I have to thank renowned China author, Paul French, for this next movie. Paul is well known for his deep knowledge of all things Chinese but also dabbles in some film nostalgia and can often be found posting movie clips of old China/HK/Macau on his various social media. It was via his Bluesky that I happened upon a post he made about this film, The Scavengers. I'd not heard of it before and he soon pointed me in the direction of Youtube where the film can be seen in full (at least for the time being).
The movie, shot in 1958 on location in Hong Kong and Macau (and in a Manila film studio), stars Vince Edwards as Stuart Allison, an ex-US soldier who, following the Korean war, is in Hong Kong as a smuggler. Just as he is about to hang up his smuggling boots he spots his estranged (and missing) wife boarding a ferry to Macau and chases after her. It turns out she is involved in some Nationalist-era bond smuggling and has become addicted to drugs. What follows is a fairly decent film noir story as he tries to save his ex-wife and make away with the bonds with a variety of bad men on his tail. One of which is the former RTHK journalist, John Wallace (full name: Geoffrey Wallace John Trodd), who shows of his acting chops as a rather nasty Brit gangster called Taggert. It appears to be a largely Filipino produced film but with an American director and stars (hence why it has an entry on the AFI catalog).
The film has some decent locations to see but many have been too difficult for me to track down due to lack of clues and the often night filter used for many scenes. However, the views are still good and the film is well worth a looksee if you like 50s era film noir. The opening sequence is a view of the harbour from atop the Peak on Hong Kong Island.
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