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Island of Lost Men

Island of Lost Men

★ 5.91939Movie1 h 8 mالولايات المتحدة
جريمةدراماأُحجِيَّة

A Chinese general, who disappeared in the Malaysian jungles with stolen government funds, is sought by his cabaret-singing daughter who wants to clear his name.

236 people rated
🔇

Island of Lost Men

1939

R

1 h 8 m

الولايات المتحدة

جريمة

دراما

أُحجِيَّة

A Chinese general, who disappeared in the Malaysian jungles with stolen government funds, is sought by his cabaret-singing daughter who wants to clear his name.
More

5.9 /10

236 people rated

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أفضل الممثلين(18)
starring avatar
Anna May Wong
Kim Ling
starring avatar
J. Carrol Naish
Gregory Prin
starring avatar
Eric Blore
Herbert
starring avatar
Ernest Truex
Frobenius
starring avatar
Broderick Crawford
Tex Ballister
starring avatar
Anthony Quinn
Chang Tai
starring avatar
William Haade
Hambly
starring avatar
Rudolf Forster
Professor Sen
starring avatar
Richard Loo
General Ahn Ling
starring avatar
Philip Ahn
Sam Ring
default avatar
Philson Ahn
Ka Woo
starring avatar
Rafael Alcayde
First Latin
default avatar
Rupert Andez
Native Servant
default avatar
Andres De La Cruz
Native Servant
default avatar
Ethyl May Halls
Tourist
starring avatar
Mitchell Ingraham
Tourist
starring avatar
George Kirby
Waiter
default avatar
Sam Labrador
Native Servant

تقييمات المستخدمين

author avatar

L O U K M A N🔥

13/10/2023 09:28
Trailer—Island of Lost Men
author avatar

Fatimaezzahraazedine

29/06/2023 07:13
Island of Lost Men(480P)
author avatar

Sall

12/06/2023 16:00
source: Island of Lost Men
author avatar

LoLo233

12/06/2023 16:00
Island of Lost Men (1939) does not show much of an improvement over Dangerous To Know (1938). The director (this time, Kurt Neumann) again allows the main player (this time, J. Carroll Naish, complete with a particularly grating, phony accent) to grossly over-act and swamp the rest of the cast, although Brod Crawford and Eric Blore give him a good run for his money. Anna May Wong, alas, is rather subdued. The ridiculously melodramatic script may have been tolerable given a different lead (bring back Akim Tamiroff!), even though its stage origins are never less than glaringly apparent. This movie represents the first of a dozen or so movies in which director Neumann teamed with photographer Karl Struss. As might be expected, the lighting is certainly attractive but, alas, nothing special.
author avatar

taya <3

12/06/2023 16:00
B movie about a woman (Anna May Wong) traveling to a labor camp run by a slimeball (J. Carrol Naish) looking for her father. A remake of the 1933 film White Woman, which I have yet to watch. Let's talk about the cast. We have two future stars in Anthony Quinn and Broderick Crawford. Great character actors J. Carrol Naish, Eric Blore, and Ernest Truex. Then we have cult favorite Anna May Wong, the star of the picture. She's also the only one truly playing to her strengths. The others are fine for the type of movie this is, but I've seen them all do much much better elsewhere. Naish is especially disappointing. He usually brings a touch of sympathetic humanity to all of his performances, even the villains. But here he's all bad with no redeemable traits. Compare this to any number of movies with similar villains played by the likes of Karloff, Lorre, and Atwill and you'll see how generic and uninteresting this performance is. Naish is a legend but this is not one of his best efforts.
author avatar

Njie Samba

12/06/2023 16:00
Teutonic expatriates Kurt Neumann (director), Karl Struss (cinematographer), Hans Dreier (art director) combine skills in this very loose remake of the 1933 Charles Laughton/Carole Lombard WHITE WOMAN with Anna May Wong cast as Kim Ling, determined to find a way to cleanse her father's discredited name, and J. Carroll Naish is Gregory Prin, in this version a part-Asian overlord of a jungle labor settlement to which visitors are given only one-way passage. Created as unabashed melodrama, the work begins with a first meeting of Prin and Kim Ling where she is performing as "Lily" at a Singapore night club, and when she notices that Prin wears a medallion of her family crest, she accepts his invitation to accompany him to his plantation as guest, where she is introduced to sundry felonious outcasts, one of whom, however, is Chinese "Secret Service" agent Chang Tai, played by Anthony Quinn. Kim Ling discovers among her host's effects the proof that she requires to restore her father's honour, whereupon she and Chang Tai endeavour to bring about Prin's downfall, but the canny villain's informants keep him knowledgeable of this activity, as the rapidly paced affair moves to its highly charged conclusion, at times bereft of logic but never dull. In spite of moderate cutting by the studio, Paramount, ISLAND pleases on many accounts, notably the efficient direction and utilization of some clever script business, along with artistic cinematography and atmospheric sets and scoring, but the playing is sterling as well, with Naish capturing acting laurels with his nuanced reading of the inconsistent Prin, and there are outstanding turns from Eric Blore and Broderick Crawford, Wong playing Wong and singing nicely; efficient editing by Ellsworth Hoagland benefits this crisply done motion picture.
author avatar

