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Mr. Moto

Mr. Moto is a fictional Japanese secret agent created by the American author John P. Marquand. He appeared in six novels by Marquand published between 1935 and 1957. Marquand initially created the character for the Saturday Evening Post, which was seeking stories with an Asian hero after the death of Charlie Chan's creator Earl Derr Biggers.[citation needed]

Mr. Moto
First appearanceYour Turn, Mr. Moto
Last appearanceStopover: Tokyo
Created byJohn P. Marquand
Portrayed byPeter Lorre
Henry Silva
James Monk
In-universe information
GenderMale
OccupationSecret agent
spy
detective
NationalityJapanese

In various other media, Mr. Moto has been portrayed as an international detective. These include eight motion pictures starring Peter Lorre between 1937 and 1939, 23 radio shows starring James Monks broadcast in 1951,[1] a 1965 film starring Henry Silva, and a 2003 comic book produced by Moonstone Books, later reprinted as Welcome Back, Mr. Moto.[2]

Character in the novels

In Marquand's novels, the character calls himself I.A. Moto, and some other characters believe this to be a fairly obvious alias, since "moto" is usually the second part of a Japanese surname, as in Hashimoto. Though Mr. Moto is shrewd, tough and ruthless against his enemies, to most people in most situations he appears to be a harmless eccentric who sometimes calls himself stupid. The main characters in the novels are Westerners who encounter Mr. Moto in the course of their adventures in exotic lands and gradually come to realize what a formidable character he is.

In the first five novels, set in the era of expansionist Imperial Japan, Mr. Moto is an agent of the empire. In the final novel, set in the 1950s inside Japan, he is a senior intelligence official in the pro-Western Japanese government.

Physical description

He is physically described in Think Fast, Mr. Moto:[citation needed]

Mr. Moto was a small man, delicate, almost fragile. … He was dressed formally in a morning coat and striped trousers. His black hair was carefully brushed in the Prussian style. He was smiling, showing a row of shiny gold-filled teeth, and as he smiled he drew in his breath with a polite, soft sibilant sound.

This basic description carries through most of the novels, with a slightly different description in Right You Are, Mr. Moto, set 20 years later than the other novels. In this novel he is described as "middle aged", and his hair as being "grayish and close-clipped." In two novels, Marquand describes Mr. Moto's build as "chunky".[citation needed]

He is often described as wearing formal evening clothes that are impeccably tailored. On occasion his sartorial style is somewhat misguided such as in Mr. Moto Is So Sorry when he appears in black-and-white checked sports clothes with green and red golf stockings. When his outfits are commented upon, Mr. Moto makes excuses. In Stopover: Tokyo, he is said to have the imposing dignity of his samurai forebears when dressed in traditional Japanese clothing.[citation needed]

Speech

In the prewar novels, Moto speaks a faintly comic English, with elaborate 'Oriental'-style politeness, with misuse of the definite and indefinite articles.[citation needed] In Stopover: Tokyo, the final novel, he works directly with U.S. intelligence agents and speaks to them in perfect English, possibly suggesting his linguistic errors are simply a device to make people underestimate him.[citation needed]

Personal life

Mr. Moto rarely discusses his personal life but in Think Fast, Mr. Moto he talks about his many talents.

Yes, I can do many, many things. I can mix drinks and wait on table, and I am a very good valet. I can navigate and manage small boats. I have studied at two foreign universities. I also know carpentry and surveying and five Chinese dialects. So very many things come in useful.

In Mr. Moto Is So Sorry he states that one of the foreign universities was in America where he studied anthropology. It is noted in this novel that he has enough knowledge of America to distinguish regional accents.

The novels generally involve a romance between the main character (often a disenfranchised expatriate American) and a mysterious woman. While Mr. Moto often despairs of the hero's attempts at saving the girl, he notes in Mr. Moto Is So Sorry that he himself is not immune to their charms.[citation needed]

"So often", he said, "I have seen such gracious ladies disrupt political combinations." He sighed and still stared at the ceiling seemingly lost in memory. "Such a lovely girl in Washington – I was so much younger then. She sold me the navy plans of a submarine. The price was thirty thousand yen. When the blueprints came, they were of a tugboat. Such a lovely lady. Such a lovely lady in Tokyo. She took me to see the goldfish in her garden, and there were the assassins behind the little trees. Not her fault, but theirs that I am still alive – they were such poor shots. I do not understand lovely ladies, but I still trust them sometimes."

Politics

While he is a devoted servant of the Emperor, he is often at odds with the Japanese military. He believes in the manifest destiny of the Japanese expansion into China, but unlike the military, wants to achieve this slowly and carefully. Millicent Bell in her biography of John P. Marquand notes how this may have influenced the audience:

There is political significance, too, in the calculated appeal to American readers of the ever resourceful Mr. Moto, the representative of Eastern subtlety combined with Western efficiency, who emerges as a gentleman of wit and charm. This characterization had to survive some anti-Japanese sentiment that followed Japan's invasion of China in 1937. Up to 1939 it may have seemed possible, especially to those Americans unaware of or indifferent to the atrocities of the Japanese military in China, that Japan would be moderate and reasonable in its expansion in the Far East and that the Mr. Motos would defeat the Japanese military fanatics. Pearl Harbor ended American neutrality and American hopes for Japanese moderation, but not before Marquand's Moto series had become one of the most popular fictions ever to be run in an American magazine.[3]

