Yellow Cargo is a 1936 American Poverty Row crime film written and directed by Crane Wilbur for Grand National Pictures. The film was rereleased in 1947 as Sinful Cargo. Starring Conrad Nagel as Alan O'Connor and producer George A. Hirliman's wife Eleanor Hunt as Bobbie Reynolds, it was the first of four G-man film series; the others were Navy Spy (1937), The Gold Racket (1937), and Bank Alarm (1937).[1]

Yellow Cargo
Directed byCrane Wilbur
Written byCrane Wilbur
Produced bySamuel Diege
George A. Hirliman
Edward L. Alperson
StarringConrad Nagel
Eleanor Hunt
Vince Barnett
CinematographyMack Stengler
Edited byTony Martinelli
Music byAbe Meyer
Production
company
Condor Productions
Distributed byGrand National Films
Release date
  • November 8, 1936 (1936-11-08)
Running time
63 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot summary edit

Alan O'Connor, a Federal Agent with the Federal Bureau of Narcotics is transferred to the Immigration and Naturalization Service by flying to California in a Boeing 247, His mission is to use his expertise to assist them with identifying how a dangerous gang is infiltrating Chinese illegal immigrants into the United States. He meets newspaper reporter Bobbie Reynolds and her comedy relief photographer Speedy "Bulb" Callahan who are trying to obtain an interview with the director and producer of Globe Productions, a motion picture company who has yet to make a film. As O'Connor has stage acting experience, he his goaded by Reynolds to get a role with Globe Productions.

The trio discover that the film company brings twenty film extras in Chinese theatrical makeup to one of the Channel Islands of California to shoot a film. Production is stopped, the extras are shipped back to the mainland by a different ship, the original boat brings back the same number of Chinese to the mainland.

Cast edit

Production edit

Production of Yellow Cargo began on December 2, 1935, at the Talisman Studios in East Los Angeles.[2]

Reception edit

Variety wrote the film featured "a plot that has a certain amount of freshness and pretty good entertainment pull" with other reviewers acknowledging the film's innovative story and having solid production values for a low budget film.[3]

Notes edit

  1. ^ p. 5 Okuda, Ted Grand National, Producers Releasing Corporation, and Screen Guild/Lippert: Complete Filmographies with Studio Histories McFarland & Companies, 1 Aug 1989
  2. ^ The Film Daily, 13 November 1935, p 10. Accessed 22 June 2020.
  3. ^ p. 337 Schmidt, Björn A. Visualizing Orientalness: Chinese Immigration and Race in U.S. Motion Pictures, 1910s-1930s Böhlau Verlag Köln Weimar, 2017

External links edit