IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,2/10
293
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuA pilot slips his plane into Red China to rescue an American girl trapped there, but when he lands he discovers that the girl has a surprise for him--she wants him to fill his plane with Chi... Alles lesenA pilot slips his plane into Red China to rescue an American girl trapped there, but when he lands he discovers that the girl has a surprise for him--she wants him to fill his plane with Chinese refugees and fly them out of the country, too.A pilot slips his plane into Red China to rescue an American girl trapped there, but when he lands he discovers that the girl has a surprise for him--she wants him to fill his plane with Chinese refugees and fly them out of the country, too.
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
Sorata Ra Fat
- Hostess
- (Nicht genannt)
Ronald Ing
- Sentry
- (Nicht genannt)
Zoreen Ismail
- Swee Kim
- (Nicht genannt)
Robert Lee
- Chinese Officer
- (Nicht genannt)
Paula Li Shiu
- Girl Croupier
- (Nicht genannt)
Milton Reid
- Bodyguard
- (Nicht genannt)
Yvonne Shima
- Liong Ti
- (Nicht genannt)
Jerry Lee Yen
- Room Boy
- (Nicht genannt)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
This film has virtually nothing to commend it.The only plus is the colour photography of Hong Kong 60 years ago.The plot is inconsequential,dull and very talky.With ridiculous casting.Athene Sayer as a Chinese woman and Eric Pohlman as a Russian General.The Chinese extras have to crowd around the small backlot,giving a general cheapskate air to the proceedings.
Richard Basehart runs a travel agency in Hong Kong. He has deep connections into the Chinesse community dating back to the War, so when pilot Burt Kwouk goes down near Canton, he goes n and gets him out. But Kwouk's papers vanished with the plane, so the police put him into custody, while Basehart heads back to Canton, to find Lisa Gastoni, who wants him to smuggle people out, and Chinese security man Eric Pohlmann, who wants to arrest everyone.
It has a view of China in this period straight out of Terry and the Pirates, but Basehart's calm demeanor and deep voice instill a sense of calm reality on this Hammer film directed by Michael Carreras. It doesn't always make sense, but it keeps moving right along. Wtih Athene Seyler and Bernard Cribbins.
It has a view of China in this period straight out of Terry and the Pirates, but Basehart's calm demeanor and deep voice instill a sense of calm reality on this Hammer film directed by Michael Carreras. It doesn't always make sense, but it keeps moving right along. Wtih Athene Seyler and Bernard Cribbins.
This film is in the spy-espionage genre but it is wrong to compare it with the James Bond films. It doesn't have the budget, the.gadgets, the suspense, the level of violence and the locations don't wander all round the world. Think more of the Harry Palmer spy films, except that this one is located in Hong Kong not Britain.
The lead character, (played by Richard Basehart), is Don Benton, a former World War II pilot who runs a travel agency in Hong Kong. He has a close relationship with his adopted Chinese family, who hid him from the Japanese during the war. The first scenes portray his travel agency and set him up as a man with wide contacts and somewhat loose scruples. When two customers complain about having difficulty getting a visa to visit the Phillipines he knows exactly who to ask and which official to bribe to get the visas .expedited. He is visited in his office by a US agent called Johnson who clearly wants him to get involved in working for the US government but Benton refuses because he doesn't want to get tangled in politics and orders him out of his office. But another agent later catches up with him and explains that the US government is interested in finding out the whereabouts of several passengers on a plane that crashed in China during a typhoon. Benton's adopted brother Jimmy (played by Bert Kwouk) was the pilot. He survived the crash but is now trapped over the Chinese border. Benton goes looking for Jimmy and brings him back. Jimmy reveals that his plane was decoyed off course over Chinese territory and shot down by two Chinese MiG fighter planes. .Back in Hong Kong the police arrest Jimmy because they believe the plane was intercepted with the connivance of the pilot. Jimmy cannot prove he isn't an agent of the Chinese government because all his identity documents are at the bottom of a river with the wreckage of his plane. Benton then uses one of his contacts to get a visa to Canton so that he can investigate what happened and prove Jimmy's identity.
People who like their spy films with lots of action and suspense are likely to find this one disappointing. There is very little suspense and the plot is largely dialogue-driven but it moves along at a good enough pace to maintain a viewer's interest. Benton's close relationship with his adopted Chinese family adds a warm and pleasing element to the story and the film has a satisfactory ending. It's an average film that is pleasantly watchable.
I always take films in their context and so I'm not generally put off by women (In this film, Benton's sisters) being given limited, stereotyped roles. That was typical of films made in the sixties. And I can put up with white European actors playing Asian characters. But I don't like it when that turns into caricature. The big jarring note in this film is the white actress who plays the Chinese family's matriarch. She is badly miscast. She doesn't look remotely oriental, speaks a cringeworthy version of pidgin English and her acting is more at the level of a pantomime than a film. It's a pity the film makers didn't find a Chinese actress for the role.