Novels

  • Your Turn, Mr. Moto (aka No Hero and Mr. Moto Takes a Hand (British edition)) (1935) – Originally serialized in the Saturday Evening Post in 1935 under the title No Hero.
  • Thank You, Mr. Moto (1936) – Originally serialized in the Saturday Evening Post in 1936. An expatriate American gets involved in intrigue in Peking when he tries to save an American woman from unscrupulous art dealers. Moto tries to save them both from a military takeover of Peking.
  • Think Fast, Mr. Moto (1937) – Originally serialized in the Saturday Evening Post in 1936. The heir to an American banking firm is sent to Honolulu to clear up a family matter involving a gambling house. Moto is also drawn to Hawaii to stop money being channeled into China to support revolutionaries.
  • Mr. Moto Is So Sorry (1938) – Originally serialized in the Saturday Evening Post in 1938. An American on the run from authorities encounters Moto on a train journey through China. Moto is on his way to a life-or-death showdown with Russian spies and draws the hapless American into the situation when a secret message accidentally falls into the possession of a beautiful woman.
  • Last Laugh, Mr. Moto (1942) – Originally serialized in Collier's Weekly in 1941 under the title Mercator Island. After Pearl Harbor the character of Moto was "interned for the duration" by the author.[4] This novel, set in the Caribbean, had already been written prior to Pearl Harbor and was published afterward.[5]
  • Right You Are, Mr. Moto (aka Stopover: Tokyo and The Last of Mr. Moto) (1957) – This Cold War tale, different in several ways from its predecessors, was originally serialized in the Saturday Evening Post in 1956 and 1957 under the title Rendezvous in Tokyo. The original book was called Stopover: Tokyo and subsequent editions were called The Last of Mr. Moto and finally Right You Are, Mr. Moto.[6]

Anthologies/"omnibus"

  • Mr. Moto's Three Aces (1939) reprints Thank You, Mr. Moto; Think Fast, Mr. Moto; and Mr. Moto Is So Sorry.
  • Thank You, Mr. Moto and Mr. Moto Is So Sorry from The Saturday Evening Post, published by The Curtis Publishing Company, Indianapolis, Indiana, 1977
  • Mr. Moto: Four Complete Novels (1983) reprints Your Turn, Mr. Moto; Think Fast, Mr. Moto; Mr. Moto Is So Sorry; and Right You Are, Mr. Moto.[6]

Character in the films

Between 1937 and 1939 eight motion pictures were produced by 20th Century Fox starring Peter Lorre as Mr. Kentaro Moto.

Unlike in the novels, Moto is the central character, a detective with Interpol, wears glasses (and has no gold teeth), and is a devout Buddhist (and friendly with the Chinese monarchy). He is impeccably dressed in Western suits. The stories are action-oriented due to Moto's skill with judo (only hinted at in the novels) and due to his tendency to wear disguises.

In early 1938, there was some press talk that Moto would be turned into a Korean due to controversy over Japanese foreign policy, but this did not happen.[7] By April there was talk the series would soon wind up.[8]

Abilities

In the film Mr. Moto's Last Warning a list is shown which describes him as:

  • Age 35–40
  • Jiu-jutsu and judo expert
  • Uses various disguises
  • International police
  • Adept at stage illusion/magic
  • Usually works alone
  • Able to walk silently
  • Known to use doubles

Throughout the films, other abilities have been noted:

  • Ventriloquism
  • Able to speak at least four languages (English, Mandarin, German, and Japanese)
  • Devout Buddhist who knows traditional chants and religious rites
  • Composes haiku
  • Draws caricatures
  • Plays the shamisen
  • Knows how to cure a hangover

Occupation

The motion picture Mr. Moto is described as an agent for Interpol.

In the first film, Think Fast, Mr. Moto, he reveals that he is the managing director of the Dai Nippon Trading Company and had decided to investigate the smuggling activities that were harming his business. He claims to be a detective "only as a hobby."[9] In the second film, Thank You, Mr. Moto, the definition of his occupation/hobby begins to get murky. He tells a woman that he is an importer whose hobby is detective work, but only after showing her his identification which indicates he is a Confidential Agent for the International Association of Importers. However, in a climactic chase sequence he flashes a badge at a guard and says that he is from the International Police (understood as Interpol).

In subsequent films Mr. Moto works for private organizations such as the Diamond Syndicate (Danger Island) as well as for world governments (Mr. Moto's Last Warning and Mr. Moto Takes a Chance)-- but only when it is in Japan's interests.

As a member of the International Police, he garners respect from local police around the world. In London, Shanghai, and San Francisco he is given full cooperation for his investigations. In Mr. Moto's Last Warning he works side by side with British Secret Service agents and in Mr. Moto Takes a Chance he is spying for an unknown government agency. He is known for his close relationship to the Chinese Royal Family.

Personal life

Mr. Moto's personal life is rarely touched upon. In Think Fast, Mr. Moto he tells Bob Hitchings that he went to Stanford University, graduating in 1921 as an honorary member. There, he set a pole vaulting record and was a member of the fraternity Alpha Omega.

