A detective matches wits with the female leader of an Oriental crime ring.A detective matches wits with the female leader of an Oriental crime ring.A detective matches wits with the female leader of an Oriental crime ring.
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James Coleman
- Hardy
- (uncredited)
Richard Cramer
- FBI Man
- (uncredited)
Joe Garcio
- Henchman
- (uncredited)
Oscar 'Dutch' Hendrian
- Henchman
- (uncredited)
Jack Hendricks
- Henchman Playing Pinball Machine
- (uncredited)
James B. Leong
- Importer
- (uncredited)
Walter Long
- Henchman
- (uncredited)
Lew Meehan
- Warehouseman
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This is an old "B" crime movie if there ever was one, straight out of the 1930s. This was released in 1939 but it looks and feels more like 1931. The acting isn't bad but it's closer to Ed Wood-type '50s material than to Casablanca. In the first half of the film, the story drags too much. You'd think that would be almost impossible in a film that's less than an hour long, but it's true. For much of the first 30 minutes, nothing happens, but it picks up in the second half with hokey barroom-brawl-type fights and a car chase in the country.
The story is a simple one: an FBI agent goes undercover to get a crime boss. The twist is that "Carney," the crime boss of San Francisco's Chinatown, is a woman and the FBI doesn't know that. By the way, nobody is the gang is Asian.
The man pretending to semi-famous crook "Gallagher" from the east who has just escaped from the Atlanta prison, has his work cut out for him: another guy - "Lefty" (gee, what a unique name for a criminal) from Atlanta is there and could blow our man's cover. Playing the FBI good guy is Grant Withers ("agent Ralph Dickson"). Gallagher was only recruited because the local heat was on Carney and she preferred someone else running the show for awhile in case the law won. Then, she wouldn't implicated since she and the new guy had no connections.
I wish "Carney" had a bigger role because Evelyn Brent is very good in here, very mysterious, beautiful and her dialog is fun to hear. Unlike "Muggsy," one of her gang members who is too nice a guy to be a thug, Brent's character is tough and edgy.
The transfer quality on this Alpha Video disc is horrible, like a bad VHS tape.
The story is a simple one: an FBI agent goes undercover to get a crime boss. The twist is that "Carney," the crime boss of San Francisco's Chinatown, is a woman and the FBI doesn't know that. By the way, nobody is the gang is Asian.
The man pretending to semi-famous crook "Gallagher" from the east who has just escaped from the Atlanta prison, has his work cut out for him: another guy - "Lefty" (gee, what a unique name for a criminal) from Atlanta is there and could blow our man's cover. Playing the FBI good guy is Grant Withers ("agent Ralph Dickson"). Gallagher was only recruited because the local heat was on Carney and she preferred someone else running the show for awhile in case the law won. Then, she wouldn't implicated since she and the new guy had no connections.
I wish "Carney" had a bigger role because Evelyn Brent is very good in here, very mysterious, beautiful and her dialog is fun to hear. Unlike "Muggsy," one of her gang members who is too nice a guy to be a thug, Brent's character is tough and edgy.
The transfer quality on this Alpha Video disc is horrible, like a bad VHS tape.
"An F.B.I. operative goes undercover to infiltrate a gang responsible for killing one of his fellow agents. Bearing an uncanny resemblance to the man suspected of being the killer, the agent succeeds in finding the leader of the murderous gang. Known as 'The Illustrious One', this Asian femme fatale controls her gang ruthlessly from the luxury of her space in the Oriental Hotel," according to the DVD sleeve's synopsis. Scar-faced Grant Withers (as Ralph Dickson) stars in this silliness masquerading as a gumshoes verses Asians in San Francisco gangster picture. It isn't even remotely convincing. The highlight is the 1930s Los Angeles area location footage involving Mr. Withers and Dave O'Brien (Jerry Morgan) in a car pursuit. Villainess Evelyn Brent (as Carney), who is inserted into the chase, has some fun with her lines.
*** Daughter of the Tong (8/28/39) Raymond K. Johnson ~ Grant Withers, Evelyn Brent, Dave O'Brien
*** Daughter of the Tong (8/28/39) Raymond K. Johnson ~ Grant Withers, Evelyn Brent, Dave O'Brien
Daughter of the Tong (1939) I watched couple of times fairly recently a crime film that comes under less than 1 hour running time. Read few user reviews some denigrating ones there also. I'm not into crime films in general but like this one! In fact I've sent for restored version dvd. The "illustrious one" & known to her subordinates as "Carney" played by Evelyn Brent. She rules them with a iron fist!
Won't get into plot you no doubt have read already.
She "Carney" is a mysterious lady who alone carries film itself, her cool demeanour shows!
This film is rather well known for a B picture, I have heard of it since a long time and I understand why. Showing a villain female lead character is of course amazing, especially in those periods. Even now in 2024, it would be daring, so imagine in 1939. Evelyn Brent is perfect in this role, and the film is entertaining, more than so many others from this period. But I expected something more powerful, unusual, poignant. Evelyn Brent robs the whole film, it was foreseeable after seeing her for only a few minutes. The last minutes could have saved the story, at least for me. But this ending is just lousy; such a shame.
An FBI agent (apparently something fairly new), a crime boss, a little Asian profiling and xenophobia, a few crooks, some cars, a couple chases, and nothing the least bit memorable. I watched this as part of a collection because I'm curious about the this period in film history. These were probably made in a week and offered a bit of diversion in the midst of the depression and before we got into the war. We have a couple strong women, one on each side, and a plot that's not the least bit interesting. There's no suspense and no great question to be answered. It's no more nor less than it was meant to be. The performances are OK but there's that deep moral fervor that seems to permeate everything. Just another film.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- La leona del barrio chino
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 56m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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