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State Department: File 649

  • 1949
  • Approved
  • 1 Std. 27 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
4,8/10
219
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Virginia Bruce and William Lundigan in State Department: File 649 (1949)
AbenteuerActionDramaKriegRomanzeThriller

Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuU.S. Foreign Service officer matches wits with a Chinese warlord to try to save American citizens threatened with execution.U.S. Foreign Service officer matches wits with a Chinese warlord to try to save American citizens threatened with execution.U.S. Foreign Service officer matches wits with a Chinese warlord to try to save American citizens threatened with execution.

  • Regie
    • Sam Newfield
  • Drehbuch
    • Milton Raison
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • William Lundigan
    • Virginia Bruce
    • Jonathan Hale
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    4,8/10
    219
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Sam Newfield
    • Drehbuch
      • Milton Raison
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • William Lundigan
      • Virginia Bruce
      • Jonathan Hale
    • 13Benutzerrezensionen
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • Fotos3

    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung31

    Ändern
    William Lundigan
    William Lundigan
    • Ken Seely
    Virginia Bruce
    Virginia Bruce
    • Marge Walden
    Jonathan Hale
    Jonathan Hale
    • Director-General
    Frank Ferguson
    Frank Ferguson
    • Consul Reither
    Richard Loo
    Richard Loo
    • Marshal Yun Usu
    Philip Ahn
    Philip Ahn
    • Col. Aram
    Raymond Bond
    • Consul Brown
    Milton Kibbee
    Milton Kibbee
    • Bill Sneed
    Victor Sen Yung
    Victor Sen Yung
    • Johnny Han
    Lora Lee Michel
    Lora Lee Michel
    • Jessica
    John Holland
    John Holland
    • Ballinger
    Harlan Warde
    Harlan Warde
    • Rev. Morse
    Carole Donne
    • Mrs. Morse
    Barbara Wooddell
    Barbara Wooddell
    • Carrie
    • (as Barbara Woodell)
    Robert J. Stevenson
    Robert J. Stevenson
    • Mongolian Spy
    • (as Robert Stephenson)
    Lee Bennett
    Lee Bennett
    • Don Logan
    H.T. Tsiang
    • Wonto
    Joseph Crehan
    Joseph Crehan
    • Government Official
    • Regie
      • Sam Newfield
    • Drehbuch
      • Milton Raison
    • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
    • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

    Benutzerrezensionen13

    4,8219
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    Empfohlene Bewertungen

    3planktonrules

    Dull and outdated nearly as soon as it was released.

    "State Department: File 649" is a film that is supposedly set in China. The film bebuted in February, 1949...and by October of the same year, the country had fallen to Mao and the Chinese Communists. This means that only a few months after the film was released, it was already obsolete.

    As far as the film goes, it was produced by Sam Neufeld. This means that even with Cinecolor, the movie is a cheap affair--with none of the polish you'd find in a film from a major studio. Neufeld was known for cheap B-movies...and this one is as cheap as they come!

    Something is up in China. The local American Consul knows something isn't right...but isn't exactly sure what. So, agent 649, Ken Seely (William Lundigan), is sent to Peking (before it was renamed Beijing) to investigate. Like Batman, Ken's parents were murdered long ago--though this was in Mongolia, not Gotham City.

    So is this any good? No especially. Lundigan has little charisma and the quality of the production isn't great--with some sloppy edits and little to make it stand out in a positive way. Now I am not saying it's bad....just that it isn't very good. At best, an odd time-passer.

    By the way, the copy I saw of this film was posted on one of the Roku channels. The copy they have is very poor--often extremely dark and grainy. This combined with the general shabbiness of the story make it a tough film for most viewers to watch and enjoy.
    6CatherineYronwode

    Strange Indie Film

    This is a difficult film to review. William Lundigan plays a nicely heroic Amercian with a warm, charismatic radio-trained voice; Richard Loo is great as the temper-tantrum-throwing villainous warlord marshal, with Philip Ahn as his civilized aide-de-camp; and Victor Sen Yung is splendid as a heroic Chinese-American radio operator. There are also cute turns by Milton Kibbee (Guy Kibbee's brother) as a pot-bellied fur trader, Barbara Wodell as a hysterical neurotic, and plug-ugly ex-pro wrestler Henry 'Bomber' Kulky as a Mongolian (in your wildest dreams) sergeant-at-arms, but despite these little highlights, the whole film is excessively talky, suffers from a patriotic narrative introduction, features muddled motivations (would the State Department actually send a female secret agent to Mongolia to deal with the emotional problems of a depressed, piano-playing secretary???), is rather set-bound (are those the "Republic Rocks" i see out back in Mongolia?), and ends on a weirdly sudden note, thus removing it from any consideration as an undiscovered classic.