In the movies, Mr. Moto travels a great deal and manages to have his cat, Chunkina, along for the journey. Besides his cat, the women in his life include Lela Liu (played by Lotus Long in the film Think Fast, Mr. Moto), a hotel telephone operator whom he asks out on a date, and who proves to be an agent who helps him in his investigation. In Mysterious Mr. Moto, an agent, Lotus Liu (also played by Lotus Long, credited as Karen Sorrell), pretends to fall for his charms so they can be alone to compare notes in their investigation. Like his literary counterpart, Kentaro Moto believes that a "Beautiful girl is only confusing to a man",[9] but has been known to use a woman's emotions to aid his cause. In Thank You, Mr. Moto, he tells the disillusioned Madame Tchernov, "I am so grateful for your suspicious nature. It is not the first time a woman's jealousy has been fatal to the man she loved."[10]

Mr. Moto is charming and polite (even to rude or obnoxious people). He is respectful of other cultures, but sometimes makes wry comments. For instance, in Think Fast, Mr. Moto, he derails the drunken American's party tricks with a little judo. After putting the tipsy Bob Hitchings to bed, he sadly shakes his head and says, "Strange people these Americans."[9]

Mr. Moto's religion is never stated; but in Thank You, Mr. Moto, when his friend Prince Chung (played by Phillip Ahn) dies, it becomes clear Mr. Moto is a devout Buddhist, as he chants expertly before the statue of the Buddha while holding the prince in his arms.

The family crest or mon on Mr. Moto's yukata, as seen in the films Thank You, Mr. Moto and Mr. Moto Takes a Vacation, is three bars in a circle. This is similar to the Maruno uchini mitsuhikiryō (丸の内に三引両),[11] the mon of the Sakuma clan who served under Oda Nobunaga.[12] This would imply that Moto is from a samurai family.

Other films

A film version of Stopover Tokyo, made in 1957, stars Robert Wagner as an American spy. This film eliminated Moto's character altogether. It disregards the plot of Marquand's novel, and was not a commercial or critical success.

In 1965 Mr. Moto's character was revived in a low-budget Robert Lippert production filmed in England starring Henry Silva. In Mr. Moto Returns, a.k.a. The Return of Mr. Moto, Mr. I.A. Moto is a member of Interpol. The very tall Silva conveyed an almost James Bond-like playboy character; in the fight scenes it is clearly obvious that he is not proficient in martial arts. He speaks in a lazy 'Beatnik' manner. Nowhere in the film is it mentioned that Moto is Japanese. He is referred to as an "Oriental" and, oddly, in the trailer, Moto is referred to as a "swinging Chinese cat." It is only when disguised as a Japanese oil representative, Mr. Takura, that a stereotypical portrayal of a Japanese businessman is given.

In 1984 Mr. Moto's character was rudely referenced in The Karate Kid by a drunken racist played by Larry Drake. After Miyagi trains Daniel to learn balance, Miyagi takes him to his truck he notices Drake's character and another drunk drinking beers and placing the empty bottles on the hood. Spouting racial slurs at Miyagi and referring to him as Daniel's "Pet Nip." When Miyagi politely asks them to remove their bottles, Drake's character retorts "Kindry do it yourself, Mr. Moto." Which Miyagi retaliates by chopping the necks off all the bottles, intimidating the two into cleaning up what's left and leaving.

Filmography

Title Star Director Released Plot Notes Distributor
Think Fast, Mr. Moto Peter Lorre Norman Foster 1937 Mr. Moto works to stop a secret smuggling operation.[13] Based on Marquand's novel of the same name.[14] 20th Century Fox
Thank You, Mr. Moto In disguise again as a Mongolian trader in the Gobi desert, Moto makes his way to Peking where he tries to obtain ancient scrolls that lead the way to the treasure of Genghis Khan. At the end, he fulfills an obligation to his dying friend and destroys the scrolls so no one can ever violate the treasure. Marquand wrote the screenplay, loosely based on his novel of the same name.
Mr. Moto's Gamble (aka Mr. Moto's Diary) James Tinling 1938 Moto is now famous enough as a detective to be giving a class in criminology in San Francisco. While at a boxing match, Moto is drawn into a murder investigation. Originally intended for the Charlie Chan series starring Warner Oland; re-written to make it a Moto film, but Keye Luke, as Chan's son Lee, remained.
Mr. Moto Takes a Chance Norman Foster Undercover as an archeologist in Thailand, Moto is trying to learn who is heading a revolutionary army smuggling guns and explosives into the tiny village of Tong Moi. Original story.
Mysterious Mr. Moto Posing as a Japanese murderer, Moto escapes from Devil's Island with a member of the League of Assassins to find out not only who is their next victim but to identify the mysterious man at the top.
Mr. Moto's Last Warning 1939 In Port Said, Egypt, Moto tries to stop the French Naval Fleet from being destroyed by secret agents bent on starting a war between the British and the French.
Mr. Moto in Danger Island Herbert I. Leeds Diamond smugglers are working out of Puerto Rico and Moto is sent to investigate and discover their secret lair. Based on the novel Murder in Trinidad by John W. Vandercook
Mr. Moto Takes a Vacation Norman Foster While pretending to be vacationing in San Francisco, Moto is actually keeping an eye on the crown of the Queen of Sheba, surefire bait for the master thief known as Metaxa. Original story.
The Return of Mr. Moto Henry Silva Ernest Morris 1965 Moto leaves his Hawaiian home to solve a case in London involving an ex-Nazi.[15]

Character in the radio program

From May to October 1951, the NBC Radio Network produced and aired 23 half-hour episodes starring James Monk as Mr. I.A. Moto, International Secret Agent. Mr. Moto is an American of Japanese descent born in San Francisco but retaining his international connections.[16]

The show focused on Mr. Moto's fight against Communism although occasionally he solved more mundane mysteries such as murder and blackmail.

