Hong Kong (1952) Poster

(1952)

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6/10
A real surprise!
ewen558 May 2008
If you're wondering where Indiana Jones came from, here it is. The picture starts off with an American adventurer on a cargo plane in China, a husky, middle-aged Irish-American brunette. He's wearing a brown leather pilot's jacket and a matching fedora, and finds a young Chinese boy stowing away behind some cargo. Except for the extravagant action shots, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom follows the Reagan plot more or less perfectly for the first twenty minutes. I wonder if it was a deliberate rip-off on the part of Spielberg, or a subconscious "homage"?

After that, it's a reasonably pleasant 1950's spy thriller, with the good guy holding off the insidious red menace until the next time, saving both the foxy damsel in distress and the cute little Chinese boy.

A fun watch in and of itself, typical of the times and genre, and interesting as a bit of history, a probably unwitting building block for one of Hollywood's best known series.
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6/10
A Hat Like Indiana Jones
bkoganbing16 December 2012
Still with Warner Brothers, Ronald Reagan was now allowed to make outside films and he signed with Paramount again to do Hong Kong with their B picture unit headed by William Pine and William Thomas. He had done his first outside picture and his first western with these two guys and liked the experience. And he no doubt liked his leading lady Rhonda Fleming as they did well on screen together and their politics were completely in sync. He did four films with Fleming all told.

This one as the title says takes place in Hong Kong as Reagan and Fleming and a bunch of refugees arrive there fleeing from the new Communist government. Reagan is your basic soldier of fortune who saw his war surplus selling business go belly up with the new rulers in China. Fleming is the daughter of a missionary. Among others they have in tow is little Danny Chang a young orphan who has a gold statue encrusted with some jewels of a Buddha. The kind of statue that would make Sydney Greenstreet envious.

Reagan figures to make some good money selling this item and his Sydney Greenstreet turns out to be Marvin Miller. And Miller is a ruthless as Caspar Guttman in obtaining what he wants.

Reagan thinks he wants money, but he's tamed by the love of a good woman and an innocent child. Definitely something we've seen before.

Still this is a nice well made action picture in the Pine-Thomas tradition. Throughout the film Reagan sports a fedora that looks like something that might have inspired the creators of Indiana Jones and those films. It fits him and his character like the fedora on Harrison Ford's head.

Reagan would make one more film with Pine-Thomas and again it was with Rhonda Fleming. They made a good screen couple, too bad he didn't work with her over at Warner Brothers in his prime years.

His prime years as a player that is.
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5/10
Ronald Reagan verses a cute Chinese kid and a cricket.
mark.waltz28 December 2013
Warning: Spoilers
All opportunist Ronald Reagan wants is the gold statue in the possession of Danny Chang, the orphaned Chinese kid he finds after the countryside is bombed. But Chang clings onto Reagan (after initially biting him in attempt to get away, something many of us would have loved to do during his presidency) and he finds out that he has more heart than he gave himself credit for, especially when a beautiful teacher (Rhonda Fleming) comes into the picture as a surrogate mom and Reagan's moral conscience.

Initially silly and far-fetched but ultimately heartwarming, this beautifully photographed Technicolor film is sort of a guilty pleasure, filled with plenty of intrigue (involving the bad men who want to get their hands on the statue and not have to pay Reagan for it) and light-hearted comedy. Chang has little to say, but how can you not fall in love with this kid who clings onto Reagan as he desperately tries to loose the kid. Watch Reagan's reaction when he dumps the kid in a noodle shop and comes back to find out that one helping for this half-pint was not enough.

There's also an amusing cameo by Nigel Bruce (Watson of the "Sherlock Holmes" series) and Mary Somerville as the hotel guests whom Fleming and Reagan claimed to be in order to get their room, and this leads to a funny sequence where Fleming and Reagan try to get some sleep as the older couple keeps them awake with their sleeping noises. Claud Allister, a rather snarky looking character actor, has some great lines as the hotel manager, while stereotypical Asian villains (lead by Marvin Miller) provide fast-paced intrigue.
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Not all that good
the_mad_mckenna26 June 2004
My best memory of this film is when Ronald Reagan's character walks into a Chinese refugee camp and asks a Chinese gentleman "what kind of clambake is this"? Very sensitive and thoughtful stuff. They showed Reagan films on tv quite a bit back when he was first elected president, then they started to disappear. With the passing of the great communicator, perhaps they will reappear, but I would bet against it. I don't recall much else about this eminently forgettable film with the exception of the quoted line, but I do recall it being pretty much total dreck, and Reagan giving his normal b-minus level performance. It's tough to actually write ten lines about this film, but I'm trying my best!
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4/10
I stayed awake...barely.
thirdeblue6 April 2011
Warning: Spoilers
I just finished watching this on Netflix not three minutes ago. Whatever his merits as President I think I can safely say that Ronald Reagan was not a good actor. I've only seen a couple of his films and I'm beginning to think that whatever charisma he displayed as President simply isn't present in his screen roles. Oh well.

