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Filmed in the months immediately following Pearl Harbor, 20th Century-Fox's Little Tokyo USA is 63 minutes' worth of speculation about prewar Japanese espionage activities. Los Angeles cop Preston Foster suspects that there's dirty work afoot in the city's Japanese community, but no one will believe him except for intrepid girl reporter Brenda Joyce. When the spies frame Foster on a trumped-up murder charge, Joyce does a little detective work herself. The enemy agents are rounded up just before they can do any real damage. Because of its strident insistence that most (if not all) Japanese-American citizens were secretly loyal to the Rising Sun, Little Tokyo USA is seldom seen these days.

Preston Foster as  Michael Steele
Brenda Joyce as  Maris Hanover
Harold Huber as  Ito Takimura
Donald Douglas as  Hendricks
June Duprez as  Teru
George E. Stone as  Kingoro
Spy

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Reviews

gordonl56
1942/07/08

LITTLE TOKYO U.S.A. – 1942This rather nasty film is a low budget flag-waver from the B unit at Twentieth Century Fox. It stars Preston Foster as a Police Lt assigned to the Los Angeles district known as "Little Tokyo", an area where many of the local Japanese American population live and work. The film starts a month before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The Japanese have sent an agent, Harold Huber to take control of the Axis spy apparatus in Southern California. Needless to say every Japanese around, seems to be in on the fifth-column act.Foster has been a cop in the area for years and senses something nefarious is afoot. He warns his boss, Captain J. Farrell Macdonald of his suspicions, but these are blown off. Foster's girl, Brenda Joyce works for a local news radio station. She also thinks Foster is letting his suspicious nature get the better of him. Foster enlists the help of a Japanese American he was at college with, Richard Loo. He wants Loo to look in on a few people he has heard rumours about. Of course Loo shows up the next day on a slab at the morgue. It takes a bit of detective work to identify the body, since it is sans head.Now Foster knows, there is more than a few rats in the cheese cupboard. He starts raiding homes and business he suspects of being involved. This just gets him warnings from headquarters when the locals complain about his tactics. Now we discover that Foster's girl, Brenda Joyce's boss at the radio station, Don Douglas, is really a Nazi. He is in with the Japanese bunch gathering intelligence for the Axis. They use the radio transmitter at the station to send out coded messages. Foster however keeps being an annoyance to the spy network. They decide to use one of their female operatives, the exotic looking, June Duprez to bag Foster. Duprez is to call up Foster and tell him she has some important information, then, lure him to a meeting. Foster bites and is soon meeting with Duprez. She hands him a drink and then starts with a cock and bull story of spies etc. The drink of course was drugged and Foster is soon face-down on the floor. Douglas and Huber join the pair. Douglas pours a healthy jolt of whiskey down Foster's throat. They then muss up his clothes, and take his gun. Douglas now shoots Duperz and plants the gun back on Foster. Douglas says to Huber that Duperz has died for the cause. A quick phone call to the Police is now made. Foster is slapped in jail on a murder beef. Of course everyone believes that Foster has finally went over the edge. What with all the complaints etc against him of late. Now December 7th arrives and maybe Foster was not so nuts after all. With some aid from others, Foster soon busts out of jail. He hides out at the city morgue, the last place anyone will look for a living person. He then spends his night's shadowing the same people he suspected before. It does not take long before he turns up the proof required. There is now a round-up of the Axis bunch for a date with the rope. There is more than a little heavy handed spreading of anti-Japanese sentiment in this one. There is a lecture, both at the start, and the finish, about the need to relocate those of Japanese heritage. Seen today, this comes across as hard racism, but at the time, there was real fear of a fifth column. Hard to second guess history, but in reality there were no charges of espionage ever brought against a Japanese American during wartime. (American born Iva Toguri, one of several women dubbed Tokyo Rose, did face charges of treason after the war for her broadcasts)The film was a hit and packed the theatres. Brenda Joyce is best remembered today as the second actress to play "Jane" in the popular TARZAN films. June Duprez was on the big screen between 1936 and 1947. Her biggest film was 1947's CALCUTTA, where she played opposite rising star, Alan Ladd.

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posmodern2000
1942/07/09

If an idiot like Miss Jones can return to radio after something like the "Tsunami Song" incident and after put a lot of dirt on the memory of Martin Luther King's struggle to avoid someone can call today Jones a "beep", it's because the mainstream don't know or try to deny the history of anti-Asian racism in the West, including Hollywood.This comment it's not mine, but of Shuriken in http://forums.yellowworld.org/showthread.php?t=10781 It's a list of "yellow face" movies, films with white people pretending to be Asian like the infamous Mickey Rooney's Yunioshi of "Brakfast at Tiffany's"."The main reason why this movie is not at the top of the list is because it has faded from popular memory. But in its day, Little Tokyo, U.S.A. exemplified yellow face at its most pernicious. While other works had used Asian make-up to ridicule or vilify Asian features, this B movie used yellow face directly to deny a group of Asian Americans their civil rights. The story, set in late 1941, follows tough Los Angeles cop Michael Steele (Preston Foster) as he investigates a series of crimes involving the local Japanese American community. The story gradually reveals that the crimes are to cover up a Japanese American cabal's efforts to facilitate Japan's bombing of Pearl Harbor. After the horrific military attack, the Japanese American community's demonstrations of pro-U.S. patriotism are portrayed as patently insincere. Policeman Steele tracks the crime trail to an American-born spy for Tokyo, Takimura (played in yellow face by Harold Huber). Takimura is shown to represent that even Japanese Americans who are born in the U.S. can't be trusted. Takimura tries to throw Steele off the case by enlisting a neighborhood vixen, Teru (June Duprez, pictured out of make-up in a publicity still above), to seduce him. If Little Tokyo, U.S.A. had been made 20 years later, Teru and Steele might have consummated the seduction. But this being the miscegenation-phobic '40s, Takimura instead murders Teru and frames Steele for the crime. Nevertheless, Steele ends up proving his innocence and busting the spy ring. The movie ends extolling the necessity for the internment. In retrospect, knowing that not a single charge of espionage was ever brought against a Japanese American during wartime, this sensationalistic story reeks of racist propaganda. Granted, the film would not have been any better if Japanese American actors had played these propagandistic roles. But Little Tokyo, U.S.A. stands as a cautionary reminder of just how horribly a community's image can be distorted when it's not there to represent itself."

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