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IMDbPro

Dans la cité obscurcie

Original title: City in Darkness
  • 1939
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 15m
IMDb RATING
6.5/10
1.4K
YOUR RATING
Lynn Bari and Sidney Toler in Dans la cité obscurcie (1939)
WhodunnitCrimeDramaMystery

While in Paris for a reunion on the eve of World War II, Charlie finds that the murder of a hated businessman leads him to a conspiracy to smuggle arms to Germany.While in Paris for a reunion on the eve of World War II, Charlie finds that the murder of a hated businessman leads him to a conspiracy to smuggle arms to Germany.While in Paris for a reunion on the eve of World War II, Charlie finds that the murder of a hated businessman leads him to a conspiracy to smuggle arms to Germany.

  • Director
    • Herbert I. Leeds
  • Writers
    • Robert Ellis
    • Helen Logan
    • Gina Kaus
  • Stars
    • Sidney Toler
    • Lynn Bari
    • Richard Clarke
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.5/10
    1.4K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Herbert I. Leeds
    • Writers
      • Robert Ellis
      • Helen Logan
      • Gina Kaus
    • Stars
      • Sidney Toler
      • Lynn Bari
      • Richard Clarke
    • 35User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast50

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    Sidney Toler
    Sidney Toler
    • Charlie Chan
    Lynn Bari
    Lynn Bari
    • Marie Dubon
    Richard Clarke
    Richard Clarke
    • Tony Madero
    • (as Richard Clark)
    Harold Huber
    Harold Huber
    • Marcel
    Pedro de Cordoba
    Pedro de Cordoba
    • Antoine
    • (as Pedro De Cordoba)
    Dorothy Tree
    Dorothy Tree
    • Charlotte Ronnell
    C. Henry Gordon
    C. Henry Gordon
    • Prefect of Police J. Romaine
    Douglass Dumbrille
    Douglass Dumbrille
    • Petroff
    • (as Douglas Dumbrille)
    Noel Madison
    Noel Madison
    • Belescu
    Leo G. Carroll
    Leo G. Carroll
    • Louis Santelle
    • (as Leo Carroll)
    Lon Chaney Jr.
    Lon Chaney Jr.
    • Pierre
    Louis Mercier
    Louis Mercier
    • Max
    George Davis
    George Davis
    • Alex
    Barbara Leonard
    Barbara Leonard
    • Lola
    Adrienne D'Ambricourt
    Adrienne D'Ambricourt
    • Landlady
    Frederik Vogeding
    Frederik Vogeding
    • Captain
    • (as Fredrik Vogeding)
    Eugene Borden
    • Gendarme
    • (uncredited)
    James Carlisle
    • Commuter
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Herbert I. Leeds
    • Writers
      • Robert Ellis
      • Helen Logan
      • Gina Kaus
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews35

    6.51.4K
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    Featured reviews

    6robertguttman

    A moment in history preserved in amber

    Although not the best of the Charlie Chan series, this is a cut above the later Sidney Toler Chan films. However, what really makes it worth seeing is that the story takes place during the 1938 Munich Crisis (September 1938), yet was produced before WW-II began (September 1939). The setting is Paris, which is blacked out due to the threat of war, and while the French armed forces are busy mobilizing. The city-wide blackout explains the title, as "The City of Light" had been transformed into a "City in Darkness".

    There are plenty of lame gags involving the distribution of gas masks, and people panicking due to false air raid alarms. Within a few months of this film's production none of those things would be laughing matters anymore. In fact, although produced prior to the outbreak of WW-II, the movie was not actually released until December 1939, by which time the war had actually begun.

    In a sense, therefore, "City in Darkness" represents a significant moment in history that, one might say, has been preserved in a drop of amber. It was the moment when one world crisis was averted, leading to the preservation of world peace for a last few happy months before the final unleashing of Armageddon. For that alone, if for no other reason, "City in Darkness" is still worth a look.
    4Jim Tritten

    Pre-war Paris as setting for weak spy melodrama

    Maybe it was the play that forms the basis of this tale, maybe the return to previous screenwriters, or a new director, or whatever…but this is one of the weakest Sidney Toler Chan films done at 20th Century Fox. Not much of a mystery – more a propaganda film about the coming war and the need to beware of traitors who would sell and ship arms to the enemy and who need clearance papers that disguise munitions as fruit.

    One of the few films without one of his offspring (he admits to having 5 sons here). Chan plays instead off Marcel, secretary and godson to the Paris Chief of Police. Audiences were probably being conditioned to regard the French as future allies; hence Marcel explains that he is really the son of the Bucharest Chief of Police – thus maligning Romania instead. Harold Huber has done a much more subtle and effective job at comedy in the Chan series. Pedro de Cordoba does splendidly as a dignified gentleman's gentleman Antoine and WWI veteran who sees his son off to the next conflict. AMC gives second billing in this film to Lon Chaney, Jr., but in reality his is a bit part preceding his more memorable appearance in `Of Mice and Men' the same year. He must have needed the work.

    There are enough clues, misdirections, and suspects to keep the outcome up in the air but we are not made to really care. The murdered man deserved to be murdered and who did it matters little. There are sufficient clues for an observant viewer to arrive at the solution along with Chan.