Radio program episode list

  1. A Force Called X07 – aired May 20, 1951[17]
  2. Smoke Screen – aired May 27, 1951
  3. Blackmail – aired June 3, 1951
  4. The Dead Land – aired June 10, 1951
  5. The Kurlioff Papers (broadcast on the West Coast) – aired June 13, 1951 and The Brazaloff Papers (broadcast on the East Coast) – aired June 17, 1951
  6. The Victim – aired June 24, 1951
  7. Project 77 – aired July 1, 1951
  8. Sabotage – aired July 8, 1951
  9. Escape – aired July 15, 1951
  10. The Wheel of Life
  11. The Yellow Robe or the Lama's Amah
  12. The Voronzoff Necklace
  13. Waltzing Matilda
  14. The Beauty and the Avenger
  15. The Shen Tsung Fan
  16. The Three Numbers
  17. The Unhappy Firebug
  18. The Blue Cigarettes
  19. The Kants of Kailuaneohe
  20. The Schraum Method – aired Oct. 1, 1951
  21. The Crooked Log – aired Oct. 7, 1951
  22. The Strange Elopement of Professor Sloan – aired Oct. 13, 1951
  23. The Dry Martini – aired Oct. 20, 1951

Parodies and satires

Peter Lorre brought the character of Mr. Moto to many comedy radio programs.[18]

  • Royal Gelatin Hour Aug. 10, 1939 on NBC. Rudy Vallée, host. Peter Lorre as Mr. Moto in a mystery sketch.
  • George Jessel's Celebrity Program Aug. 16, 1939 on NBC. George Jessel, host. Peter Lorre as Mr. Moto in a mystery sketch.
  • Texaco Star Theater Jan. 3, 1943 on CBS. Fred Allen, host. Peter Lorre as Mr. Moto in "The Missing Shot or Who Killed Balsam Beamish?" Mr. Moto vs. One Long Pan.

The slangy and whimsical song "Java Jive", a 1940 song by Milton Drake and Ben Oakland that was a standard for the Ink Spots, namechecks the detective in a nonsensical couplet: "I love java, sweet and hot / Whoops Mister Moto, I'm a coffee pot".

The Bel-Airs, an early and influential surf rock band, are best known for their 1961 instrumental hit "Mr. Moto".

The character of Joe Jitsu from The Dick Tracy Show was based on Mr. Moto.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ Digitaldeliftp.com
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-09-08. Retrieved 2008-08-27.
  3. ^ Marquand: An American Life by Millicent Bell. Boston: Little, Brown and Company. 1979. Pg.221.
  4. ^ THEODORE STRAUSS (Dec 14, 1941). "GOODBYE, MR. MOTO: Jolin P. Marquand Sends an Old Friend Back to His 'Honorable' Ancestors". New York Times. p. X7.
  5. ^ "Notes on Books and Authors". New York Times. Jan 9, 1942. p. 19.
  6. ^ a b The Mr. Moto Novels of James P. Marquand 2008-07-20 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ JIMMY FIDLER (Jan 8, 1938). "In Hollywood". The Washington Post. p. X14.
  8. ^ Schallert, Edwin (Apr 5, 1938). "Warren William to Star for Universal: Payne Replaces Powell More Cinema Series Four Pictures to Start Film World Pageant". Los Angeles Times. p. 10.
  9. ^ a b c Quote from Think Fast, Mr. Moto.
  10. ^ Quote from Thank You, Mr. Moto
  11. ^ Image of Sakuma family crest
  12. ^ Oda clan#Oda retainer families
  13. ^ "Think Fast, Mr. Moto". Monthly Film Bulletin. Vol. 4, no. 37. London. Jan 1, 1937. p. 149.
  14. ^ Hal Erickson. "Think Fast, Mr. Moto". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Baseline & All Movie Guide. Archived from the original on 2013-09-06.
  15. ^ Sandra Brennan. "The Return of Mr. Moto". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Baseline & All Movie Guide. Archived from the original on 2013-09-06.
  16. ^ Mr. Moto radio show at Internet Archive
  17. ^ Audio at the Internet Archive
  18. ^ Stephen Youngkin: The Lost One
  19. ^ Big Cartoon Database entry for Porky's Movie Mystery

Further reading

  • Wires, Richard (1990). John P. Marquand and Mr. Moto: Spy Adventures and Detective Films. Ball State University. ISBN 0-937994-17-0.
  • Berlin, Howard (2005). The Complete Mr. Moto Film Phile: A Casebook. Wildside Press. ISBN 0-8095-1129-0.
  • Youngkin, Stephen D. (2005). The Lost One: A Life of Peter Lorre. University Press of Kentucky. ISBN 0-8131-2360-7. — Contains a full chapter on the making of the Mr. Moto films at 20th Century-Fox, 1937–1939.
  • Bell, Millicent (1979). John P. Marquand, An American Life. Little Brown and Company. Biography of the creator of Mr. Moto.
  • Mason, Fran (2012). Hollywood's Detectives: Crime Series in the 1930s and 1940s from the Whodunnit to Hard-Boiled Noir. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 9780230578357. Has chapter "Ordering the World: The Uncompromising Logic of Charlie Chan and Mr. Moto".

