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The Yellow Claw | |
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Directed by | René Plaissetty |
Written by | Sax Rohmer (novel) Gerard Fort Buckle |
Produced by | Oswald Stoll |
Starring | Sydney Seaward Arthur M. Cullin Harvey Braban Annie Esmond |
Cinematography | Jack E. Cox |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Stoll Pictures |
Release date |
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Running time | 6,200 feet[1] |
Country | United Kingdom |
Languages | Silent English intertitles |
The Yellow Claw is a 1921 British silent crime film directed by René Plaissetty and starring Sydney Seaward, Arthur M. Cullin and Harvey Braban. The film was shot partly at Cricklewood Studios[2] and ran 68 minutes.[3] It was based on the 1915 novel The Yellow Claw by Sax Rohmer, in which a French detective battles a notorious master criminal named Mr. King.
A frightened woman is murdered in the London apartment of a well-known novelist named Henry Leroux. The police arrest Leroux's butler, but he escapes and runs off to a mysterious opium den, the lair of a drug dealer named Mister King. Gaston Max, a detective from Paris, arrives in London to investigate the drug trafficking. Although the police take down the gang, Mr. King escapes and manages to keep his true identity a secret.
Producer Stoll went on to release another xenophobic Yellow Peril film called Mr. Wu in 1919 (which was remade in 1927 with Lon Chaney in the lead), a 15-film Fu Manchu series called The Mystery of Dr. Fu Manchu in 1923, and an eight-film series in 1924 called The Further Mysteries of Dr. Fu Manchu, both series starring Harry Agar Lyons as Fu.[4]