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The Crimson Kimono

1959

Action / Crime / Drama / Mystery / Romance / Thriller

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Glenn Corbett Photo
Glenn Corbett as Det. Sgt. Charlie Bancroft
Walter Burke Photo
Walter Burke as Ziggy
Carol Nugent Photo
Carol Nugent as Girl
Anna Lee Photo
Anna Lee as Mac
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU 720p.WEB
748.04 MB
1280*694
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 21 min
P/S ...
1.36 GB
1920*1040
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 21 min
P/S 1 / 1
748.12 MB
960*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 21 min
P/S ...

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by sol-kay8 / 10

But down deep what am I?

Very provocative movie, for the time that it was released in 1959, about a love triangle between two L.A detectives, one white and the other Japanese/American. With a young white female art student whom their protecting from an unknown killer.

After strip-tease artist Sugar Torch, Gloria Pall, finishes her act on stage she's shot at by an unknown assailant. Running for her life outside the theater on the crowded street, with nothing on but her underclothes, she's gunned down and killed. With Detctives Charles Bancroft & Joe Kojaku,Glenn Corbett & James Shigeta, put on the case they find in Sugar Torch's dressing room a painting of a her in a crimson kimono. The painting that the killer also shot a bullet through in anger. It was as if he knew who painted it.

The detectives track down the artist who painted the portrait to an art student at the University of Southern California named Christine Downs, Victoria Shaw. Christine, or Chris, tells Charles and Joe that the painting of Sugar Torch was commissioned by her boyfriend. A man who called himself Hansel, Neyle Morrow. The two L.A cops besides providing 24 hours around the clock protection of Chris from Sugar Torch's killer, who just missed shooting and killing her, go out on the streets canvassing the neighborhood, mostly L.A's Little Tokyo. Looking to find him and see what the people there know about Sugar's murder.

Both's Charles and Joe have been the best of friends since the Korean War. Joe saved Charles life on the battlefield by not only dragging back a seriously injured Charles to the safety of a MASH unit but also by donating a paint of his badly needed blood in order to keep him alive while he was being operated on. It never bothered them that they came from different backgrounds and are of different races all these years. Now, with Chris coming into their lives, things are about the change dramatically.

"Crimson Komino" goes from a police murder drama to a love triangle half-way through the movie. The All-American rough and tumble Charles Bancroft falls in love with ,the American as apple pie, Chris Downs only to have her fall for the more sensitive and artistic Japanese/American Joe Kojaku. Whom Chris, being an artist herself, has far more in common with. This leads Joe to feel very guilty and in a way embarrassed for stealing his best friends girlfriend who's not Japanese like himself.

As all this is happening the two cops begin to track down Hansel but the pent-up emotions that Joe is keeping inside him begins to come to the surface. In a Karate contest sponsored by the Little Tokyo neighborhood, that both Charles & Joe are entered in, leads to Joe almost killing Charles. This happens when Joe forgets the rules and smashed Charles head in after he was told to stop and back off by the contest referee.

In the dressing room Joe confesses that his being in love with Chris, and she with him,has made it impossible for him to be his partner Joe tells a shocked and confused Charles that he's turning in his badge since Joe feels that he can't do his job as a L.A policemen anymore. It's then when the truth comes out about Hansel who it turned out was involved in a similar situation and what he had, or had not, to do with Sugar Torch's murder. That put things into sharp focus for both Charles and Joe to not only who the killer is but why their sudden dislike and antagonism, towards each other over Chris, was nothing more then unfounded and irrational hate and ideas. Ideas that they had deep inside their minds that the racism,of both of them, blew way out of proportion.

"The Crimson Komino" is another hit, by cult director Samuel Fuller, that dared to show to the American public in 1959 what an inter-racial relationship can do to both parties who are not at all ready for it. Somewhat like the movie "Sayonara" but far more explosive and penetrating. And at the same time with a much happier ending.

Reviewed by bkoganbing8 / 10

Art Of Many Kinds

I remember seeing The Crimson Kimono when I was 12 years old when it was playing on the bottom half of a double bill back in the days they had those. I cannot remember the feature film, but this independent production distributed by Columbia never left my mind.

It was the civil rights era so the time was right for one of the first interracial love stories to reach the screen. Glenn Corbett and James Shigeta are a pair of LAPD homicide detectives on the trail of a murderer who shot stripper Gloria Pall right in the middle of the street after running her down.

This film is set in the art world, art of many kinds and a key witness played by Victoria Shaw is an artist who gives a better than normal police sketch of a man who was associated with Pall. Problems arise when both these cops fall in love with Shaw. Corbett assumes a kind of proprietary claim, but she wants Shigeta.

As for Shigeta he's a tormented soul because he and Corbett go back to the Korean War and a blood transfusion from Shigeta saved Corbett's life. He also suspects prejudice for the first time in Corbett and the racial barriers loom in size for him. No doubt during World War II his family may well have been interred and that has to play into his psyche as well.

There's a nice performance by Anna Lee in this as a rather worldly sophisticated member of the arts community who looks on Shaw as a kind of protégé. Lee was a member in good standing of the John Ford stock company, but he never cast her in a role like this.

Samuel Fuller directed this on a dime, but he made that dime count with some nice location shooting in the Little Tokyo area of Los Angeles. There are some nice glimpses of the Japanese-American culture that most of us rarely see.

The Crimson Kimono is a fine piece of work and Fuller and his cast deserve all the kudos we can muster.

Reviewed by blanche-27 / 10

Asian detective and white partner fall for the same woman

Sam Fuller directed "The Crimson Kimono," starring Glenn Corbett, James Shigeta, Victoria Shaw and Anna Lee, and this 1959 film is not your usual detective noir. Corbett and Shigeta are Charlie Bancroft and Joe Kojaku, buddies from the Korean war and now partners in the LA Police Department, who investigate the death of a stripper. In the course of that investigation, they meet a beautiful artist (Shaw) and both men fall for her; she in turn falls for the gentle and intelligent Joe. This tests the relationship of the two men, and when Joe sees Charlie's reaction, he assumes it comes from Charlie's latent racism.

This is an odd film, not as good or as well done as Fuller's Pickup on South Street, but good nonetheless. Part of its success is due to the persona and performance of James Shigeta, for a time one of the biggest Asian-American stars ever. "The Crimson Kimono" was the first feature film for both Shigeta and Corbett, and they handle their assignments well. Fifty years later, Shigeta is still working; Corbett worked steadily until his death in 1993. Anna Lee is on hand giving a vigorous performance as an alcoholic artist; the late Victoria Shaw is beautiful but doesn't register much as Chris, the love interest of both men.

There are a couple of problems with this ambitious script, one being Joe's claim that he had never experienced racism. That's impossible if he was in California when World War II broke out; it's a naive statement he wouldn't have made. The other problem is that all of the love connections seem instantaneous, though that seems to be a very "noir" thing. Nevertheless, the story holds interest, the performances are good, the atmosphere authentic, and Sam Fuller always has something to say, if only we'd listen

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