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Judge Dee and the Monastery Murders (1974)
Character: True Wisdom
China, 7th century. On their way to a provincial center Judge Dee and his three wives spend the night at a Taoist monastery. Soon the judge discovers that the secluded place holds a secret - the former abbot died of unnatural causes. After a number of mysterious events and more cases of murder Dee tracks down the true villain.
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Reunion in France (1942)
Character: Japanese Man (uncredited)
Frenchwoman Michele de la Becque, an opponent of the Nazis in German-occupied Paris, hides a downed American flyer, Pat Talbot, and attempts to get him safely out of the country.
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Abandoned (1949)
Character: Pool Player (uncredited)
A Los Angeles newspaperman seeks a woman's sister and finds a black-market baby ring.
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The General Died at Dawn (1936)
Character: Waiter on Train (uncredited)
China, 1930s, during the ravaging civil war. General Pen entrusts O'Hara, an intrepid American adventurer, with the mission of providing a large sum of money to Mr. Wu with the task of buying weapons in Shanghai to help end General Yang's tyranny that keeps an entire province under his ruthless iron boot.
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The Capture (1950)
Character: N/A
A badly injured fugitive explains to a priest how he came to be in his present predicament.
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The Gunfighter (1950)
Character: Long Fu - Cayenne Restaurant Cook (uncredited)
The fastest gun in the West tries to escape his reputation.
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The Sand Pebbles (1966)
Character: Chien
Engineer Jake Holman arrives aboard the gunboat USS San Pablo, assigned to patrol a tributary of the Yangtze in the middle of exploited and revolution-torn 1926 China. His iconoclasm and cynical nature soon clash with the 'rice-bowl' system which runs the ship and the uneasy symbiosis between Chinese and foreigner on the river. Hostility towards the gunboat's presence reaches a climax when the boat must crash through a river-boom and rescue missionaries upriver at China Light Mission.
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First Yank into Tokyo (1945)
Character: Japanese Sentry (uncredited)
A U.S. pilot undergoes plastic surgery and drops into Japan to get a captive scientist's (Marc Cramer) atomic secrets.
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Wake Island (1942)
Character: N/A
In late 1941, with no hope of relief or re-supply, a small band of United States Marines tries to keep the Japanese Navy from capturing their island base.
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Rooster Cogburn (1975)
Character: Chen Lee
After a band of drunken thugs overruns a small Indian Nation town, killing Reverend Goodnight and raping the women folk, Eula Goodnight enlists the aid of US Marshal Cogburn to hunt them down and bring her father's killers to justice.
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Macao (1952)
Character: Chinese Victim (uncredited)
Nick Cochran, an American in exile in Macao, has a chance to restore his name by helping capture an international crime lord. Undercover, can he mislead the bad guys and still woo the attractive singer/petty crook, Julie Benson?
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The Blue Gardenia (1953)
Character: Waiter (uncredited)
Upon waking up to the news that the man she’d gone on a date with the previous night has been murdered, a young woman with only a faint memory of the night’s events begins to suspect that she murdered him while attempting to resist his advances.
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The Breaking Point (1950)
Character: Chinese Immigrant (uncredited)
A fisherman with money problems hires out his boat to transport criminals.
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Victory (1940)
Character: Chinese Houseboy
A hermit's idyllic life on an island is disturbed by the arrival of a bunch of cutthroats.
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The Shanghai Story (1954)
Character: Policeman (uncredited)
Shanghai, China. The last expatriate Westerners still living in the city are imprisoned in a hotel by the communist authorities in order to find the spy hiding among them.
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