Bourgeois Detective

KARNICK, S.T.

The Bourgeois Detective Charlie Chan, conservative. BY S.T. KARNICK Critics have never cared much for Charlie Chan, but the portly Chinese-American detective has been a favorite for...

...Also of great value is Chan's remarkable patience...
...Charlie is devastated, which Oland shows especially well through his dejected posture and body movements...
...Red clay on a car's accelerator pedal, a fresh bullet hole hidden behind a recently moved picture, a murdered parrot, a stolen antique pistol: "All the more honor for us," he says in The Chinese Parrot, "if we unravel [the mystery] from such puny clues...
...Stone also strengthened the main character by reducing Chan's use of aphorisms (and giving him better ones to say), decreased the love-story element, and established the convention of Chan gathering the suspects near the end of the film for a reconstruction of the crime and identification of the killer...
...Toler was not nearly as good an actor, and his Chan is not as placid and charming as his predecessor's...
...In Charlie Chan at the Opera, for example, the low-class Inspector Nelson (William Demarest) refers to Chan as "Chop Suey" and says, "No Chinese cop is gonna show me up...
...His cheeks were as chubby as a baby's, his skin ivory tinted, his black hair close-cropped, his amber eyes slanting...
...Like Sherlock Holmes, he can tell the difference between tobaccos...
...He rose laboriously as they entered...
...After an attempt on his life, Chan tells Lee that they can go back to sleep: "Enemy who misses mark, like serpent, must coil to strike again...
...When Biggers conceived The House Without a Key, the first of his Chan stories, he wanted a new kind of investigator...
...In his first conversation, Chan offers one of his trademark aphorisms: "The fates are busy, and man may do much to assist...
...This composure clearly flows from the character's great humility...
...So Biggers simply reversed the stock characteristics, replacing villain with hero, evil with good, arrogance with humility, greed with generosity, power-lust with serenity, ostentation with modesty, and brutality with courtesy...
...Chan, representative of all that is humble, decent, good-natured, and conventional, investigates the crime and discovers the perpetrators, who are almost always motivated by a desire for more good fortune than society and circumstance allow them to obtain morally and legitimately...
...Born in Ohio and educated at Harvard, Biggers had achieved success as the author of conventional romantic melodramas featuring a dollop of mystery, his most popular being the novel Seven Keys to Baldpate (1913), which George M. Cohan adapted into a popular Broadway play...
...The use of non-Chinese actors to play Chan has caused controversy in recent years, but the films' upholding of Western values may be the real reason multiculturalists so despise them...
...Short and plump, soft-spoken, always wellgroomed but never ostentatious, Chan wears simple dark suits or plain white suits befitting his tropical home...
...Sinister and wicked Chinese are old stuff," he remarked, referring to Sax Rohmer's Dr...
...In his best films, Charlie is an almost ideal human being: wise, calm, observant, humble, polite, patient, affectionate, and generous, but also, when necessary, crafty, devious, and merciless...
...He is unassuming but intelligent, perceptive, and direct: "Humbly asking pardon to mention it...
...In Charlie Chan at the Circus, Lee says, "It's kind of creepy here in [the murder victim's] room," to which his father replies, "Then recommend you brush teeth, say prayers, and go to bed...
...Oland, interestingly enough, had just finished portraying the evil Dr...
...He always takes his time in following the evidence and deducing its meaning, while the other policemen and Charlie's well-meaning sons inevitably rush about trying to do everything too quickly, jumping to absurd conclusions...
...Charlie Chan's new, real-life enemies among his multiculturalist critics represent forces similar to those he has always fought—people who despise the bourgeois social and moral order because they consider themselves better than the sheep who accept it...
...KARNICK Critics have never cared much for Charlie Chan, but the portly Chinese-American detective has been a favorite for three-quarters of a century...
...Biggers noticed that mystery writers had created Sherlock Holmesian "master detectives" of nearly every stripe— except one...
...Described by another character as the best detective on the Honolulu police force (which may not be intended as a particularly strong endorsement), Chan is first seen in action in a humble posture typical of his character in all the years since: "The huge Chinese man knelt, a grotesque figure, by a table...
...No great physical specimen, Chan is a middle-aged family man...