Hong Kong is a cheap, cheap film about a disreputable ex-G.I. in 50s China trying to make a buck by stealing a gold idol from some poor orphaned Chinese boy. At no point do you ever expect Reagan to actually steal the idol and abandon the child to the wilds of the Hong Kong streets, but the movie sure likes to pretend like it might...maybe...sort of...could happen.

When he finally has a change of heart you're as surprised as finding out the sun will rise again tomorrow. The story is riddled with plot "twists" that are telegraphed half an act away and you end up watching the film constantly fifteen minutes ahead of the action. SPOILER: Good guys win, bad guys lose, good guy gets the girl. etc. etc. etc. You've seen this movie before...believe me.

As the story blandly marches forward your mind wanders toward what Humphrey Bogart could do with similar material and you remember that Bogart DID make movies with similar material: Casablanca, Tokyo Joe, The Maltese Falcon.

If this 1952 snoozer has any redeeming value, is that it reminds you how good Humpfrey Bogart's films were.
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5/10
The ending really sinks this one....
planktonrules21 September 2012
Warning: Spoilers
This is an interesting film because Ronald Reagan plays an absolute heel! It begins in China during the fall of the Chinese republic to the communists. On the way to escape to Hong Kong, Reagan happens upon a cute little orphan kid and takes him with him. Now this ISN'T because he's a great humanitarian--it's because the kid has a jewel-encrusted idol with him--and this shabby adventurer wants to steal it and sell it! Into the mix comes a nice lady (Rhonda Fleming)--who thinks Reagan is a swell guy and doesn't realize he's a rat.

Midway through the film, Reagan undergoes a miraculous change of heart (that is, after trying to ditch the kid on the streets of Hong Kong). However, it's too late--gangsters who Reagan had approached to buy the idol have decided they'd just take it! In the process, an innocent man is stabbed and the little boy is stolen. So, it's up to Reagan and Fleming to find the boy.

Despite this being a silly little film, up until the end, my wife and I enjoyed it. It was fluff but enjoyable fluff. HOWEVER, the ending of the film was horrible. All throughout the film Reagan and Fleming loved the little Chinese boy and cared for him. And, at the end, they just dropped him off at an orphanage!!! This was horrible but might have been an effort to appeal to narrow-minded idiots who, at the time, might have been offended by the idea of white folks adopting an Asian kid. Sad and it really undid the film.
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5/10
Average
agore318 February 2022
Ronald Reagan is teamed with with Rhonda Flemming in this a movie about a jeweled statue during the Chinese war. Reagan gives a fairly wooden performance as the criminal that has a change of heart. I

I did like the fact that it was in color and some of the Hong Kong exterior street scenes appeared to have been done in a studio. It is listed as filmed on location such as the boat scenes.

Reagan wears a leather jacket and Fedora hat that made Harrison Ford famous in the Raiders of the Lost Ark.
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6/10
Influencer/forerunner of Indiana Jones!
loloandpete11 June 2021
Not a great film in its own right but it certainly was responsible for a later greater franchise of films starting with Raiders of the Lost Ark. A brief checklist proves the point: fedora and leather jacket wearing hero that is a good, all action guy but sometimes strays into morally grey areas? Check. His name is Jeff Williams but his love interest comes from Indiana, so substitute another Welsh name for his surname and add a bit of geography and we have Indiana Jones. An orphaned oriental boy as his sidekick? Check. A feisty heroine and romantic interest that joins him on his adventures? Check. Dastardly foreign villains? Check. A sought after golden statuette? Check. A plane running out of fuel that is forced to 'crash' land? Check. Actually this is a fun little film and largely because of noting all these influences and Director/co-writer Lewis R Foster was no slouch having directed a number of early, classic shorts starring Laurel and Hardy. Ronald Reagan and Rhonda Fleming in the leads are both likeable and have decent chemistry together and Nigel Bruce and Mary Somerville, as an older upper crust couple and Claud Allister as a beleaguered Hotel manager, all add moments of welcome, gentle comedy. As it is set in Hong Kong, we would expect to see a number of Asian actors in prominent roles but that is not really the case. Danny Chang is the moppet, Wei Lin who adds heart to the story and Marvin Miller is a suitably oily Eastern bad guy. But the stakes never feel particularly high and it relies too much on obviously stock footage. That said, it passes an hour and a half of time agreeably enough.
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8/10
a good drama/anti-communist film
rvltn2066 August 2004
I like this one. Ronald Reagan, who helped tear down the Berlin wall in real life, battles communism in Asia with this film, although the viewer might not realize that's part of what this film is about. It isn't full of rhetoric, but instead is full of drama. Mostly the film is about an orphaned Chinese boy in the care of an American, Jeff Williams (Reagan). Williams struggles with greed versus human compassion. It is a good human drama with some romance also between the Reagan character and the lovely Victoria Evans played by Rhonda Fleming who did a wonderful job. There is some action in the movie to boot. The little orphan in the movie is adorable for lack of a more macho word from a manly man such as myself. LOL.
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