Charlie Chan, on a plane heading to New York City for a police convention, chats with Scotland Yard inspector Drake who is after a saboteur named Narvo. He has tracked Narvo's wife to New York and is looking for help from her. Also showing up in the Big Apple is Chan's pesky son Jimmy. At a party for Drake given at the apartment of aircraft executive George Kirby, Drake winds up dead, poisoned by a tetrogene gas pellet—surprisingly, it's Jimmy who identifies the newly developed gas—and his briefcase of secret documents goes missing. Following the conventions of the mystery genre, the guests at the party all become suspects. There is Fenton, an old friend of Drake's who treats the murder as a personal inconvenience; Jeffrey, a business associate of Kirby's; Ralph Percy, an airplane designer; actress June Preston; Boggs, the somewhat shady butler; David Elliott, a chemist who was working with tetrogene and may have been the last person to see Drake alive; and, of course, Kirby. Eventually Narvo's wife shows up, using the name Pat Shaw; she has left Narvo (and is now involved with Elliott) but worries that she is being followed by Narvo and his Hindu associate Ramullah. Police inspector Vance has the bright idea of bringing in a dragnet of all Hindu men in the city, leading to a comic scene in which one Hindu man is revealed to be a non-Hindu con man. In the somewhat improbable climax, Chan and Vance gather all the suspects onto a plane on which a capsule of tetrogene has been hidden the night before. Will there be a mass murder over New York?
Some years ago, during my first viewing of the Chan films on the Fox Movie Channel, this was one of my favorites due to the airplane climax. Now, however, that scene isn't quite enough to boost the film much above a B-minus. The plot, as is often the case, gets muddled and there are almost too many characters. But there is an unusually strong supporting cast. A few of my favorite character actors are present: Ricardo Cortez, who played both good guys and villains, is Kirby; the British actor Melville Cooper is appropriately obnoxious as Fenton; the British John Sutton is Jeffrey; busy B-movie lead Kane Richmond is Percy; Robert Lowery, who played Batman in a 1949 serial, is the chemist Elliott. As is sometimes the case in Chan movies, the females (Marjorie Weaver and Joan Valerie) are weaker, partly because their roles seem underwritten. Sidney Toler (Chan) and Victor Sen Yung (Jimmy) are fine, though Jimmy is more irritating here than usual. The likable Frank Coghlan Jr. (Billy Batson in the original Captain Marvel serial) has a small but noticeable role. Shemp Howard of the Three Stooges is the fake Hindu man. Donald MacBride, who played cops in dozens of classic-era films, is Vance. The first fifteen minutes, as the case is being set up, are good, as are the last fifteen; it's in the middle that things bog down a bit. Pictured are Cortez, Richmond and Toler. [DVD]












