George Town: 'Pride of Penang' (1941) Poster

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6/10
before war
SnoopyStyle20 February 2021
On the western coast of Malaya lies the island of Penang. It's a British colonial outpost and George Town is its largest settlement.

James A. FitzPatrick goes to the Far East to do another episode of his travel show. This is obviously filmed before the war which would soon arrive in the area. It's in color. It's exotic. It's fascinating. I can do without James keep repeating the word Chinese. Of course, he brings along the Chinese girls back to their hotel for a shoot. I hate that he wastes half the episode on that. It's one of his more lazier standard moves.
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5/10
So That's Where Penang Is
boblipton20 February 2021
James A. Fitzpatrick sends the Technicolor cameras under the supervision of Robert Carney to Prince of Wales Island off the coast of Thailand, to shoot pictures of its capital and talk about the oddities of its history, like the middle of the 19th century, when American ships brought ice to the place.

The commentary seems rather restrained given Fitzpatrick's usual sesquipedalian vocabulary. Perhaps that's because this is the last Traveltalks shot outside the Americas for five years. World War Two got in the way.
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7/10
I think that there was some sort of horror flick called THE BLOB . . .
tadpole-596-91825626 February 2021
Warning: Spoilers
. . . about an organic substance that slowly oozed over everyone, consuming, digesting and absorbing everything around it in an ever-widening circle. GEORGE TOWN is this sort of a fright fest. Though set in Malaysia, every other word coming out of the crazed narrator's mouth seems to be "China." Whether it's Chinese rice, Chinese architecture, Chinese merchants, Chinese funerals, Chinese cooking, Chinese boats, Chinese temples, Chinese spices, Chinese snakes or Chinese wenches, all viewers hear is "China--China--China." It puts one in mind of a wild bull running rampant in--you guessed it!--a China shop.
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TravelTalks
Michael_Elliott5 February 2010
Georgetown, Pride of Penang (1941)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

Another fun entry in James A. FitzPatrick's TravelTalks series. This time out we travel to the "Prince of Wales Island" where we learn that 160,000 Chinese are currently living. We learn about their various old customs, which includes painting the front of their ships white to make "eyes" for them to see during bad weather. We also learn about the rice, coffee and spices that are major exports and we get to see a sacred funeral as it holds up traffic going through the streets. Finally, we get to see the sacred Snake Temple where various deadly snakes live out their lives with people stopping by to worship and give them food. Fans of the series will find this entry to be right up their with the rest. This one here offers the fine narration and great Technicolor and the stories told are fairly interesting. I think the highlight of the film has to be the Snake Temple but the various ways of the streets were also interesting. We also get to hear how firecrackers are used to scare off evil spirits.
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