When Charlie Chan creator Earl Der Biggers died in 1933, The Saturday Evening Post began looking for another writer to create a series about an Asian hero. They found the writer in John Marquand and the hero in Japanese secret agent Mr. I. A, Moto. The first Mr. Moto novel, No Hero, was published in SEP six part from March 30 through May 4, 1935, and was released in book form later that year as Your Turn, Mr. Moto (British title Mr. Moto Takes a Hand). Five more Mr. Moto novels followed; the fifth novel, Last Laugh, Mr. Moto. was written before Pearl Harbor but was published afterward. the final novel was published in 1957 and was a Cold War tale. The character appeared in eight popular motion pictures between 1937 and 1939, but was reimagined as a detective working for Interpol. (By 1938 there was some distrust about Japanese foreign policy and studio executives considered making the character Korean instead of Japanese, but the idea never went too far.)
In the great tradition of Hollywood bigotry, Mr. Moto was portrayed by a white actor, Peter Lorre. Moto returned to the screen in 1965's The Return of Mr. Moto, again being portrayed by a white actor, Henry Silva. (The final Mr. Moto novel was filmed in 1957 as Stopover: Tokyo and featured Robert Wagner and eliminated the Moto character altogether.)
The practice of "yellowface" -- using white actors to portray Asians -- cut a wide swarth through Hollywood history, from Dr. Fu Manchu to Charlie Chan to Madame Butterfly. Actors cast in yellowface roles included Mary Pickford, Norma Talmadge, Bessie Love. Lon Chaney. Myrna Loy, Edward G. Robinson, Bela Lugosi, Paul Muni, Louise Ranier, Emlyn Williams, Anthony Quinn, Boris Karloff, Gale Sondergaard, J. Carroll Nash, Katharine Hepburn, Walter Huston, Turhan Bey, Agnes Moorehead, Hurd Hatfield, Rex Harrison, Linda Darnell, Fred Astaire, Anita Ekberg, Mike Mazurki, Jennifer Jones. John Wayne, Susan Haywood, Yul Brynner, Rita Moreno, Marlon Brando, Ricardo Montalban, Kurt Jurgens. Robert Donat, Mickey Rooney, Christopher Lee, Alec Guinness, Dorothy Dandridge, William Schallet, Tony Randall. Robert Morley, James Mason, Vito Scotti, Ray Walston, David Carradine, John Gielgud, Charles Boyer, Peter Ustinov, Peter Sellers, Max von Sydow, Lind Hunt, David Suchet, Barbara Hershey, Edward James Olmos. Joel Grey, Roddy McDowell, Piper Laurie, Groucho Marx, Christopher Walken, Eddie Murphy, Nicholas Cage, Halle Berry, Hugh Grant, James D'Arcy, Jon Voight, Emma Stone, and (marginally) Scarlett Johansson, along with many. many others. A lot of these portrayals will leave you scratching your head, while others are totally cringe-worthy.
Peter Lorre's portrayal of Mr. Moto, while worthy of some head-scratching, was not completely cringe-worthy. Here, in the first Mr. Moto film, Moto is after a gang of international smugglers. While Moto is on a Shanghai-bound ship, he recognizes his steward as a man wanted for murder in San Francisco. The steward tries to steal a letter from passenger Bob Hitchings (Thomas Beck), the son of the owner of the shipping line. After a stopover in Honolulu, beautiful Gloria Danton (Virginia Field) comes aboard and falls in love with her, not realizing that she is a spy for smuggler Nicholas Marloff (Sig Ruman). Fast action and some nifty plot twists helped propel Mr. Moto into a film franchise.
Also featuring Murray Kinnell, John Rogers, Lotus Long, George Cooper, J. Carrol Nash, Frederik Vogeding, and Philip Ahn. Directed by Norman Foster (Charlie Chan in Reno, Journey Into Fear, Davy Crockett: King of the Wild Frontier), and written by Foster and (according to IMDb and the actual film credits) Howard Ellis Smith. (Wikipedia mistakenly credits mystery writer Philip MacDonald as the co-writer: MacDonald wrote three of the Mr. Moto films, but not this one.)
Try to ignore the yellowface and enjoy this one.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o9lUInobAdE