Peete Bereng

12/06/2023 16:00
It might be argued that any of the movies starring Anna May Wong has an intrinsic element of Asian sympathy, but at various points in this story I felt they were overdoing it. Even though the story is set in Singapore, for purposes of feasibility I suppose, Wong's character's name is China Lily. Conveniently enough, one of her old friends from China happens to wander through her part of town also. Singapore was just a little fishing village apparently. What underscores the initial emphasis on the "exotic" setting and characters is an early comment by the so-called "King of the River" as he orders in the restaurant - "American style hamburger. Forget the onions." It's all too heavy-handed. Otherwise the story isn't too bad. She is looking for her father, who happens to be a General, known to most of the other characters and when they discover her relation, their attitudes and motivations change. Through her charm she makes a connection with the King of the River and this leads to a positive resolution, if an expected one for this era. Some of the weakness of the film, as for most of the era, is its reliance on sets and stock footage. Also, the dance with the drums, which is stereotypically "native" in its primitive appearance, does nothing to enhance the idea that the cultures of Southeast Asia are civilized in any way. This movie is worth watching if you're a hound for the 1930s style of movie-making, or if you like to see the changes in how various cultures are depicted in American cinema. Otherwise, not much to recommend.
author avatar

Klatsv💫

12/06/2023 16:00
The great character actor J. Carroll Naish played some sinister characters, but perhaps no more despicable than his evil Asian in this film, a loose remake of 1933's "White Woman". Naish takes the role played by Charles Laughton, and as vile as Laughton was, Naish makes his deplorable with no redeeming graces outside of a phony charm. The beautiful Anna May Wong continues her string of playing the saddest women on the screen by portraying a self-confessed criminal who is actually trying to find her missing father and willing to risk her own virtue by accepting Naish's invitation to be his guest. Joining them are Broderick Crawford as a blackmailing visitor, Anthony Quinn as an old Chinese acquaintance of Wong's, and Eric Blore as an eccentric Englishman who is not as stupid and cowardly as he seems. Naish is deliciously rude and sinister, yet as a less stereotypically dressed Asian, he's equally as offensive as the white actors playing both Fu Manchu and Charlie Chan. Wong is completely somber, never even cracking a smile. Yes, this has every cliché that makes many younger audiences cringe, but it's fast moving and gripping. So put aside your sensitivity towards racial stereotypes, the subjugation towards women and even cruelty to animals. The fun is seeing the villain get his just rewards and seeing the bad guy get Hus due. Like me, you might scream at the screen, demanding that they get it painfully.
— No more content —

تقييمات المستخدمين

author avatar

L O U K M A N🔥

13/10/2023 09:28
Trailer—Island of Lost Men
author avatar

Fatimaezzahraazedine

29/06/2023 07:13
Island of Lost Men(480P)
author avatar

Sall

12/06/2023 16:00
source: Island of Lost Men
author avatar

LoLo233

12/06/2023 16:00
Island of Lost Men (1939) does not show much of an improvement over Dangerous To Know (1938). The director (this time, Kurt Neumann) again allows the main player (this time, J. Carroll Naish, complete with a particularly grating, phony accent) to grossly over-act and swamp the rest of the cast, although Brod Crawford and Eric Blore give him a good run for his money. Anna May Wong, alas, is rather subdued. The ridiculously melodramatic script may have been tolerable given a different lead (bring back Akim Tamiroff!), even though its stage origins are never less than glaringly apparent. This movie represents the first of a dozen or so movies in which director Neumann teamed with photographer Karl Struss. As might be expected, the lighting is certainly attractive but, alas, nothing special.
author avatar

taya <3

12/06/2023 16:00
B movie about a woman (Anna May Wong) traveling to a labor camp run by a slimeball (J. Carrol Naish) looking for her father. A remake of the 1933 film White Woman, which I have yet to watch. Let's talk about the cast. We have two future stars in Anthony Quinn and Broderick Crawford. Great character actors J. Carrol Naish, Eric Blore, and Ernest Truex. Then we have cult favorite Anna May Wong, the star of the picture. She's also the only one truly playing to her strengths. The others are fine for the type of movie this is, but I've seen them all do much much better elsewhere. Naish is especially disappointing. He usually brings a touch of sympathetic humanity to all of his performances, even the villains. But here he's all bad with no redeemable traits. Compare this to any number of movies with similar villains played by the likes of Karloff, Lorre, and Atwill and you'll see how generic and uninteresting this performance is. Naish is a legend but this is not one of his best efforts.
author avatar

