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IMDbPro

Charlie Chan nos Jogos Olímpicos

Título original: Charlie Chan at the Olympics
  • 1937
  • Approved
  • 1 h 11 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,0/10
1,9 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Katherine DeMille, C. Henry Gordon, Warner Oland, and Andrew Tombes in Charlie Chan nos Jogos Olímpicos (1937)
Mistério

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaWhen a strategically important new aerial guidance system is stolen, Charlie traces it to the Berlin Olympics, where he has to battle spies and enemy agents to retrieve it.When a strategically important new aerial guidance system is stolen, Charlie traces it to the Berlin Olympics, where he has to battle spies and enemy agents to retrieve it.When a strategically important new aerial guidance system is stolen, Charlie traces it to the Berlin Olympics, where he has to battle spies and enemy agents to retrieve it.

  • Direção
    • H. Bruce Humberstone
  • Roteiristas
    • Robert Ellis
    • Helen Logan
    • Paul Burger
  • Artistas
    • Warner Oland
    • Katherine DeMille
    • Pauline Moore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,0/10
    1,9 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • H. Bruce Humberstone
    • Roteiristas
      • Robert Ellis
      • Helen Logan
      • Paul Burger
    • Artistas
      • Warner Oland
      • Katherine DeMille
      • Pauline Moore
    • 40Avaliações de usuários
    • 16Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos24

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    Elenco principal49

    Editar
    Warner Oland
    Warner Oland
    • Charlie Chan
    Katherine DeMille
    Katherine DeMille
    • Yvonne Roland
    Pauline Moore
    Pauline Moore
    • Betty Adams
    Allan Lane
    Allan Lane
    • Richard Masters
    Keye Luke
    Keye Luke
    • Lee Chan
    C. Henry Gordon
    C. Henry Gordon
    • Arthur Hughes
    John Eldredge
    John Eldredge
    • Cartwright
    Layne Tom Jr.
    Layne Tom Jr.
    • Charlie Chan Jr.
    Jonathan Hale
    Jonathan Hale
    • Hopkins
    Morgan Wallace
    Morgan Wallace
    • Honorable Charles Zaraka
    Frederik Vogeding
    Frederik Vogeding
    • Captain Strasser
    • (as Fredrik Vogeding)
    Andrew Tombes
    Andrew Tombes
    • Police Chief Scott
    Howard Hickman
    Howard Hickman
    • Dr. Burton
    William Begg
    William Begg
    • Minor Role
    • (não creditado)
    Brooks Benedict
    Brooks Benedict
    • Zaraka Henchman
    • (não creditado)
    Stanley Blystone
    Stanley Blystone
    • New York Policeman
    • (não creditado)
    Walter Bonn
    • Polizei Officer
    • (não creditado)
    Don Brodie
    Don Brodie
    • Radio Announcer
    • (não creditado)
    • Direção
      • H. Bruce Humberstone
    • Roteiristas
      • Robert Ellis
      • Helen Logan
      • Paul Burger
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários40

    7,01.9K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    7AlsExGal

    Worth watching for reasons not intended when it was made...

    ... that being that the film is set at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin.

    A plane is doing a test flight with a brand new invention vital to the defense of the United States when the plane disappears. The audience can see inside the cockpit that someone hiding inside the plane overpowers the actual pilot, but the cast is denied this knowledge. Charlie Chan finds the plane with the body of the pilot nearby while on a fishing trip with one of his younger sons. A careful investigation leads suspicions to somebody who is part of the American Olympic team, and thus he has left Hawaii for Berlin. Therefore Chan goes to Berlin himself to continue the investigation. A further complcation is that oldest Chan son Lee is a competitor in the games there.

    Set in 1936, there is quite a bit of stock footage of the 1936 Olympic games. There is one shot with the torch bearer running down the stairs with people in the crowd on either side of him clearly performing the Nazi salute. The Berlin police are portrayed as pedantic stumble bums whose hearts are in the right place and who act and dress like the Kaiser is still alive versus the rather lethal group that they had become by 1936 - not a group you'd want to tangle with.

    What is really ironic is that Charlie postulates that the radio control device will be sold in Germany to some unnamed group of international terrorists because they feel "safe" in Germany during the games because of the presence of so many people from many nations. It's so interesting to see how the United States and the rest of the world did not take Hitler's Germany seriously until it was almost too late.
    7Mike-764

    Sports, Spies, and Murder

    Charlie discovers the body of a pilot who was missing for days following a test flight using a remote control navigation system, which is missing from the plane. Charlie discovers that the killer, Miller, worked at an airplane factory in Honolulu, but is found murdered in his apartment before he can be questioned. The suspects of being the sinister power behind the theft are headed towards Berlin, not only to watch the Olympics, but to sell the remote control unit. Charlie takes the Hindenburg to Berlin and is joined by son Lee (who is entered in the 100m swimming relay) to track down Yvonne Rowland, who was seen in Miller's apartment, and who has contacted Baron Zaraka, dignitary for a warring nation. Knowing that Chan is on the case, Zaraka has Lee kidnapped and will turn him over to Charlie in exchange for the remote control device. Charlie tries to dupe the spies, even though he knows that his son is at their mercy. Very good Chan film that places the emphasis on foreign intrigue rather than mystery (and is able to succeed). Oland does turn in one of his best performances as the character, due to the character's development from the genial detective to the worried parent. The Olympics angle does give an interesting aspect of the film towards today's audiences giving an idea of the athletes back then (and the subtraction of the Nazi influence over the games). The climax to the mystery (which is suspenseful) and the revelation of the killer's motive seems to suggest that the film was trying to bloat the mystery angle of the film more. Rating, based on B mysteries, 7.
    8binapiraeus

    Sports, spies, and kidnapping

    While Charlie's multi-talented son Lee is traveling by ship to Europe as a member of the US Olympics team, his father searches at home for a newly invented remote control device for planes which is probably on its way to be sold to some obscure foreign power (the political tensions all over the world are already perceptible three years before the beginning of WW II, but the movie doesn't show any affiliation or enmity yet) - and happens to be on the same ship with Lee and his friends, guarded by a 'femme fatale' (Cecil B. DeMille's adoptive daughter Katherine in her probably best role) who arouses the dislike of the young athletes only because she keeps flirting with one of them although he's got a steady girlfriend...

