Doomtomylo
a film so unique, intoxicating and bizarre that it not only demands another viewing, but is also forgivable as a satirical comedy where the jokes eventually take the back seat.
Gurlyndrobb
While it doesn't offer any answers, it both thrills and makes you think.
Nicole
I enjoyed watching this film and would recommend other to give it a try , (as I am) but this movie, although enjoyable to watch due to the better than average acting fails to add anything new to its storyline that is all too familiar to these types of movies.
Walter Sloane
Mostly, the movie is committed to the value of a good time.
JohnHowardReid
Director: CHARLES LAMONT. Screenplay: Arthur Hoerl. Based on characters created by Arthur Hoerl and Monroe Shaff. Photography: Arthur Martinelli. Film editor: Bernard Loftus. Art director: Ralph Berger. Set decorator: Glenn Thompson. Costumes: W.H. McCrary. Production manager: Irene Schreck. Music director: David Chudnow. Assistant director: V.O. Smith. Sound recording: Hal Bumbaugh. Production executive: J. Samuel Berkowitz. Associate producer: Charles Lamont. Executive producer: Franklyn Warner. A Fine Arts Production. Copyright 20 May 1939 by Fine Arts Pictures. Released in the U.S.A. through Grand National: 20 May 1939. No New York opening. Never theatrically released in Australia. 69 minutes. SYNOPSIS: Major Philip Waring (Leon Ames) is an Army Intelligence officer, stationed at the Washington cipher bureau. He is about to marry his secretary (Charlotte Wynters), but is forced to postpone the ceremony in order to track down a nest of Oriental spies who are plotting the destruction of the Panama Canal. An interpreter for Army Intelligence (Abner Biberman) puts him on the trail of an Oriental femme fatale (Adrienne Ames).
NOTES: Sequel to Cipher Bureau (1938) which has the same stars and many of the same technicians, including photographer Martinelli and associate producer/director Charles Lamont.Leon Ames is not related to Adrienne Ames. His real name is Leon Wycoff (under which name he was once billed). Miss Ames (her birth name) was Mrs Bruce Cabot off-screen. COMMENT: Despite the credits, this is actor Abner Biberman's picture - and a grand job he makes of it too, ably assisted by Charles Lamont's obviously sympathetic direction. Notice that Biberman receives as many, if not more close-ups than Leon Ames, despite the fact that his role is smaller. And, though her part is brief, Adrienne (the spelling of her name in the credit titles is incorrect) Ames also scores strongly with both director and audience. Whilst Biberman is allowed by both director and script to give a portrait in depth, the same cannot be said for Leon Ames and the lovely Charlotte Wynters. Both are personable, but rather bland. Of the support players, it's odd to say that Mickey Rooney's perennial mascot, Sidney Miller, provides the most ingratiating performance. The script has its share of excitement, is skillfully photographed by Arthur Martinelli and directed with more style than we expect of Charles Lamont. An insistent music score sometimes helps with atmosphere, sometimes not, but always lends a bit of class.
MartinHafer
"Panama Patrol" is a low budgeted B-movie...and as such my expectations were relatively low. So imagine my surprise when it turned out to be a pretty good action and adventure film!When the film begins, Major Waring (Leon Ames) and Helen Lane (Charlotte Wynters) are about to get married. However, an emergency phone call interrupts their plans...some very big espionage ciphers MUST be decoded NOW and their wedding will have to wait. Little do they know that soon they'll both be caught up in a life and death struggle with Asian agents! And, little do they know that one of their own people is actually working for these evil no-goodnicks!In some ways, this movie plays like a movie serial because there is a lot of action and something always seems to be happening. But it generally works well and the acting is good for this sort of nonsense. My only reservations are WHO these Asians were...the film never tells us, though they would appear to be Chinese--which is odd since the Chinese were essentially friendly with the US at the time. Also, the scene where Miss Lane gets captured is a bit lame...she did seem a tad silly to let this happen so easily.