The lead character, (played by Richard Basehart), is Don Benton, a former World War II pilot who runs a travel agency in Hong Kong. He has a close relationship with his adopted Chinese family, who hid him from the Japanese during the war. The first scenes portray his travel agency and set him up as a man with wide contacts and somewhat loose scruples. When two customers complain about having difficulty getting a visa to visit the Phillipines he knows exactly who to ask and which official to bribe to get the visas .expedited. He is visited in his office by a US agent called Johnson who clearly wants him to get involved in working for the US government but Benton refuses because he doesn't want to get tangled in politics and orders him out of his office. But another agent later catches up with him and explains that the US government is interested in finding out the whereabouts of several passengers on a plane that crashed in China during a typhoon. Benton's adopted brother Jimmy (played by Bert Kwouk) was the pilot. He survived the crash but is now trapped over the Chinese border. Benton goes looking for Jimmy and brings him back. Jimmy reveals that his plane was decoyed off course over Chinese territory and shot down by two Chinese MiG fighter planes. .Back in Hong Kong the police arrest Jimmy because they believe the plane was intercepted with the connivance of the pilot. Jimmy cannot prove he isn't an agent of the Chinese government because all his identity documents are at the bottom of a river with the wreckage of his plane. Benton then uses one of his contacts to get a visa to Canton so that he can investigate what happened and prove Jimmy's identity.
People who like their spy films with lots of action and suspense are likely to find this one disappointing. There is very little suspense and the plot is largely dialogue-driven but it moves along at a good enough pace to maintain a viewer's interest. Benton's close relationship with his adopted Chinese family adds a warm and pleasing element to the story and the film has a satisfactory ending. It's an average film that is pleasantly watchable.
I always take films in their context and so I'm not generally put off by women (In this film, Benton's sisters) being given limited, stereotyped roles. That was typical of films made in the sixties. And I can put up with white European actors playing Asian characters. But I don't like it when that turns into caricature. The big jarring note in this film is the white actress who plays the Chinese family's matriarch. She is badly miscast. She doesn't look remotely oriental, speaks a cringeworthy version of pidgin English and her acting is more at the level of a pantomime than a film. It's a pity the film makers didn't find a Chinese actress for the role.
"Visa to Canton" is not an especially believable movie and a lot of the 'Asians' in the film where white folks in makeup and prosthetics...two big strikes against the movie. Despite this, I still enjoyed watching it and perhaps you will as well.
Richard Basehart plays Don Benton, an American who lives in Hong Kong...doing business as a travel agent. His political stances are not strong at all...he just wants to make money helping travelers. Out of the blue, he's approached by an American agent that want him to go into communist China to do a job for them. He refuses, but soon goes when he learns more. It seems that a good friend of his is a pilot and his plane went down near Canton. So, he sneaks in and rescues him. Well, this isn't all the agent wanted him to do, as three folks on the plane aren't accounted for...and he wants him to go back and find them. Will Don go...or will common sense keep him in Hong Kong.
The film is fast-paced and simple entertainment...nothing fancy nor sophisticated here...just a nice old adventure film.
By the way, the segment where they talk about the Chinese people going out to massacre the sparrows...that REALLY did happen. The Chinese government decided that sparrows were eating too many of the crops and they ordered everyone to go outside and make lots of noise and do everything they can to kill the birds by exhaustion. It worked and millions were killed. But soon they realized the stupidity of the plan, as bugs were now unchecked and the crops were completely decimated...killing millions due to starvation. Don't believe me? Read up on it...it's a very strange bit of Chinese history.
Richard Basehart plays Don Benton, an American who lives in Hong Kong...doing business as a travel agent. His political stances are not strong at all...he just wants to make money helping travelers. Out of the blue, he's approached by an American agent that want him to go into communist China to do a job for them. He refuses, but soon goes when he learns more. It seems that a good friend of his is a pilot and his plane went down near Canton. So, he sneaks in and rescues him. Well, this isn't all the agent wanted him to do, as three folks on the plane aren't accounted for...and he wants him to go back and find them. Will Don go...or will common sense keep him in Hong Kong.
The film is fast-paced and simple entertainment...nothing fancy nor sophisticated here...just a nice old adventure film.
By the way, the segment where they talk about the Chinese people going out to massacre the sparrows...that REALLY did happen. The Chinese government decided that sparrows were eating too many of the crops and they ordered everyone to go outside and make lots of noise and do everything they can to kill the birds by exhaustion. It worked and millions were killed. But soon they realized the stupidity of the plan, as bugs were now unchecked and the crops were completely decimated...killing millions due to starvation. Don't believe me? Read up on it...it's a very strange bit of Chinese history.
What a big fat nothing of a movie.
Richard Basehart plays a travel agent living in Hong Kong. A friend of his has piloted a plane with a courier in it, and the government wants his help in finding the courier; Basehart wants to clear the pilot's name, as the man is like a brother to him.
I really like Richard Basehart but even filmed in color this film had nothing to it except some beautiful location shots. I will say Basehart's relationship with the man's family was lovely.
Eric Pohlmann plays a bad guy, and Athene Seyler does a good job as the matriarch of the pilot's family.
It sort of reminded me of a bad Elvis movie - a travelogue, this time in another country.
One interesting thing - the last part concerns a real event, Massacre of the Sparrows (sounds gross, and it is), which was stopped the year this film was released.
Richard Basehart plays a travel agent living in Hong Kong. A friend of his has piloted a plane with a courier in it, and the government wants his help in finding the courier; Basehart wants to clear the pilot's name, as the man is like a brother to him.
I really like Richard Basehart but even filmed in color this film had nothing to it except some beautiful location shots. I will say Basehart's relationship with the man's family was lovely.
Eric Pohlmann plays a bad guy, and Athene Seyler does a good job as the matriarch of the pilot's family.
It sort of reminded me of a bad Elvis movie - a travelogue, this time in another country.
One interesting thing - the last part concerns a real event, Massacre of the Sparrows (sounds gross, and it is), which was stopped the year this film was released.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesFilmed in color, but shown in the US in black-and-white.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Hammer: Heroes, Legends and Monsters (2024)
Top-Auswahl
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- Laufzeit1 Stunde 15 Minuten
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