    Charlie, in the meantime, has found out the 'traveling route' of the device, and 'overtakes' it, first by plane and then aboard the famous zeppelin 'Hindenburg' (which would crash only a year later). But from the moment on that the athletes (one of whom 'smuggled' it into the country without even knowing it), the spies and the police mingle, there is constant confusion, until Charlie seems to have it safely in the hands of the German police authorities - BUT the spies have got Lee...

    From this moment, we really FEEL the agony of Charlie as a father, and his dilemma of handing the important invention over to the spies or risking his son's life - certainly a very earnest and dramatic entry in the 'Charlie Chan' movies, but not without its lighter moments; and besides that, we get a glimpse of the 1936 Olympics in Berlin - a real time document.
    7eschetic-1

    Decent entry, but "pulled from circulation shortly after its release"?

    Some unnamed source at IMDb alleges that CHARLIE CHAN AT THE OLYMPICS, a film capitalizing on the then recent 1936 Berlin Olympics (taking place in Germany under Chancellor Hitler) and released on May 21, 1937, in the U.S and in the early fall of that year in Europe, was "pulled from circulation shortly after its release because it takes place in Nazi Germany." Could someone please define "shortly after its release"? The film, while sympathetically portraying the civilian police force in Berlin (interestingly played for irony and possibly surprise or subtext by frequent film villain Frederik Vogeding), pointedly incorporated actual newsreel footage of Jessie Owens' Olympic triumph which was so upsetting to the Herr Hitler. The film plot had considerable hurdles to surmount in avoiding the identification of the foreign power trying to steal the "McGuffin" military device. Most U.S. or British films of the period would have been more blatant in assuming the national guilty party, but Germany was still a major market for U.S. motion pictures (even if the Chan character himself must have been an anathema to Nazi Party leadership).

    Even with the unsettling Anschlus in Austria and the Munich Crisis over the dismembering of Czechoslovakia; with the invasion of Poland and the formal start of European hostilities in World War II still a little more than a year away (U.S. entry into the conflict more than four years away!), America and much of the rest of the world was doing its best to ignore distressing realities within the Reich. While CHARLIE CHAN AT THE OLYMPICS had to do a fine dance to play to that desire to turn a blind eye, it largely succeeded. It is difficult to believe that 20th Century Fox would withdraw an entry in the wildly popular Chan series in anything which could be realistically considered "soon" (anything less than six months). A specific DATE of the withdrawal would be appreciated.

    While the film over all may be one of the lesser Chan efforts, it has moments (the initial set-up in the U.S., the travelogue race to Berlin, the scenes in the Olympic Stadium and the final confrontation with the killers) which are as good as any in the canon. To be dismissed as "pulled from circulation shortly after its release" if it is demonstrably not true would be unfortunate.
    9ccthemovieman-1

    Good To See This Gem Coming Out On DVD

    Charlie has his youngest helper ever - or at least in any of the 20 Chan films I've seen - as 12-year-old Charlie Jr. joins Number One Son Lee as they both help dad solve a crime.

    Lee (Keye Luke) plays a member of the United States Olympic swimming team in this adventure. The repartee between Chan (Warner Oland) and his two sons in here is terrific. Layne Tom Jr. plays Charlie Junior.

    The Chan movie is more of an adventure than the normal whodunit as Charlie and the cops travel to the Olympics in Munich, Germany in search of a missing radar-plane "black box." Lee is kidnapped at the games and his dad does everything he can to get his kidnapped son back while not jeopardizing the United States in the process.

    This is one of the better Chan films and will be available on DVD in December, 2006, as part of another Charlie Chan DVD package of four movies.

    Interesses relacionados

    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mistério

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    • Curiosidades
      While several views of swastika flags were blotted out, other instances of Nazism were missed, e.g. as the German torch bearer turns left into the grand stadium avenue, in the lower left corner of screen can be seen four militarily-clad males giving the Nazi salute; plus as the same torch bearer descends the stadium steps all the youths lining the way are giving the Nazi salute, even with four outstretched arms in very front of the camera.
    • Erros de gravação
      When Charlie's son brings him a picnic basket he says he was bringing "cut up tea and sandwiches" when clearly he meant "tea and cut up sandwiches."
    • Citações

      Charlie Chan Jr: Gee, Pop, they're having as hard a time finding that plane as we are catching fish.

      Charlie Chan: Fish in sea like flea on dog - always present but difficult to find.

    • Conexões
      Edited into Who Dunit Theater: Charlie Chan at the Olympics (2015)

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    Perguntas frequentes14

    • How long is Charlie Chan at the Olympics?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 21 de maio de 1937 (Estados Unidos da América)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Charlie Chan at the Olympics
    • Locações de filme
      • 20th Century Fox Studios - 10201 Pico Blvd., Century City, Los Angeles, Califórnia, EUA(Studio)
    • Empresa de produção
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 1 h 11 min(71 min)
    • Cor
      • Black and White
    • Proporção
      • 1.37 : 1

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