...Biggers seems not to have realized how popular such a simple reversal of characterization would prove...
...The anxious parent does not overcome the great detective, and Charlie cleverly manages to retrieve his son without giving up the plane...
...Fox quickly purchased the rights to The Black Camel, the fourth Chan novel, moving the detective to the center of the story and teaming Oland's Chan with a sinister psychic played by Bela Lugosi in a story concerning the murder of a movie star...
...Hence, ironically for a man of Chinese descent, Chan not only works to strengthen the Western, Christian, bourgeois moral order but, perhaps equally important, he exemplifies it...
...Charlie calmly responds: "Better to lose life than to lose face...
...You're a fine officer," says an associate...
...Numerous films featuring Chan quickly followed...
...He is always polite: "Mere words can not express my unlimitable delight in meeting a representative of the ancient civilization of Boston...
...Moreover, those of his children who are not blundering about in trying to help him solve cases are quite well-behaved...
...But he is best known from his numerous film appearances...
...Chan shook his head...
...Stone came up with the idea of setting the stories in interesting locations around the world, beginning with Charlie Chan in London (1934), and he introduced comic relief in the form of Keye Luke as Number One Son, Lee Chan, in Charlie Chan in Paris (1935...
...Fu Manchu in three films for Paramount...
...As befits a successful police detective, Chan is highly observant...
...In the novels, Chan tends not to dominate scenes in which he appears, and he is almost preternaturally calm and equable...
...Fu Manchu novels and countless imitations, all using Asians as stock villains...
...Detective-Sergeant Charlie Chan of the Honolulu police became a globally recognized figure through the five novels Earl Derr Biggers published between 1925 and 1932...
...In The House Without a Key, he does not even introduce Chan until more than a quarter of the book has passed, and even then the hero does not appear at all formidable: "He was very fat indeed, yet he walked with the light dainty step of a woman...
...Biggers's Charlie Chan novels are neither psychologically complex works nor models of literary style, but they are pleasant romances with a smattering of social criticism and a good deal of common sense...
...A British policeman repeatedly calls him Chang, but Chan seems to take no notice of it...
...In Charlie Chan at the Wax Museum, he says, "Suspicion is only toy of fools...
...The Monogram films are widely reviled by critics for their absurd plots and abundance of low humor, but they did well for such low-budget fare, and the series lasted until 1949...
...Chan demurs: "Not very good detective, just lucky old Chinaman...
...I detect in your eyes slight flame of hostility...
...Quench it, if you will be so kind...
...As he passed . . . he bowed with a courtesy encountered all too rarely in a work-a-day world, then moved on...
...He is adept with the use of technology, saying, "Good tools shorten labor," in Charlie Chan at the Circus, but he is not overly dependent on it...
...The detective did not appear until near the end of the film, yet audiences responded very positively to Swedish-born Warner Oland's portrayal, especially the character's pithy aphorisms such as "Only a very brave mouse will make its nest in a cat's ear...
...He frequently uses subterfuge to trick the killer into revealing guilt, as in Charlie Chan at the Circus, where he sets up a fake operation on an injured circus performer to lure the murderer into trying to finish the job...
...The investment paid off: Costing between $250,000 and $275,000, the films made more than a million dollars apiece...
...In Charlie Chan at the Wax Museum (1940), Jimmy Chan, mistaking his father for a wax figure, kicks Charlie in the backside...
...Comedy helps the films avoid sappi-ness...
...When a dignitary raises a toast to him in Charlie Chan in London, saying, "To the greatest detective in the world...
...He speaks in a "high, sing-song voice," and, as befits a man whose first language is Chinese, his grasp of English is somewhat tenuous, though often rather poetic: "Story are now completely extracted like aching tooth...
...After Oland's death, in 1938, Fox assigned Sidney Toler to the role...
...And Chan is an original and interesting character...
...Given Chan's past history, however, the odds are strong that the great detective will triumph over them, too, and serve future generations as a figure at once entertaining and edifying...
...But an amiable Chinese on the side of law and order had never been used...
...In Charlie Chan on Broadway, the same policeman (now played by Harold Huber) suggests that a band play "Chinatown, My Chinatown" to greet Chan, but a nearby reporter says, "You'll have to excuse the Inspector's broken English—he's a Brooklyn immigrant...
