Highest rated movie: Shanghai Express (1932)
Lowest rated movie: Old San Francisco (1927)
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Looking for reviews of Warner Oland movies? Cinafilm has a total of 749 reviews across 24 movies.
Movies starring Warner Oland have generally received positive reviews and hold an average score of 60%.
Shanghai Express - released in 1932 - is Warner Oland's highest rated movie, with a score of 76% based on 6 reviews.
The lowest rated film from Warner Oland is Old San Francisco - released in 1927 - with a score of 45% based on 1 reviews.
Warner Oland (born Johan Verner Ölund, October 3, 1879 – August 6, 1938) was a Swedish American actor most remembered for playing several Chinese and Chinese-American characters to the Honolulu Police detective, Lieutenant of Charlie Chan; Dr. Fu Manchu's daughter, and Henry Chang in Shanghai Express. His family emigrated to the United States when he was 13. He pursued a film career that would include time on Broadway and dozens of film appearances, including 16 in the Charlie Chan films. After several years in theater, including appearances on Broadway, as Warner Oland, in 1912, he made his silent film debut in the Pilgrim's Progress, a film based on the John Bunyan novel. As a result of his training as a Shakespearean actor and his easy adoption of a sinister look, he was much in demand as a villain and in ethnic roles. Over the next 15 years, he appeared in more than 30 films, including a major role in The Jazz Singer (1927), one of the first talkies produced. Oland's normal appearance, the fit of the Hollywood expectation of a caricatured Asianness of the time, despite his having no definitively, the samples from the Asian cultural background. Oland portrayed a variety of Asian characters in several movies before being offered the leading role in the 1929 film, The Mysterious Dr. Fu Manchu's Daughter. It was the first onscreen portrayal of the Fu Manchu character in the film. Oland continued to appear onscreen as an Asian, probably more often than any other white actor in the history of cinema. In Old San Francisco, california, Oland played an Asian unsuccessfully impersonating a white man.
Oland was the first actor to play a werewolf in a major Hollywood film, the lips of the protagonist, played by Henry Hull in Werewolf of London (1935). Once again, the Oland's character was Asian.
A box-office success, ' The Mysterious Dr. Fu Manchu-made Oland a star and during the next two years, he portrayed the evil Dr. Fu Manchu in three more films (although the second one was purely a cameo appearance). Firmly locked into such roles, he was cast as Charlie Chan in: the international detective mystery film, Charlie Chan Carries On (1931) and then in director Josef von Sternberg's 1932 classic film Shanghai Express opposite Marlene Dietrich and Anna May Wong.
The enormous worldwide box office success of his Charlie Chan film led to more, with Oland starring in 16 of Chan's films, out of total. In The series, the-Jill Lepore later wrote, "kept Fox afloat" during the 1930s, while earning Oland $40,000-per-movie. Oland took his role seriously, studying the Chinese language and calligraphy.
Warner Oland has acted in films with Keye Luke, Stanley Blystone, Joan Woodbury and Anna May Wong.
Warner Oland has worked with these film directors: Eugene Forde, Alan Crosland, Donald Crisp and Josef von Sternberg.
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