Soldier of Fortune

Tale of Today's Orient.

5.9
19551h 36m

An American woman arrives in Hong Kong to unravel the mystery of her missing photographer husband. After getting nowhere with the authorities, she is led by some underground characters to an American soldier of fortune working in the area against the Communists. He promises to help find her husband.

Production

Logo for 20th Century Fox

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Soldier of Fortune (1955) Trailer

Soldier of Fortune (1955) Trailer

Cast

Photo of Clark Gable

Clark Gable

Hank Lee

Photo of Susan Hayward

Susan Hayward

Mrs. Jane Hoyt

Photo of Michael Rennie

Michael Rennie

Inspector Merryweather, Hong Kong Marine Police

Photo of Gene Barry

Gene Barry

Louis Hoyt

Photo of Tom Tully

Tom Tully

Tweedie

Photo of Alexander D'Arcy

Alexander D'Arcy

Rene Dupont Chevalier

Photo of Anna Sten

Anna Sten

Madame Dupree

Photo of Leo Gordon

Leo Gordon

Big Matt

Photo of Jack Kruschen

Jack Kruschen

Austin Stoker

Photo of Richard Loo

Richard Loo

Gen. Po Lin

Photo of Soo Yong

Soo Yong

Dak Lai

Photo of Mel Welles

Mel Welles

Fernand Rocha

Photo of Robert Burton

Robert Burton

Father Xavier (uncredited)

Photo of James Hong

James Hong

Chinese Policeman (uncredited)

Photo of Harry Carter

Harry Carter

Hotel Lobby Extra (uncredited)

Photo of Grace Chang

Grace Chang

Prostitute (uncredited)

Photo of John Eldredge

John Eldredge

Man Slapped in Lobby (uncredited)

Photo of Victor Sen Yung

Victor Sen Yung

Goldie - Hotel Waiter (uncredited)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

6/10

Susan Hayward's husband has been detained while taking photographs in China and so she tries to illicit the help of Hong Kong based "entrepreneur" Clark Gable to try and rescue him. Despite some initial hostility, he falls for her and determines to try and help so he can win her from the captured Gene Barry. It's a pretty run of the mill romantic adventure, Hayward looks the part and there is certainly a glint in Gable's eye, Michael Rennie gets roped in too, and it flows well towards a rather predictable, but fun conclusion. It is pretty lightweight, this - but it shows off Hong Kong in the 1950s; takes a gentle ping at post war China and there is certainly a chemistry between the two out front. Forgettable, but still worth a watch.

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