External links

  • Mr. Moto In Love
  • Mr. Moto at seriesbooks.info

moto, professional, wrestler, known, kamata, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sou. For the professional wrestler known as Mr Moto see Tor Kamata For other uses see Mr Moto disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Mr Moto news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Mr Moto is a fictional Japanese secret agent created by the American author John P Marquand He appeared in six novels by Marquand published between 1935 and 1957 Marquand initially created the character for the Saturday Evening Post which was seeking stories with an Asian hero after the death of Charlie Chan s creator Earl Derr Biggers citation needed Mr MotoPeter Lorre as Moto with Jayne Regan in Thank You Mr Moto 1937 First appearanceYour Turn Mr MotoLast appearanceStopover TokyoCreated byJohn P MarquandPortrayed byPeter LorreHenry SilvaJames MonkIn universe informationGenderMaleOccupationSecret agentspydetectiveNationalityJapaneseIn various other media Mr Moto has been portrayed as an international detective These include eight motion pictures starring Peter Lorre between 1937 and 1939 23 radio shows starring James Monks broadcast in 1951 1 a 1965 film starring Henry Silva and a 2003 comic book produced by Moonstone Books later reprinted as Welcome Back Mr Moto 2 Contents 1 Character in the novels 1 1 Physical description 2 Speech 2 1 Personal life 2 2 Politics 3 Novels 3 1 Anthologies omnibus 4 Character in the films 4 1 Abilities 4 2 Occupation 4 3 Personal life 4 4 Other films 5 Filmography 6 Character in the radio program 6 1 Radio program episode list 6 2 Parodies and satires 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksCharacter in the novels EditIn Marquand s novels the character calls himself I A Moto and some other characters believe this to be a fairly obvious alias since moto is usually the second part of a Japanese surname as in Hashimoto Though Mr Moto is shrewd tough and ruthless against his enemies to most people in most situations he appears to be a harmless eccentric who sometimes calls himself stupid The main characters in the novels are Westerners who encounter Mr Moto in the course of their adventures in exotic lands and gradually come to realize what a formidable character he is In the first five novels set in the era of expansionist Imperial Japan Mr Moto is an agent of the empire In the final novel set in the 1950s inside Japan he is a senior intelligence official in the pro Western Japanese government Physical description Edit He is physically described in Think Fast Mr Moto citation needed Mr Moto was a small man delicate almost fragile He was dressed formally in a morning coat and striped trousers His black hair was carefully brushed in the Prussian style He was smiling showing a row of shiny gold filled teeth and as he smiled he drew in his breath with a polite soft sibilant sound This basic description carries through most of the novels with a slightly different description in Right You Are Mr Moto set 20 years later than the other novels In this novel he is described as middle aged and his hair as being grayish and close clipped In two novels Marquand describes Mr Moto s build as chunky citation needed He is often described as wearing formal evening clothes that are impeccably tailored On occasion his sartorial style is somewhat misguided such as in Mr Moto Is So Sorry when he appears in black and white checked sports clothes with green and red golf stockings When his outfits are commented upon Mr Moto makes excuses In Stopover Tokyo he is said to have the imposing dignity of his samurai forebears when dressed in traditional Japanese clothing citation needed Speech EditIn the prewar novels Moto speaks a faintly comic English with elaborate Oriental style politeness with misuse of the definite and indefinite articles citation needed In Stopover Tokyo the final novel he works directly with U S intelligence agents and speaks to them in perfect English possibly suggesting his linguistic errors are simply a device to make people underestimate him citation needed Personal life Edit Mr Moto rarely discusses his personal life but in Think Fast Mr Moto he talks about his many talents Yes I can do many many things I can mix drinks and wait on table and I am a very good valet I can navigate and manage small boats I have studied at two foreign universities I also know carpentry and surveying and five Chinese dialects So very many things come in useful In Mr Moto Is So Sorry he states that one of the foreign universities was in America where he studied anthropology It is noted in this novel that he has enough knowledge of America to distinguish regional accents The novels generally involve a romance between the main character often a disenfranchised expatriate American and a mysterious woman While Mr Moto often despairs of the hero s attempts at saving the girl he notes in Mr Moto Is So Sorry that he himself is not immune to their charms citation needed So often he said I have seen such gracious ladies disrupt political combinations He sighed and still stared at the ceiling seemingly lost in memory Such a lovely girl in Washington I was so much younger then She sold me the navy plans of a submarine The price was thirty thousand yen When the blueprints came they were of a tugboat Such a lovely lady Such a lovely lady in Tokyo She took me to see the goldfish in her garden and there were the assassins behind the little trees Not her fault but theirs that I am still alive they were such poor shots I do not understand lovely ladies but I still