

B-list vaudevillians accidentally become wartime heroes—what could POSSIBLY go wrong?
Three American vaudeville entertainers become involved with spies in Hong Kong, just before Pearl Harbor.
Acting
Leo Carrillo's Pancho steals every scene he's barely in
Production
California 'Hong Kong' sets are gloriously unconvincing

Director
William Nigh
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Shot in six days on recycled sets from 1940's 'The Letter'—you can practically smell the budget.
Released March 1942, literally WHILE Pearl Harbor fallout dominated headlines—audiences watched fictional Hong Kong fall as real Pacific theater horror unfolded.
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