    Not one of the better or even good Chan films. See this only to round out the series. As Chan said in this film: `To describe bitter medicine will not improve its flavor.'
    6bkoganbing

    Breach in the blackout regulations

    One of the few Charlie Chan movies that does not have one of his eager beaver sons trying oh so earnestly to help, Charlie Chan In The City Of Darkness refers to the fact that the well known city of lights is actually in darkness due to blackout regulations. During the course of the film, a breach in those regulations actually saves Sidney Toler's life.

    Harold Huber takes the place of the sons here and provides us some comic relief. Huber who normally played oily villainous types must have welcomed a change in casting.

    Toler is in Paris ironically celebrating a reunion of intelligence service officers from the last World War as a new one beckons. The film, released in 1939 after war had been officially declared was set in that period in 1938 when the United Kingdom and France went to the brink before capitulating to the Nazis at Munich.

    During the first of a Parisian blackout the French prefect of police in Paris is up to his ears in work and just can't get to the murder of Douglass Dumbrille in a timely fashion. This provides his loyal secretary who wants to make his bones as a detective an opportunity. Good thing Huber had Sidney Toler around to show him the ropes.

    Dumbrille was one of those international men of mystery and intrigue and being that has a host of enemies who would like to do him in. There's a nice array of suspects including a couple of sneak thieves played comically by Louis Mercier and George Davis who might look good for it as well. In fact with regularity Huber keeps declaring he's solved the case only to have Toler give him another Confucian aphorism about staying cool.

    During the course of the film an international smuggling and spy ring is broken up. As for the murderer, a rather different fate awaits him than that of the normal course of perpetrators that Charlie Chan usually brings in.

    Toler and Huber keep this film entertaining at all time, a good entry among the Charlie Chan features.
    9bnwfilmbuff

    Patience Big Sister to Wisdom

    Smuggling, counterfeiting, espionage, blackmail, theft, treason, and murder are all intertwined in this brilliant Chan pre-WWII mystery. Charlie is trying to leave Paris on the eve of the war when he stumbles into this complex web of deceit while investigating the murder of a munitions manufacturer. The cast and acting were amazing. However, Harold Huber as the bumbling police inspector does get to be a bit much, though he has several laugh-out-loud funny scenes. Sidney Toler is on top of his game for this entry with several wonderful quips as well as his trademark poise amid the insanity but fear when endangered. This has a marvelous finish as well as a prescient statement ending the movie. This is a must see for fans of this series.
    7binapiraeus

    War and murder

    Even after watching it a couple of times, this - admittedly unique - entry in the 'Charlie Chan' series still looks like a somewhat strange and a little bit inappropriate mixture of a 'usual' murder mystery and an early WWII flag waver. It starts like a Newsreel about the dramatical political developments in Europe; and it is announced that on September 28, the whole city of Paris has to remain in darkness because of the possibility of a German air strike.

    The next thing we see is a reunion party of secret agents from WWI, to which M. Romaine, the Prefect of Police, has invited his old friend Charlie Chan; and they drink a toast to peace, hoping there'll not be another war soon...

    But at the same time, there is a spy ring of an enemy country in full activity: Charlotte Ronnell arranges with sinister Belescu that a cargo full of French weapons manufactured by another enemy spy, Petroff, will sail out the same night to get into the enemy's hands before an embargo will be imposed; but Belescu tricks them, and they're left without the necessary papers. And in another part of Paris, Petroff's innocent former secretary Tony Madero wants to flee the country in order not to be accused as a member of the spy ring, and his wife Marie promises him to get him a ticket and a false passport from shady M. Santelle - but she's got to raise a lot of money, and her only hope is Petroff...

    ... And a few hours later, Petroff is found shot, discovered by his butler Antoine, a veteran from WWI who has just sent his young son to the army; and so, while the soldiers are leaving for a possible war, Charlie and his friend's godson, dopey inspector Marcel (played once more by Harold Huber, who specialized in playing nervous, clumsy Frenchmen) investigate the Petroff murder, looking for clues like a camellia lying next to the body, a smashed window in the cellar, and so on...

    Somehow, this mixture doesn't work properly - solving a murder case (even if it's connected to a dangerous spy ring) amid the atmosphere of a city preparing for war is simply somehow like losing one's sense of proportion... And when the case is solved, the film takes us back to politics: Romaine proclaims happily that there will be NO war, because Hitler has just invited the French and British Premiers to a conference in Munich! BUT since the film was released in December 1939, the further developments were already known by that time; and so Charlie Chan can utter one of his wise 'foretellings': 'Beware of spider who invites fly into parlor'...

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The advice given by the butler, Antoine (Pedro de Cordoba), to his soldier son concerns having rhubarb pills available. Rhubarb was used primarily for digestive complaints including constipation and diarrhea which were among major complaints by WWI survivors, Antoine having served in the Great War.
    • Goofs
      When Harold Huber is thrown from the raised doorway of the hotel steps by the bouncer, the mattress on the cobblestones can be seen in the shot.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Charlie Chan: [referring to the Munich conference] A wise man once said, "Beware of spider who invites fly into parlor."

    • Connections
      Edited into La guerre, la musique, Hollywood et nous... (1976)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 1, 1939 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Streaming on "" YouTube Channel
      • Streaming on "Classic Entertainment" YouTube Channel
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Dans la ville obscurcie
    • Filming locations
      • 20th Century Fox Studios - 10201 Pico Blvd., Century City, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 15m(75 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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