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| Shanghai Express is a 1932 movie of the Pre-Code era starring Marlene Dietrich, Clive Brook, Anna May Wong and Warner Oland. It was written by Jules Furthman and Harry Hervey, and was directed by Josef von Sternberg. It was American-born director Sternberg's third of seven vehicles he would make with new German sensation Marlene Dietrich, 'Blonde Venus' to follow later in 1932. Now after two years in Hollywood, Dietrich was ranked by a Picturegoer magazine poll as the third top female star, behind only Greta Garbo and Constance Bennett, and ahead of theatre superstar Ruth Chatterton, then known as "Queen of the Paramount Lot", and MGM's Norma Shearer and Joan Crawford. After the fad for heavy European accents faded in Hollywood during the 1932-33 box-office year, Garbo and Dietrich's popularity dipped markedly in America though remaining the premier attractions in most of the rest of the moviegoing world for the rest of the thirties. Unlike the other Sternberg films of exquisite style, which treated Dietrich as a clothes horse of unassailable mystique, 'Shanghai Express' had a strong plot which appealed to the mass US audience. This difference apparently explained why it was Dietrich's biggest hit ever in America, and a studio record for Paramount in the still-young talkie era, making a clear profit of $3 million -- more than most blockbusters took in gross through the Depression era. The express train to Shanghai travelling cross country is raided by Warlord Henry Chang (Warner Oland). Henry quickly comes to claim Shanghai Lily (Dietrich) as his booty from the raid. A British officer and her former lover, played by English gentleman Clive Brook, best known as Sherlock Holmes and now coming towards the end of his starring career, tries to save her along with a sympathetic Chinese maiden (Los Angeles-born Anna May Wong). AwardsThe movie was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture and won for Best Cinematography (Lee Garmes).PlotThe story concerns the many travelers on a train through China as the country undergoes a civil war.Shanghai Express was remade in 1942 as Night Plane from Chungking, and in 1951 as Peking Express. [ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for Shanghai Express (film) ] Some related entries: Doune Castle | Bride of Re-Animator | The Snapper | Denis Héroux | Down and Derby | It's a Bad, Bad, Bad, Bad Movie | Genghis Blues | Mona Lisa Smile | Kottentail | Avatar Day | The Out-of-Towners This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article Shanghai Express (film); it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay
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