Dangerous Money


Dangerous Money is a 1946 American film directed by Terry O. Morse, featuring Sidney Toler as Charlie Chan.

Plot

Aboard an ocean liner bound for Samoa, United [States Department of the Treasury|United States Treasury] agent Scott Pearson confidentially asks Charlie Chan for help; he is on the trail of stolen currency and art treasures plundered from Philippine banks during the Japanese invasion. Two attempts have been made on his life. Chan rescues him from a third, but not the fourth. The ship's captain asks Chan to complete the dead man's mission.

Cast

The film's working title was Hot Money.
The role of Chan's chauffeur Birmingham Brown was traditionally played by comedian Mantan Moreland, but not in this film. Mantan Moreland and Ben Carter, seen in the 1945 Chan mystery The Scarlet Clue, became so popular as a comedy team that they embarked on a coast-to-coast personal-appearance tour for eight weeks, which is why Moreland was missing from the next two Chan pictures, The Red Dragon and Dangerous Money. Veteran African-American comic Willie Best substituted for him as Chattanooga Brown, Birmingham's cousin.
Sidney Toler was seriously ill during filming. Diagnosed with cancer, the 72-year-old Toler could hardly walk but insisted on seeing the project through. Monogram hired Toler's original foil, "Number Two Son" Sen Yung, easing the burden on Toler and relieving him of some of the action.

Reception

Thalia Bell of Motion Picture Daily thought Dangerous Money was par for the series: "Typical murder mystery in typical Chan style. Sidney Toler portrays the Chinese detective in familiar fashion, while Victor Sen Young and Willie Best contribute their usual style of comedy." Showmen's Trade Review commented, "Entire locale of the story takes place aboard a ship, which naturally confines the action and makes the picture a little slower than most, but this shouldn't hinder its acceptance. Smooth and able in a role that seems to have become second nature to him, Sidney Toler is again the brilliant Chinese sleuth."

Copyright status

While some presume the film to be in the public domain, due to the omission of a valid copyright notice on original-release prints, Dangerous Money was indeed registered for copyright by Monogram Pictures on September 29, 1946.