...Near the beginning of Charlie Chan in Egypt, we see the great detective awkwardly riding a donkey and unceremoniously falling off...
...No knife are present in neighborhood of crime.'" Biggers plays Chan against the Great Detective stereotype by introducing his hero with a failure, his inability to find the murder weapon...
...You've certainly got an eye for detail," says a man helping him, to which Chan sagely replies, "Grain of sand in eye can hide mountain...
...In Charlie Chan at the Circus, they all come running when Lee blows a whistle, even though they'd obviously much rather watch the show...
...He knows the islands and their inhabitants...
...The budgets were quite serviceable for a B picture series, with such supporting performers as Ray Milland and Boris Karloff...
...But Toler's character was more formidable: taller and more vocally expressive and physically agile than his predecessor...
...The series moved to the very-low-budget Monogram Studios, and when Toler died, in 1947, he was replaced by Roland Winters...
...In Charlie Chan's world, people turn to crime not because of deprivation but because they see themselves as more deserving than others...
...Chan's humility also makes him a model for the virtues of bourgeois conventionality and self-control...
...Pathe first brought him to the screen in 1925 in a serial of The House Without a Key, but it was only in the 1931 Fox film Charlie Chan Carries On that the real Chan emerged...
...By this time, the actor's mind was seriously deteriorating because of alcoholism, but his tranquil mien made the character seem even more serene and charming...
...Within three years, however, the series was in decline, in part because of a loss of inspiration after the grueling pace of three films per year, but also because of the wartime contraction of international markets...
...Toler also brought out more of Chan's humor, to good effect...
...He keeps photos of his children on his dresser when traveling...
...Find the knife, Charlie?' the captain asked...
...The importance of Chan's personal life is explored in Charlie Chan at the Olympics (1937), when a gang of spies kidnaps Charlie's son Lee to force the detective to turn over a newly invented radio-controlled plane...
...He was featured in a radio series from 1932 to 1948 and a television series starring J. Carol Naish—to say nothing of a comic strip, a short-lived mystery magazine in the 1970s, and even an animated television series for children...
...But it was not until several films later, in 1934, that the series really took off, when Fox assigned John Stone as associate producer and the studio ran out of Biggers novels to adapt...
...In each Charlie Chan film, order and peace are disrupted by ambition...
...To ensure the series didn't decline in popularity, Stone made sure to create especially suspenseful and unusual story lines...
...Actually, the films seldom take explicit notice of Chan's ethnicity, and in the few instances when someone other than Charlie himself does so, it is presented as very bad form...
...Karnick is editor-in-chief of American Outlook magazine, published by the Hudson Institute...
...Also highly conventional is Chan's attitude toward sexual morality...
...Charlie Chan at Treasure Island (1939) is in fact one of the best of the series, with Cesar Romero in an excellent performance as the Great Rhadini, a debunker of phony psychics...
...Despite his travails with English syntax, Chan is not ignorant...
...Gamblers, spies, Nazis, saboteurs, thieves, forgers, embezzlers, grave robbers, occultists, smugglers, drug runners, jealous lovers, greedy relatives: These are the villains in the Chan stories, and they are victims of their own disdain for others...
...His detection techniques blend both ancient and modern ways of thinking, a major theme of one of the best of the films, Charlie Chan in Egypt...
...But Chan proceeds to solve a complex mystery of murder among wealthy transplanted Bostonians, and all the important facets of his character are present from the start...
...Such selflessness affords him an extraordinary but undemonstrative courage...
...You went through with your duty even though it meant risking your son's life...
...Theory like mist on eyeglasses—obscures facts," he says in Charlie Chan in Egypt...
...He is a loving family man, with eleven children in the first book and thirteen later—at a time when the American birthrate was dropping rapidly...
...When he walks into a bank in Charlie Chan in Paris, his eyes rove as if by long-ingrained habit, examining everything, and he even checks his watch against the bank's clock...
...Chan sees to it that these individuals are expelled and order is restored...

Vol. 7 • December 2001 • No. 16


 
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