Njie Samba

12/06/2023 16:00
Teutonic expatriates Kurt Neumann (director), Karl Struss (cinematographer), Hans Dreier (art director) combine skills in this very loose remake of the 1933 Charles Laughton/Carole Lombard WHITE WOMAN with Anna May Wong cast as Kim Ling, determined to find a way to cleanse her father's discredited name, and J. Carroll Naish is Gregory Prin, in this version a part-Asian overlord of a jungle labor settlement to which visitors are given only one-way passage. Created as unabashed melodrama, the work begins with a first meeting of Prin and Kim Ling where she is performing as "Lily" at a Singapore night club, and when she notices that Prin wears a medallion of her family crest, she accepts his invitation to accompany him to his plantation as guest, where she is introduced to sundry felonious outcasts, one of whom, however, is Chinese "Secret Service" agent Chang Tai, played by Anthony Quinn. Kim Ling discovers among her host's effects the proof that she requires to restore her father's honour, whereupon she and Chang Tai endeavour to bring about Prin's downfall, but the canny villain's informants keep him knowledgeable of this activity, as the rapidly paced affair moves to its highly charged conclusion, at times bereft of logic but never dull. In spite of moderate cutting by the studio, Paramount, ISLAND pleases on many accounts, notably the efficient direction and utilization of some clever script business, along with artistic cinematography and atmospheric sets and scoring, but the playing is sterling as well, with Naish capturing acting laurels with his nuanced reading of the inconsistent Prin, and there are outstanding turns from Eric Blore and Broderick Crawford, Wong playing Wong and singing nicely; efficient editing by Ellsworth Hoagland benefits this crisply done motion picture.
author avatar

Peete Bereng

12/06/2023 16:00
It might be argued that any of the movies starring Anna May Wong has an intrinsic element of Asian sympathy, but at various points in this story I felt they were overdoing it. Even though the story is set in Singapore, for purposes of feasibility I suppose, Wong's character's name is China Lily. Conveniently enough, one of her old friends from China happens to wander through her part of town also. Singapore was just a little fishing village apparently. What underscores the initial emphasis on the "exotic" setting and characters is an early comment by the so-called "King of the River" as he orders in the restaurant - "American style hamburger. Forget the onions." It's all too heavy-handed. Otherwise the story isn't too bad. She is looking for her father, who happens to be a General, known to most of the other characters and when they discover her relation, their attitudes and motivations change. Through her charm she makes a connection with the King of the River and this leads to a positive resolution, if an expected one for this era. Some of the weakness of the film, as for most of the era, is its reliance on sets and stock footage. Also, the dance with the drums, which is stereotypically "native" in its primitive appearance, does nothing to enhance the idea that the cultures of Southeast Asia are civilized in any way. This movie is worth watching if you're a hound for the 1930s style of movie-making, or if you like to see the changes in how various cultures are depicted in American cinema. Otherwise, not much to recommend.
author avatar

Klatsv💫

12/06/2023 16:00
The great character actor J. Carroll Naish played some sinister characters, but perhaps no more despicable than his evil Asian in this film, a loose remake of 1933's "White Woman". Naish takes the role played by Charles Laughton, and as vile as Laughton was, Naish makes his deplorable with no redeeming graces outside of a phony charm. The beautiful Anna May Wong continues her string of playing the saddest women on the screen by portraying a self-confessed criminal who is actually trying to find her missing father and willing to risk her own virtue by accepting Naish's invitation to be his guest. Joining them are Broderick Crawford as a blackmailing visitor, Anthony Quinn as an old Chinese acquaintance of Wong's, and Eric Blore as an eccentric Englishman who is not as stupid and cowardly as he seems. Naish is deliciously rude and sinister, yet as a less stereotypically dressed Asian, he's equally as offensive as the white actors playing both Fu Manchu and Charlie Chan. Wong is completely somber, never even cracking a smile. Yes, this has every cliché that makes many younger audiences cringe, but it's fast moving and gripping. So put aside your sensitivity towards racial stereotypes, the subjugation towards women and even cruelty to animals. The fun is seeing the villain get his just rewards and seeing the bad guy get Hus due. Like me, you might scream at the screen, demanding that they get it painfully.
— No more content —
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