IMDb RATING
5.4/10
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When Captain Street's best friend Dan Grady is murdered, Street receives help from Chinese detective James Lee Wong and local newspaper reporter Bobbie Logan.When Captain Street's best friend Dan Grady is murdered, Street receives help from Chinese detective James Lee Wong and local newspaper reporter Bobbie Logan.When Captain Street's best friend Dan Grady is murdered, Street receives help from Chinese detective James Lee Wong and local newspaper reporter Bobbie Logan.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Jason Robards Sr.
- Griswold
- (as Jason Robards)
C.E. Anderson
- Cap Anderson
- (uncredited)
Allan Cavan
- Radio Station Owner
- (uncredited)
Tristram Coffin
- Hotel Desk Clerk
- (uncredited)
Nick Copeland
- Crank Informant
- (uncredited)
Pauline Drake
- Bessie
- (uncredited)
Harry Harvey
- Radio Salesman
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
1940's "The Fatal Hour" began shooting Nov. 28, 1939 for release in January (original title "Mr. Wong at Headquarters"), Boris Karloff's 4th Monogram entry as Oriental detective James Lee Wong, again teamed with Grant Withers as Capt. Bill Street and Marjorie Reynolds as reporter Bobbie Logan. As a whodunit it might very well be the best of the entire series, with its culprit guilty of four murders during the course of the film while using a remote controlled radio for an alibi, the brand new Philco Mystery Control. A somber note is struck at the beginning when Street learns of the murder of one of his colleagues, whom he has known since childhood, found dead in the bay while on smuggling detail at the waterfront. Wong's investigation involves a number of suspects: a shady jeweler (Hooper Atchley), his dense but innocent son (Craig Reynolds), the son's fiancee (Lita Chevret), and her association with a nightclub owner (Frank Puglia) directly involved with the smuggling ring. Even a radio actor (Jason Robards) isn't safe from danger, Karloff himself oddly more of a background figure in many scenes, essentially silent as Grant Withers does all the tiresome bullying (not once is Wong seen in his home). Once again, Bobbie Logan is capable of far more than her police captain boyfriend lets on, and even delivers the payoff for the climax by preventing two more killings. Richard Loo puts in another performance in aged makeup, Frank Puglia fresh from the set of "Charlie Chan in Panama," where he played an Egyptian building his own tomb! Karloff's final outing as the Asian sleuth is preceded by mad scientist roles in Universal's "Black Friday" and Columbia's "The Man with Nine Lives."
After a number of Mr. Wong detective movies, Boris Karloff's performance as a "Chinese copper" is a smooth transition in believing Karloff is Chinese. The battling twosome of Captain Street and Reporter Bobbie Logan returns as usual. Because of the number of mysteries solved by Mr. Wong, Street seeks out the detective in solving the murder of Street's friend and fellow cop, Dan O'Grady. A level head is needed in solving this mystery. Numerous clues appear and only Wong can see them. Of course, this will occur only if Wong can survive till the end of the movie. For once, the female reporter Logan saves the lives of both of the men. A good movie to watch if you like a mystery.
An old, creaky Monogram mystery with Karloff as Mr. Wong, the celebrated Chinese detective. Grant Withers as policeman Street gets news his partner has been killed, and soon he and Wong begin to unravel the truth. Helping is spunky newswoman Marjorie Reynolds. This is not a great mystery by any means, but it is highly watchable as Karloff ably plays Wong - though not in a very Oriental fashion. Karloff of course is good and surprisingly so is the rest of the cast. Everyone seems adept at being mediocre, which for a film like this, directed by the very mediocre director William Nigh, works. The 68 minutes of running time just zip by and the ending, while very inventive and highly implausible, pays off as being clever.
This was a Wong routine murder mystery, none too well produced, which has as its principal saving grace the suave BORIS KARLOFF...as a master detective. Basically an ordinary story, its failure to impress is largely due to the elemental plot and the inconsistencies which figure. Karloff still made this a classic film series for viewers of many generations.
Neither of the six films in the Mr Wong series are great but they are entertaining enough. The Fatal Hour does drag a fair bit, the photography could have done with a little more finesse and while he is much better than he is in Mr Wong in Chinatown Grant Withers overacts, shouting his lines too much. I didn't find it a bad film at all and found it an improvement over Mr Wong in Chinatown. The sets and lighting are effective enough, the music is jaunty and eerie and the dialogue has good doses of humour and thoughtfulness. The story is not as predictable as it sounds, the murders are not particularly creative but the plotting is diverting, fills the short running time very well and the twists and red herrings add to the intrigue and fun(personally I didn't find it that convoluted) though would have been more effective with a brisker pace. The Fatal Hours also is one of the better acted films in the series. Boris Karloff regardless of reservations of authenticity is very magnetic and gives a dignified and thoughtful performance. Marjorie Reynolds is very sassy with the humour coming naturally to her, she and Withers do have some good chemistry. The supporting cast is one of the stronger and more consistent ones of the series, Robert Puglia is the standout as the film's most interesting character and Craig Reynolds also injects life and humour to things. In conclusion, not great but better than expected. 7/10 Bethany Cox
Did you know
- TriviaWilliam Nigh, who directed this and the other four films in Monogram Pictures' Mr. Wong series, was a prolific director of B movies, with more than 200 titles in his IMDb filmography. Before turning to directing, Nigh had been an actor, whose credits include being one of the original Keystone Kops in silent comedies for Mack Sennett.
- GoofsThe execution of the murderer's plot requires precise actions during the minutes between 10:00 and 10:15 p.m., to coordinate the radio, the telephone call to the switchboard girl, etc. If one puts together all the information about times and actions given in the four relevant scenes -- in Forbes's home office with Street and Wong, in Tanya's apartment with the switchboard girl explaining to Street what she heard and when, in Wong's discussion with the radio station owner about when the program started and stopped, and in the final confrontation of the murderer with Wong where he explains the timing of his actions -- one sees that the timing described in all these different scenes can't be harmonized. To give only one of many inconsistencies, when Street and Wong enter Forbes's office it is at most 1 or 2 minutes after 10:00 (based on the henchman's announcement of 10:00), and they are there for much less than 13 or 14 minutes of real-time conversation, yet during their time there they get a call from police headquarters about the murder which the switchboard girl didn't report to the police until after 10:15.
- Quotes
Bill Street: I'll see you later.
Bobbie Logan: Not me, flat foot. Get one of the nurses out of the receiving hospital. They don't mind a pain in the neck.
- ConnectionsEdited into Muchachada nui: Episode #1.12 (2007)
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 8m(68 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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