trust them sometimes Politics Edit While he is a devoted servant of the Emperor he is often at odds with the Japanese military He believes in the manifest destiny of the Japanese expansion into China but unlike the military wants to achieve this slowly and carefully Millicent Bell in her biography of John P Marquand notes how this may have influenced the audience There is political significance too in the calculated appeal to American readers of the ever resourceful Mr Moto the representative of Eastern subtlety combined with Western efficiency who emerges as a gentleman of wit and charm This characterization had to survive some anti Japanese sentiment that followed Japan s invasion of China in 1937 Up to 1939 it may have seemed possible especially to those Americans unaware of or indifferent to the atrocities of the Japanese military in China that Japan would be moderate and reasonable in its expansion in the Far East and that the Mr Motos would defeat the Japanese military fanatics Pearl Harbor ended American neutrality and American hopes for Japanese moderation but not before Marquand s Moto series had become one of the most popular fictions ever to be run in an American magazine 3 Novels EditYour Turn Mr Moto aka No Hero and Mr Moto Takes a Hand British edition 1935 Originally serialized in the Saturday Evening Post in 1935 under the title No Hero Thank You Mr Moto 1936 Originally serialized in the Saturday Evening Post in 1936 An expatriate American gets involved in intrigue in Peking when he tries to save an American woman from unscrupulous art dealers Moto tries to save them both from a military takeover of Peking Think Fast Mr Moto 1937 Originally serialized in the Saturday Evening Post in 1936 The heir to an American banking firm is sent to Honolulu to clear up a family matter involving a gambling house Moto is also drawn to Hawaii to stop money being channeled into China to support revolutionaries Mr Moto Is So Sorry 1938 Originally serialized in the Saturday Evening Post in 1938 An American on the run from authorities encounters Moto on a train journey through China Moto is on his way to a life or death showdown with Russian spies and draws the hapless American into the situation when a secret message accidentally falls into the possession of a beautiful woman Last Laugh Mr Moto 1942 Originally serialized in Collier s Weekly in 1941 under the title Mercator Island After Pearl Harbor the character of Moto was interned for the duration by the author 4 This novel set in the Caribbean had already been written prior to Pearl Harbor and was published afterward 5 Right You Are Mr Moto aka Stopover Tokyo and The Last of Mr Moto 1957 This Cold War tale different in several ways from its predecessors was originally serialized in the Saturday Evening Post in 1956 and 1957 under the title Rendezvous in Tokyo The original book was called Stopover Tokyo and subsequent editions were called The Last of Mr Moto and finally Right You Are Mr Moto 6 Anthologies omnibus Edit Mr Moto s Three Aces 1939 reprints Thank You Mr Moto Think Fast Mr Moto and Mr Moto Is So Sorry Thank You Mr Moto and Mr Moto Is So Sorry from The Saturday Evening Post published by The Curtis Publishing Company Indianapolis Indiana 1977 Mr Moto Four Complete Novels 1983 reprints Your Turn Mr Moto Think Fast Mr Moto Mr Moto Is So Sorry and Right You Are Mr Moto 6 Character in the films EditBetween 1937 and 1939 eight motion pictures were produced by 20th Century Fox starring Peter Lorre as Mr Kentaro Moto Unlike in the novels Moto is the central character a detective with Interpol wears glasses and has no gold teeth and is a devout Buddhist and friendly with the Chinese monarchy He is impeccably dressed in Western suits The stories are action oriented due to Moto s skill with judo only hinted at in the novels and due to his tendency to wear disguises In early 1938 there was some press talk that Moto would be turned into a Korean due to controversy over Japanese foreign policy but this did not happen 7 By April there was talk the series would soon wind up 8 Abilities Edit In the film Mr Moto s Last Warning a list is shown which describes him as Age 35 40 Jiu jutsu and judo expert Uses various disguises International police Adept at stage illusion magic Usually works alone Able to walk silently Known to use doublesThroughout the films other abilities have been noted Ventriloquism Able to speak at least four languages English Mandarin German and Japanese Devout Buddhist who knows traditional chants and religious rites Composes haiku Draws caricatures Plays the shamisen Knows how to cure a hangoverOccupation Edit The motion picture Mr Moto is described as an agent for Interpol In the first film Think Fast Mr Moto he reveals that he is the managing director of the Dai Nippon Trading Company and had decided to investigate the smuggling activities that were harming his business He claims to be a detective only as a hobby 9 In the second film Thank You Mr Moto the definition of his occupation hobby begins to get murky He tells a woman that he is an importer whose hobby is detective work but only after showing her his identification which indicates he is a Confidential Agent for the International Association of Importers However in a climactic chase sequence he flashes a badge at a guard and says that he is from the International Police understood as Interpol In subsequent films Mr Moto works for private organizations such as the Diamond Syndicate Danger Island as well as for world governments Mr Moto s Last Warning and Mr Moto Takes a Chance but only when it is in Japan s interests As a member of