Customs Agent (1950) Poster

(1950)

User Reviews

Review this title
4 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Decent Columbia Crime Thriller
gordonl5624 November 2010
Warning: Spoilers
This is another of the many "Government Law Enforcement Agency" films that were popular during the late 1940's and early 50's. These films had titles like T-Men, Revenue Agent, C-Man and Federal Agent at Large.

This one has the Customs Service on the trail of drug smugglers. They are bringing heroin into the States and then smuggling Streptomycin back to the Orient. Streptomycin was a highly controlled wonder drug in the 50's. This anti-biotic was worth a fortune in the Orient and was in big demand. The Government wants the trade stopped but have been unable to catch those responsible.

The film starts with the Customs detachment stationed in Shanghai, China. A Customs agent is ambushed and shot dead. The man's partner, William Eythe, who should have been with him, was out drinking at a club. He is blamed for his partner's death and very publicly fired by the local boss, Jim Backus, and thrown out of the Customs Service.

Eythe now goes on a month long bender to end all benders. The whole time he is drowning himself in booze he has a man following him. As Eythe's money runs low, so does his choice of drinking establishments. He finally ends up at a dive named, "The Golden Rat", there he passes out and is gobbled up by several large gentlemen who take him for a ride.

He wakes up in a fancy apartment with a splitting hangover. A man, Howard St John, gives him a large coffee and asks if he would like a job. "What kind of pay" are the first words out of Eythe. St. John smiles, then responds with. "Many thousands".

Eythe asks for several days to sober up before he gives an answer. He heads back to his flea bag rooms to crash. There he is meet by Griff Barnett, (He is named Charles McGraw in the film!) an old family friend. Barnett, a importer of small toys etc to the U.S. is concerned about Eythe's fall from grace. "Not to worry, I believe I have found a job!" Eythe meets with St. John and accepts the job offer. St John needs someone who know the ins and out of how the Customs boys operate. He has some small "items" he would like delivered Stateside. The pay is half the value of the items. Ship passage to the States is arranged and a salary advance handed over.

Eythe heads to the bar to celebrate and asks for a private room. There he meets with Jim Backus and we find out the death of his partner, as well as his firing, was all a ploy. It was a ruse to seek entry into the mob.

Eythe arranges it so he can smuggle the heroin into the States in-order to prove his worth to the mob. On the ship, he meets Marjorie Reynolds who is a mob employee assigned to keep a "close" eye on Eythe.

The ship docks on the West Coast and Eythe sails through customs. He then pulls a fast one on the mob and bolts with their heroin. The mob figures he plans to sell the drugs himself and keep the cash. They are not amused. Eythe meets with his Customs contact and they plan a scam arrest for the heroin. They give Eythe a large wad of cash to flash around. They then hold a fake arrest of one of their undercover agents on drug charges. This of course hits the newspapers. The mob figures Eythe sold the drugs and got away before being arrested himself.

The mob finds Eythe at a low rent hotel and grabs him up for a friendly chat. He hands over the cash and says he was just making sure he got his cut. St John and Reynolds are furious and all for giving him the deep six. In walks Griff Barnet who we soon discover is really the big boss of the operation. He appreciates initiative, but tells Eythe that any further examples will result in a bullet to the back of the head.

Now they get down to planning the job to get hold of the streptomycin for the return to the Orient. They have the route of a drug factory delivery truck from an inside man. They will hit the truck, load the booty onto a waiting ship, then back to China for the payoff.

The robbery goes bad and the truck driver is killed. St John's henchmen, Denver Pyle and John Doucette, take great pleasure in the murder as Eythe helplessly looks on. Eythe then manages to get word to his contact about the mob shipping arrangements. The Coast Guard and Customs boys swoop in as the mob tries to load the drugs onto the ship. The mandatory fistfight and blazing gun battle ensues before the nasty types are dispatched and the survivors rounded up.

A middle of the road programmer from Columbia pictures that runs just over an hour and is, IMO, a decent time-waster.

William Eythe had roles in OX-BOW INCIDENT, SPECIAL AGENT and THE HOUSE ON 92ND ST. Griff Barnett was in THE GANGSTER, THE SELLOUT, SAIGON, POSSESSED, CRISS CROSS and ARENLO AFFAIR. Marjorie Reynolds was in MINISTRY OF FEAR, HIS KIND OF WOMAN and of course was Peg, in THE LIFE OF RILEY. John Doucette seemed to have bits in every second film and TV show so I will not bother to list them all.

The director was Seymoir Friedman whose work included, ESCAPE ROUTE, PRISON WARDEN, CHINATOWN AT MIDNIGHT and LOAN SHARK. The d of p was Phil Tannura who lensed THE MYSTERIOUS INTRUDER, HI-JACKED and NIGHT EDITOR. Screenplay was by Russell Hughes who did THIS SIDE OF THE LAW.

(b/w)
2 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Middling Through
robert-temple-130 March 2009
This is a moderate sub-B picture which has nothing wrong with it, but has little to offer. The one very interesting thing is that in 1950 the early anti-biotic drug strepto-mycin was so rare and so controlled (only tiny amounts could be exported from the USA. its only source, on special licence) that there was a big market for smugglers who could send it to China, where it was worth more than narcotics. The whole film is therefore based on a customs agent who tries to expose the criminal ring who are stealing strepto-mycin and smuggling it into Shanghai. The film begins in Shanghai, where we get a couple of shots of stock footage of the Bund, and one two-second glimpse of Nanjing Xi Lu, and the rest is cheap California sets with some extras grabbed from Chinatown. The lead is played by William Eythe, who I must say seems pretty unexciting to me. This is a walk-through-it-and-join-the-dots story. Anyone who is an undemanding viewer can sit through this without being offended, and be entertained in a middling manner.
2 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
International crime does not pay.
mark.waltz3 November 2017
Warning: Spoilers
International law can be quite ruthless in dealing with contraband being snuck out of a country, especially if it is narcotics. For United States customs agent William Blythe, getting fired and pie-eyed afterwards is the best thing that could happen to him, because he gets in with the head man of a narcotics smuggling ring (played by Howard St. John as if he were some run of the mill businessman), and being reassigned secretly by old boss Jim Backus (excellent in a rare dramatic part) gets his career back on track.

This gets pretty gritty and gets the feeling of details right. The problem (a minor one) is that the dramatic documentary style narration has become such a cliché that this feels somewhat forced. But as a B crime drama (containing a few elements of film noir), this accomplishes exactly what it sets out to do, and the results are perfectly adequate.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Better then Expected
sbibb121 November 2004
I am a fan of William Eythe, and followed his career from the star build-up at 20th Century Fox, through his later years bouncing from studio to studio.

This film, his last film, I expected to be a poorly done and cheapy B-picture, but was quite surprised to see the high production values that this film has.

The film is similar in style to that of House on 92nd Street, a popular film about the FBI, this film is similar in that it covers the life of a Custom Agent.

Eythe plays a custom agent in China, who is not at his partners side when he is murdered. As a result of this, he is fired from his position. Left in China, Eythe turns to drink, only to be spotted by a smuggler who decides to hire Eythe to smuggle drugs into the US. On the ship to the states, Eythe meets Marjorie Reynolds, who he later learns is also in the smuggling business.

The film is good, has good acting, nice sets and was enjoyable. This film is not available on VHS or DVD, and is still under copyright.
8 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed