
|

|
The Trap
Monogram Pictures Corporation Distributed: Monogram Pictures Corporation,
November 30, 1946 Production: Late July to mid-August 1946 Copyright: Monogram Pictures Corporation, November 26,
1946; LP728 Sound: Western Electric Sound System Film: Black and white Running Time: 69 minutes Source: Based
on the character created by Earl Derr Biggers
Producer: James S. Burkett Director: Howard Bretherton Assistant Director: Harold Knox Original Screenplay:
Miriam Kissinger Director of Photography: James Brown Technical Director: Dave Milton Supervising Film Editor:
Richard Currier Editor: Ace Herman Set Decorations: Raymond Boltz, Jr. Musical Direction: Edward J. Kay Recorder:
Tom Lambert Makeup: Harry Rose Production Manager: William Callihan, Jr.
CAST:
Sidney Toler: Charlie Chan Mantan Moreland: Birmingham Brown Victor
Sen Young: Jimmy Chan Tanis Chandler: Adelaide Larry Blake: Rick Daniels Kirk Alyn: [State Police] Sergeant Reynolds
Rita Quigley: Clementine Anne Nagel: Marcia Helen Gerald: Ruby Howard Negley: Cole King (also called "the
Maestro") Lois Austin: Mrs. [Irene] Thorn Barbara Jean Wong: San Toy Minerva Urical: Mrs. Weebles Margaret
Brayton: Madge Mudge Bettie Best: Winifred Jan Bryant: Lois Walden Boyle: George "Doc" Brandt
Cole King's variety troupe, along with press agent Rick Daniels and Mrs. Thorn, the wardrobe
mistress, occupy a Malibu, California beach house. When Adelaide, a showgirl, criticizes Marcia, the overbearing star of the
show and King's girlfriend, Marcia threatens to reveal that Adelaide is secretly married to physician George Brandt. She also
hints that she knows Brandt's real identity. Marcia later forces showgirl Lois to steal letters from Adelaide's trunk, threatening
to tell King that Lois is underage, having lied about her true age to get a job in the variety troupe.
Marcia disappears
later, and Lois' body is discovered by San Toy, a Chinese member of the troupe. Because Lois has been strangled, a murder
technique said to be favored by the Chinese and the French, both San Toy and Adelaide are under immediate suspicion. To avoid
the bad publicity that a murder would bring, Daniels suggests that Lois' death be made to appear as an accidental drowning.
San Toy, who is a friend of Jimmy Chan, asks his father to investigate. Chan hurries to the scene, mistakenly thinking
that San Toy, in the message that she had given his assistant Birmingham Brown, had said that Jimmy had been murdered. "Mistake
sometimes bring most fortunate relief," says the relieved father as he learns that the message was misunderstood.
During
the course of the investigation, Birmingham, San Toy, and Jimmy are each attacked. Later, troupe member Clementine finds Marcia's
body with a silken cord wrapped around her neck, apparently washed up on the beach.
Chan later discovers Daniels in
the act of burying Marcia's bathrobe. When Chan reveals that the cord from the robe was the one used in the murders, Daniels
claims that the robe was planted on King to frame him. King then accuses Daniels of murdering the women and trying to hide
the evidence.
Privately, Chan reveals his knowledge that Brandt was once accused of his wife's murder. Although Brandt
was exonerated, his career was ruined. He had gone to war and, while in Paris, had met and married Adelaide. It was at this
time that Marcia had first met them. Brandt admits that he had found Lois' body and had removed personally damaging letters,
but denies killing her.
Chan decides to set a trap for the killer. That night, King confesses that he took a box from
Brandt's suitcase that contained incriminating papers. Jimmy later finds the missing box in the furnace. He then sees someone
trying to strangle San Toy and intervenes, inadvertently spoiling his father's trap.
CONCLUSION:
Chan, Jimmy, and Birmingham chase the attacker, who speeds away from the beach house in a car. During the high-speed
car chase, the assailant, who is revealed to be Mrs. Thorn, crashes and is fatally injured. As she lies dying, Mrs. Thorn
tells how she had deserted King, her husband, and when she wanted to return to him, he had humiliated her by offering her
a job as his wardrobe mistress. She then killed the two women and tried to frame King in order to get revenge. It was her
letters that were in the box that King had stolen from Brandt.
Later, Chan assures Brandt that the California Board of Medical Examiners will reinstate his
license and he will now be free once again to practice medicine under his real name.
NOTES: The Trap marked the last film
appearance for Sidney Toler, who died on February 12, 1947. Roland Winters assumed the role of Charlie Chan in the 1947 film
The Chinese Ring.
Adapted from: AMERICAN FILM INSTITUTE CATALOG - Within Our Gates: Ethnicity in American
Feature Films, 1911-1960
|