the International Police he garners respect from local police around the world In London Shanghai and San Francisco he is given full cooperation for his investigations In Mr Moto s Last Warning he works side by side with British Secret Service agents and in Mr Moto Takes a Chance he is spying for an unknown government agency He is known for his close relationship to the Chinese Royal Family Personal life Edit Mr Moto s personal life is rarely touched upon In Think Fast Mr Moto he tells Bob Hitchings that he went to Stanford University graduating in 1921 as an honorary member There he set a pole vaulting record and was a member of the fraternity Alpha Omega In the movies Mr Moto travels a great deal and manages to have his cat Chunkina along for the journey Besides his cat the women in his life include Lela Liu played by Lotus Long in the film Think Fast Mr Moto a hotel telephone operator whom he asks out on a date and who proves to be an agent who helps him in his investigation In Mysterious Mr Moto an agent Lotus Liu also played by Lotus Long credited as Karen Sorrell pretends to fall for his charms so they can be alone to compare notes in their investigation Like his literary counterpart Kentaro Moto believes that a Beautiful girl is only confusing to a man 9 but has been known to use a woman s emotions to aid his cause In Thank You Mr Moto he tells the disillusioned Madame Tchernov I am so grateful for your suspicious nature It is not the first time a woman s jealousy has been fatal to the man she loved 10 Mr Moto is charming and polite even to rude or obnoxious people He is respectful of other cultures but sometimes makes wry comments For instance in Think Fast Mr Moto he derails the drunken American s party tricks with a little judo After putting the tipsy Bob Hitchings to bed he sadly shakes his head and says Strange people these Americans 9 Mr Moto s religion is never stated but in Thank You Mr Moto when his friend Prince Chung played by Phillip Ahn dies it becomes clear Mr Moto is a devout Buddhist as he chants expertly before the statue of the Buddha while holding the prince in his arms The family crest or mon on Mr Moto s yukata as seen in the films Thank You Mr Moto and Mr Moto Takes a Vacation is three bars in a circle This is similar to the Maruno uchini mitsuhikiryō 丸の内に三引両 11 the mon of the Sakuma clan who served under Oda Nobunaga 12 This would imply that Moto is from a samurai family Other films Edit A film version of Stopover Tokyo made in 1957 stars Robert Wagner as an American spy This film eliminated Moto s character altogether It disregards the plot of Marquand s novel and was not a commercial or critical success In 1965 Mr Moto s character was revived in a low budget Robert Lippert production filmed in England starring Henry Silva In Mr Moto Returns a k a The Return of Mr Moto Mr I A Moto is a member of Interpol The very tall Silva conveyed an almost James Bond like playboy character in the fight scenes it is clearly obvious that he is not proficient in martial arts He speaks in a lazy Beatnik manner Nowhere in the film is it mentioned that Moto is Japanese He is referred to as an Oriental and oddly in the trailer Moto is referred to as a swinging Chinese cat It is only when disguised as a Japanese oil representative Mr Takura that a stereotypical portrayal of a Japanese businessman is given In 1984 Mr Moto s character was rudely referenced in The Karate Kid by a drunken racist played by Larry Drake After Miyagi trains Daniel to learn balance Miyagi takes him to his truck he notices Drake s character and another drunk drinking beers and placing the empty bottles on the hood Spouting racial slurs at Miyagi and referring to him as Daniel s Pet Nip When Miyagi politely asks them to remove their bottles Drake s character retorts Kindry do it yourself Mr Moto Which Miyagi retaliates by chopping the necks off all the bottles intimidating the two into cleaning up what s left and leaving Filmography EditTitle Star Director Released Plot Notes DistributorThink Fast Mr Moto Peter Lorre Norman Foster 1937 Mr Moto works to stop a secret smuggling operation 13 Based on Marquand s novel of the same name 14 20th Century FoxThank You Mr Moto In disguise again as a Mongolian trader in the Gobi desert Moto makes his way to Peking where he tries to obtain ancient scrolls that lead the way to the treasure of Genghis Khan At the end he fulfills an obligation to his dying friend and destroys the scrolls so no one can ever violate the treasure Marquand wrote the screenplay loosely based on his novel of the same name Mr Moto s Gamble aka Mr Moto s Diary James Tinling 1938 Moto is now famous enough as a detective to be giving a class in criminology in San Francisco While at a boxing match Moto is drawn into a murder investigation Originally intended for the Charlie Chan series starring Warner Oland re written to make it a Moto film but Keye Luke as Chan s son Lee remained Mr Moto Takes a Chance Norman Foster Undercover as an archeologist in Thailand Moto is trying to learn who is heading a revolutionary army smuggling guns and explosives into the tiny village of Tong Moi Original story Mysterious Mr Moto Posing as a Japanese murderer Moto escapes from Devil s Island with a member of the League of Assassins to find out not only who is their next victim but to identify the mysterious man at the top Mr Moto s Last Warning 1939 In Port Said Egypt Moto tries to stop the French Naval Fleet from being destroyed by secret agents bent on starting a war between the British and the French Mr Moto in Danger Island Herbert I Leeds Diamond smugglers are working