mark.waltz
Overloaded with Asian stereotypes and clichéd flowery dialog between two of the Asian couples, this pre World War II espionage thriller is enjoyable for its tense action, but offensive in modern sensibilities. It concerns federal agent Leon Ames uncovering a plot against the Panama Canal and his ingenious ways of uncovering it and breaking it. He is aided by his brave secretary/fiancée Charlotte Wynters who is willing to risk her own life by confronting the villain (Richard Loo) and his very Caucasian looking Asian assistant (Adrienne Ames). There are some very interesting details, particularly the uncrypting of code and how everything is exposed. Enjoyable in spite of the bad elements, it has to be looked at as a product of its time and make us happy that we've moved past these insensitivity's.
sol1218
**SPOILERS** Pre-Pearl Harbor depiction of the danger from the east that threatened America represented as a very militaristic Chinese regime that also seems to be allied at the time with Hitler's Germany. With one of the bad guys being a very German looking, with a thick German accent, Wihelm Von Brickner playing one of the Chinese espionage rings henchmen Marlin.In just two years after "Panama Patrol" was released the roles of the bad guys from the Orient were completely reversed with the Chinese being our friends and comrades in arms instead of our deadly enemies. There's also the fact that Chinese-American actor Richard Loo is in the movie portraying for once in a film a Chinese, who he is, instead of a Japanese, who he isn't.Going down to the Marriage Licenses Bureau to get hitched Maj.Leon Waring,Leon Ames,gets an emergency phone call to report to the State Department's Cipher Bureau. Waring leaving his bride Helen Lane, Charlotte Wynters,who's also a government decoding specialist, making her very angry to say the least on both her future husband and his boss.The D.C police Picking up this Chinese embassy worker Tommy Young, Richard Loo, who's been seen handing papers that he snuck out of the State Department. The D.C police have trouble getting him to talk about his covert activities. Young refuses to cooperate with his American captors by not speaking any English or handing over to them his passport. Chinese-speaking and also encrypted specialist Arlie Johnson, Abner Biberman, is then called in to get the closed-mouth Young to open up. As Johnson finally starts getting something out of the Chinese embassy worker in Chinese he's shot from behind from a hidden peephole in the wall by Marlin a German thug working for the Chinese government.Later we see Johnson as well as Marlin together at this New York Curiso Shop run by one of the heads of the Chinese spy-ring the half American half Chinese Eli Ming, John Smart! Johnson it turns out is a spy who infiltrated the US Government Chipher Bureau and has been handing over sensitive information to the Chinese Government concerning the Panama Canal. The Chinese are planning, possibly with their future German allies, to blow up the canal locks and bottle up the US Pacific Fleet keeping it from being reinforced after a Pearl Harbor-like attack! this is two years before such an event did in fact happen, on America!Lame action sequences with Maj. Waring getting captured at least twice by the fumbling and butterfingered Chinese spies and all but walking away from them to freedom. There's a really insane scene later in the movie with Maj. Waring having it out with his kidnappers in a plane at 6,000 feet and after quickly dispatching the bad guys. It's then that the Major takes the controls and lands the aircraft as easy as Charles Linberg did in landing the St.Louis in Paris back in 1927.The film is very interesting when it come to the art of decoding secret massages without the help of super computers, which weren't invented at the time, that shows how much brain power and hard work coupled with old fashion luck it took to break then Chinese secret code.Helen also gets into the act by getting herself kidnapped by Johnson as his spy girlfriend Lia, Adrenne Ames, the exotically beautiful daughter of Chinese spy-master Eli Ming. In the end Helen saves the day by leaving a trail of clues that leads her boyfriend Maj. Waring together with the local police and FBI to the Chinese spy's secret headquarters. It's then that the spy ring that included Johnson Lia and the big boss of the whole operation Suri, Philip Ahn, end up getting arrested after a brief struggle and shootout.In the end both Maj. Warnig and his finance Helen Lang drive down to Elton Md. where they'll be in the middle of nowhere and not be disturbed, like at the beginning of the movie, to finally get married.