|

|

|

|
CHARLIE CHAN'S APHORISMS:
Mistake sometimes bring most fortunate relief.
Obstructing justice is very serious crime.
Best laid plans of mice and men sometimes
go a little bit haywire.
Puzzle always deepest near the center.
Leisurely hunter have time to stalk prey,
but hunter in haste must set trap.
Levity is a great cure-all.
OTHER WORTHY
STATEMENT:
Repetition of your merit only go to prove your fear of fault. (to Rick Daniels)
I have trap all set, and you put big foot in it. (to Jimmy)
FILM NOTES:
THE PROBABLE DATE OF CHARLIE CHAN'S
INVOLVEMENT IN THIS CASE: Summer 1946
DURATION: Two days
LOCATION: Malibu, California (near Los Angeles where Charlie Chan was staying)
THE BEACH HOUSE RENTED BY COLE KING'S VARIETY TROUPE: The Rutherford mansion
THE
ADDRESS OF THE RUTHERFORD HOUSE: 26 Malibu Drive (Malibu Drive appears to be just off of Pacific Coast Highway,
and, although this was the address that was given to Birmingham Brown by San Toy, the number at the front door reads
"624.")
THE TIME AS SEEN ON THE GRANDFATHER CLOCK AT THE FOOT OF THE STAIRWAY AS THE WOMEN FILE UPSTAIRS
FOLLOWING CHARLIE CHAN'S ARRIVAL AT THE RUTHERFORD HOUSE: 12:45 (a.m.)
THE OTHER CASE MENTIONED BY RICK DANIELS: The "March Case," which, as mentioned by Rick Daniels,
was worked on by Charlie Chan whom he had met while he (Daniels) was working for the March Flour Mills.
ACCORDING TO "DOC" BRANDT, THE
TYPE OF KNOT THAT WAS USED BY THE MURDERER: "...a granny knot..."
ACCORDING TO "DOC" BRANDT, THE CONDITION OF THE VICTIM'S (MARCIA) THROAT:
"...the trachea was flattened."
ACCORDING TO "DOC" BRANDT, THE "PERIOD OF IMMERSION" (IN THE OCEAN) OF MARCIA'S BODY: "Ten to twelve hours."
WHEN AND WHERE, ACCORDING TO CHARLIE CHAN, THAT "DOC" BRANDT
HAD BEEN ACCUSED OF MURDERING HIS WIFE: "Six years ago [1940] in New York City."
THE ADDRESS AS WRITTEN ON THE ENVELOPE OF
THE LETTER THAT ROSE WAS DELIVERING TO THE POST OFFICE FOR GEORGE BRANDT:
"California Board
of Medical Examiners
Sacramento
Calif."
MRS. THORN'S FULL NAME AND ADDRESS WHEN SHE LIVED IN PARIS AS SEEN ON THE OLD
ENVELOPE ADDRESSED TO HER:
"Mrs. Irene Thorn 14 Rue Madelene Paris, France"
GLOSSARY:
cabana (cabaņa) -
(Spanish) (1) A shelter on a beach or at a swimming pool used as a bathhouse. (2) A cabin or hut.
"Doc" Brandt: "...I was just in the cabana."
chiseler - (1) One who cheats
or swindles. (2) One who obtains by deception.
Rick Daniels: "This kid Lois was a chiseler."
clipped - (slang) To have hit with a sharp
blow.
Jimmy Chan: Yeah, he clipped Birmingham."
dame
- (slang) A woman.
Jimmy Chan: "It's a dame, Sarge!"
framed - (slang) Having been incriminated by made up evidence or contrived events.
Rick
Daniels: "I was trying to keep someone from being framed."
garroted - The act of being strangulated
in a manner reminiscent of the old Spanish method in which prisoners were executed, usually by the use of an iron collar.
"Doc" Brandt: "She was garroted, a cord around her neck."
in Dutch - (slang) In disfavor or trouble.
Jimmy Chan: "...I'm already in Dutch with Pop."
pipe down
- (slang) To stop talking; quiet down.
Jimmy Chan: "Pipe down..."
prohibition days (prohibition era) -
The period from 1920 to 1933 when the sale of alcoholic beverages was prohibited in the United States by a constitutional
amendment.
Charlie Chan: "Sliding panel is merely relic of old prohibition days."
sarge -
(slang) Short for sergeant.
Jimmy Chan: "It's a dame, Sarge!"
third degree
- Mental or physical torture used to obtain information or a confession from a prisoner.
Rick Daniels: "Let's get him out of here where we can give him the third
degree."
trachea - The airway that
extends from the larynx into the thorax where it divides into the right and left bronchi. Also called windpipe.
"Doc" Brandt: "...the trachea was flattened."
zut - (French - popular) You be hanged!
Confound it! Hang it! etc.
Adelaide: Zut! We know her too well!"
MALIBU BEACH:
Located about 15 miles from the center of Los Angeles, Malibu was seen as a "colony" that attracted
seasonal visitors as well as movie production companies. During late July and early August, Monogram Pictures filmed
portions of The Trap in and around Malibu Beach.
In late 1940, the entire Malibu Ranch property owned by May K. Rindge was put up for
sale due to the financial pressures brought about by the Depression. A land company subdivided
the property and sought buyers. Eventually, all of the land was sold to individuals, developers, farmers, or commercial
interests. By 1946, nearly 80 percent of the property has been sold. When The Trap was filmed, many land
parcels were still available, and, if one looks closely, a sign reading "Real Estate" can be seen at the Malibu Inn in the
initial scene of the movie (or in the postcard image seen below).
This gradually changed as more parcels of land sold at premium prices and Malibu grew to become
the wealthy beach community that it is today.

The Malibu Inn, located on the Roosevelt
Highway (later Pacific Coast Highway),
as seen in the opening scene of The
Trap. Note the sign that reads "Real
Estate"
both in this postcard from the
1940s and the film, attesting to the real estate
"boom" then occurring in Malibu.

The caption for this early 1940s postcard
reads: "Along the
Malibu Coast, Roosevelt Highway, California."

|

|

|