Charlie Chan in the Chinese Cat

The Chinese Cat
Directed byPhil Rosen
Written byEarl Derr Biggers (characters)
George Callahan (screenplay)
Produced byPhillip N. Krasne
James S. Burkett
StarringSidney Toler
Joan Woodbury
Mantan Moreland
CinematographyIra H. Morgan
Edited byJohn Link
Music byDavid Chudnow
Production
company
Distributed byMonogram Pictures
Release date
  • May 20, 1944 (1944-05-20)
Running time
66 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

The Chinese Cat (also titled Murder in the Funhouse) is a 1944 mystery film starring Sidney Toler as Charlie Chan.

Plot

Mr. Manning is murdered in his study while the door is locked from the inside. Police close the case after 6 months. Mr. Manning's step-daughter contacts Charlie Chan to try and solve the case before he leaves in 48 hours because a rival criminologist has published a book Manning Murder Solved which implicates Mrs. Manning as the murderer. Mr. Manning's business partner confronts Mrs. Manning demanding that the murder investigation be dropped. Later he is found dead by Mr. Chan while following up on clues. Identical twins are involved in a diamond-smuggling ring after the Kohinoor Diamonds are stolen; one twin is killed and the other living twin masquerades as a ghost tricking Birmingham Brown and Number 3 son. Mr. Manning had the largest stone stored in the secret compartment of a Chinese cat statue, and double-crossed his associates. Movie ends in a carnival funhouse with police arresting the diamond-smuggling ring for three murders. Rival author of Manning Murder Solved book must now pay $20,000 to Chinese War Relief after a lost bet with Charlie Chan about the murderer's identity.

Cast

Production

The film was the second Charlie Chan movie from Monogram. It was originally called Charlie Chan and the Perfect Crime and filming started on 4 January 1944.[1]

This is the film where Birmingham Brown is permanently hired as Charlie Chan's chauffeur. He is looking for a new job after the guilty criminals blow up his taxicab with a bomb.

See also

References

  1. ^ Of Local Origin New York Times 10 Dec 1943: 31.