    Also working against this film's revival or renewal of popularity is the plot line's firm tie to then current events. How many modern viewers will understand the backdrop of what the script refers to as "the present crisis" -- the fact that, in 1949, this meant the Communist take-over of China, with Mao Tse-Tung wresting control from the pro-American Generalisimo Chiang Kai Shek?

    Communism might have made a credible opposing force to the heroic American men and women of the State department, but the film-makers apparently wanted to play it safe and, not knowing which way the cats were gonna jump in old Peiping, they inserted a stereotypical "Mongolian Warlord" figure as the opponent to America's interests, a "Yellow Peril" threat that was dated at the time and hasn't aged well since. There was an attempt to cover this anachronism in the screenplay by stating that the marshal's father had been a local "prince" and that he himself -- despite the fact that his followers are dressed in Maoist People's Army type uniforms -- are actually out of favour with the "central government" -- but the effect comes across as a fairly transparent screenwriter's ruse, because if the marshal was a Mongolian prince, educated at Oxford, then why were his foot soldiers wearing Maoist style clothing?

    Campiest line in the story, delivered by Philip Ahn, after Richard Loo goes ape on Victor Sen Yung's communications set-up:

    "The marshal is very angry. He has broken your radio."

    Spoken in the voice of Monty Python's Michael Palin as Cardinal Ximenez, that would have been a classic! As it is, it's just weird.
    3planktonrules

    Pretty dull and cheap but not exactly terrible.

    "State Department" is a strange film because it's about politics in China but never mentions the communists--who assumed power the same year this film debuted! It's also a rather cheap and insignificant film.

    The movie begins with a prologue about various workers in the foreign service who have given their lives for their country. One of these people is the subject of this film. Ken (William Lundigan) is the new vice-consul of a remote consulate in northern China. However, he just arrives at his new posting when a local warlord arrives and begins menacing everyone. This sort of stuff did happen in the 1920s and 30--and I assume that this is the time period in which the movie is based.

    The film is decent but a bit dull. While it's not a bad film, it never rises to anything more than just barely average. Lundigan and the rest are pretty good--it's just that the story never seems too interesting.
    4richardchatten

    "I always get a tug of emotion when I look at the Lincoln Memorial, don't you?"

    You wouldn't expect a cold war drama with a title like that to be in colour, but here it is. (Soviet propaganda films of the period were also often in colour believe it or not.) Art director Edward Jewell also otherwise manages to suggest fairly lavish production values on a limited budget and the film was presumably waved through by the Breen Office as being politically useful in the grim new postwar climate (people get their tongues cut out and arms cut off - mercifully off camera - presumably to remind audiences just how dangerous the world still was outside the good old U. S. of A.)

    Unfortunately, for all it's up to the minute, Torn-from-Today's-Headlines veneer Russia exploded its first atom bomb and China fell to the communists within months of the film's release in early 1949, rendering its storyline about a dastardly Chinese warlord even more irrelevant to current events; and it fell through a fissure in history that makes it interesting today for so precisely preserving a moment of faltering uncertainty and indecision as the tectonic plates of the United States' relations with the East began shifting in ways that still haven't settled yet.
    6Matthew_Capitano

    Fortune Cookie Theater

    Bill Lundgren is forced to be the "army, navy, and marines" all rolled into one as he infiltrates the underground in communist China.

    After learning how to be a good spy, Lundy literally bumps into pretty Virginia Bruce, whom also is a trainee in Washington. Our heroes part, but re-emerge in one another's company when serving in Peking. Frank Ferguson tags along as Lundy's boss. Fine veteran actor Joe Crehan plays a U.S. government official.

    Fun at the start with some interesting narrative background concerning the Department of State, though things slow down a bit as the film progresses to the eastern hemisphere.

    Worth a look as a period piece from the prime of the Cold War.

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    Handlung

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    • Wissenswertes
      Former Foreign Service public diplomacy officer, Donald M. Bishop, writes, in his review of the movie, in the American Foreign Services Journal in 2014, in 'It Deserved An Oscar": "During the war, Lundigan enlisted and took his place behind, rather than in front of, the camera. He was a Marine Corps combat cameraman in the battles of Peleliu and Okinawa."
    • Alternative Versionen
      Television prints are in black and white.
    • Verbindungen
      Featured in The Slanted Screen (2006)

    Top-Auswahl

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    Details

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    • Erscheinungsdatum
      • 11. Februar 1949 (Vereinigte Staaten)
    • Herkunftsland
      • Vereinigte Staaten
    • Sprache
      • Englisch
    • Auch bekannt als
      • File 649: State Department
    • Drehorte
      • Iverson Ranch - 1 Iverson Lane, Chatsworth, Los Angeles, Kalifornien, USA
    • Produktionsfirma
      • Sigmund Neufeld Productions
    • Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen

    Box Office

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    • Budget
      • 750.000 $ (geschätzt)
    Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

    Technische Daten

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    • Laufzeit
      • 1 Std. 27 Min.(87 min)
    • Seitenverhältnis
      • 1.37 : 1

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