian (?) woman in charge of a large crime syndicate controlling the politicians and much of the city. Into town is sent Grant Withers as an FBI agent charged with bringing down the criminal organization. Unremarkable crime film is gamely put together but doesn't amount to much. Part of the problem is that even with a running time of under an hour it feels stretched. Much of the first ten or fifteen minutes consists of stock footage that is used to piece together a murder and its reportage. That means almost a 20 percent of the film is gone before the plot really kicks in. The rest of the film is a typical two fisted crime drama. Its nothing you probably haven't seen before so it plays remarkably bland. Withers, who is almost always good, though rarely outstanding, gives a workman like performance. Brent is just okay as the villain even though the only attempt to make her look Asian was via costume and haircut. I wouldn't go out of my way to see it.
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3/10
Confidentially Connie.
mark.waltz23 March 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Who is Connie? That's what the smart men of the FBI want to find out. Of course, they assume he is a man, considering that "he" is the mastermind behind human smuggling ring. You know that because we see an Asian man in a box (marked "fragile" of course). What they do with them once they are shipped to America is never explained, but when you've only got 53 minutes in which to unravel a plot and wrap everything up, there's not really time for details.

But Connie is a woman, a dragon lady (of course) played by a non-Asian, here Evelyn Brent sporting a severe hairstyle, not Medusa-like as was given to Ona Munson's Madame Gin Sling in "The Shanghai Gesture", stuck with a chop stick like Bea Lillie's in "Thoroughly Modern Millie", or black widowed like Gale Sondergaard's in "The Letter", yet she's no dangerous flower like Anna May Wong's various more feminine villains. Brent is laughable in the part, sneering throughout with a mid-western dialect, and is surrounded by mostly Caucasian underlings, although there are a few stereotypical Asian characters in her circle as well who hide behind jobs usually given to Asian villains in "B" movies. The result is a silly, somewhat offensive film, that is thankfully over quickly.
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5/10
A Tong takeaway in Carney.
seance-647494 April 2019
Daughter of the Tong (1939) I watched couple of times fairly recently a crime film that comes under less than 1 hour running time. Read few user reviews some denigrating ones there also. I'm not into crime films in general but like this one! In fact I've sent for restored version dvd. The "illustrious one" & known to her subordinates as "Carney" played by Evelyn Brent. She rules them with a iron fist! Won't get into plot you no doubt have read already. She "Carney" is a mysterious lady who alone carries film itself, her cool demeanour shows!
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