out of Puerto Rico and Moto is sent to investigate and discover their secret lair Based on the novel Murder in Trinidad by John W VandercookMr Moto Takes a Vacation Norman Foster While pretending to be vacationing in San Francisco Moto is actually keeping an eye on the crown of the Queen of Sheba surefire bait for the master thief known as Metaxa Original story The Return of Mr Moto Henry Silva Ernest Morris 1965 Moto leaves his Hawaiian home to solve a case in London involving an ex Nazi 15 Character in the radio program EditFrom May to October 1951 the NBC Radio Network produced and aired 23 half hour episodes starring James Monk as Mr I A Moto International Secret Agent Mr Moto is an American of Japanese descent born in San Francisco but retaining his international connections 16 The show focused on Mr Moto s fight against Communism although occasionally he solved more mundane mysteries such as murder and blackmail Radio program episode list Edit A Force Called X07 aired May 20 1951 17 Smoke Screen aired May 27 1951 Blackmail aired June 3 1951 The Dead Land aired June 10 1951 The Kurlioff Papers broadcast on the West Coast aired June 13 1951 and The Brazaloff Papers broadcast on the East Coast aired June 17 1951 The Victim aired June 24 1951 Project 77 aired July 1 1951 Sabotage aired July 8 1951 Escape aired July 15 1951 The Wheel of Life The Yellow Robe or the Lama s Amah The Voronzoff Necklace Waltzing Matilda The Beauty and the Avenger The Shen Tsung Fan The Three Numbers The Unhappy Firebug The Blue Cigarettes The Kants of Kailuaneohe The Schraum Method aired Oct 1 1951 The Crooked Log aired Oct 7 1951 The Strange Elopement of Professor Sloan aired Oct 13 1951 The Dry Martini aired Oct 20 1951Parodies and satires Edit Peter Lorre brought the character of Mr Moto to many comedy radio programs 18 Camel Caravan Oct 24 1938 on CBS Eddie Cantor host Peter Lorre as Mr Moto investigates the disappearance of guest Martha Raye Royal Gelatin Hour Aug 10 1939 on NBC Rudy Vallee host Peter Lorre as Mr Moto in a mystery sketch George Jessel s Celebrity Program Aug 16 1939 on NBC George Jessel host Peter Lorre as Mr Moto in a mystery sketch Texaco Star Theater Oct 4 1939 on CBS Ken Murray host Peter Lorre as Mr Moto in a mystery sketch Texaco Star Theater Jan 3 1943 on CBS Fred Allen host Peter Lorre as Mr Moto in The Missing Shot or Who Killed Balsam Beamish Mr Moto vs One Long Pan Texaco Star Theater June 4 1944 on CBS Fred Allen host Peter Lorre as Mr Moto in More Murder on the Fred Allen Program Porky s Movie Mystery 1939 Features Porky Pig as the detective Mr Motto 19 The slangy and whimsical song Java Jive a 1940 song by Milton Drake and Ben Oakland that was a standard for the Ink Spots namechecks the detective in a nonsensical couplet I love java sweet and hot Whoops Mister Moto I m a coffee pot The Bel Airs an early and influential surf rock band are best known for their 1961 instrumental hit Mr Moto The character of Joe Jitsu from The Dick Tracy Show was based on Mr Moto citation needed See also Edit Books portal Film portalPortrayal of East Asians in Hollywood Charlie Chan Mr WongReferences Edit Digitaldeliftp com Welcome Back Mr Moto graphic novel at Moonstone Books Archived from the original on 2008 09 08 Retrieved 2008 08 27 Marquand An American Life by Millicent Bell Boston Little Brown and Company 1979 Pg 221 THEODORE STRAUSS Dec 14 1941 GOODBYE MR MOTO Jolin P Marquand Sends an Old Friend Back to His Honorable Ancestors New York Times p X7 Notes on Books and Authors New York Times Jan 9 1942 p 19 a b The Mr Moto Novels of James P Marquand Archived 2008 07 20 at the Wayback Machine JIMMY FIDLER Jan 8 1938 In Hollywood The Washington Post p X14 Schallert Edwin Apr 5 1938 Warren William to Star for Universal Payne Replaces Powell More Cinema Series Four Pictures to Start Film World Pageant Los Angeles Times p 10 a b c Quote from Think Fast Mr Moto Quote from Thank You Mr Moto Image of Sakuma family crest Oda clan Oda retainer families Think Fast Mr Moto Monthly Film Bulletin Vol 4 no 37 London Jan 1 1937 p 149 Hal Erickson Think Fast Mr Moto Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times Baseline amp All Movie Guide Archived from the original on 2013 09 06 Sandra Brennan The Return of Mr Moto Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times Baseline amp All Movie Guide Archived from the original on 2013 09 06 Mr Moto radio show at Internet Archive Audio at the Internet Archive Stephen Youngkin The Lost One Big Cartoon Database entry for Porky s Movie MysteryFurther reading EditWires Richard 1990 John P Marquand and Mr Moto Spy Adventures and Detective Films Ball State University ISBN 0 937994 17 0 Berlin Howard 2005 The Complete Mr Moto Film Phile A Casebook Wildside Press ISBN 0 8095 1129 0 Youngkin Stephen D 2005 The Lost One A Life of Peter Lorre University Press of Kentucky ISBN 0 8131 2360 7 Contains a full chapter on the making of the Mr Moto films at 20th Century Fox 1937 1939 Bell Millicent 1979 John P Marquand An American Life Little Brown and Company Biography of the creator of Mr Moto Mason Fran 2012 Hollywood s Detectives Crime Series in the 1930s and 1940s from the Whodunnit to Hard Boiled Noir Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9780230578357 Has chapter Ordering the World The Uncompromising Logic of Charlie Chan and Mr Moto External links EditThe Mr Moto Novels Mr Moto In Love Mr Moto at seriesbooks info Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mr Moto amp oldid 1136425473, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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