Directed by Sam Newfield and produced by Sigmund Neufeld, State Department: File 649 is a rare example of a Cinecolor Cold War spy drama from the late 1940s. Released by Film Classics, Inc., the film was also known in the UK as Assignment in China, and it offers a pulpy, patriotic look at American Foreign Service agents operating in politically unstable Asia.
Plot Summary
Kenneth Seeley (William Lundigan), a member of the U.S. State Department’s Foreign Service Bureau, and Marge Weldon (Virginia Bruce), a morale worker, are assigned to a remote village in Mongolia, which is under threat from a rogue warlord named Marshal Yun Usu (Richard Loo). When the warlord seizes control of the village, the Americans must devise a daring escape while protecting local citizens and uncovering a plot involving stolen government bonds and espionage.
Cast Highlights
- William Lundigan as Kenneth R. Seeley
- Virginia Bruce as Margaret “Marge” Weldon
- Jonathan Hale as Director General of Foreign Service
- Richard Loo as Marshal Yun Usu
- Philip Ahn as Col. Aram
- Victor Sen Yung, Frank Ferguson, and Lora Lee Michel in supporting roles
Behind-the-Scenes Trivia
- Filming began on September 15, 1948, at Nassour Studios in Hollywood
- The film had a budget of $750,000, relatively high for a Monogram-style production
- It was one of the few American films of the era to portray Foreign Service life seriously, earning praise from diplomats decades later
- Actor William Lundigan had served as a Marine Corps combat cameraman during WWII, including at Peleliu and Okinawa
- The film was screened in 2014 by the American Foreign Services Association, which called it a “slightly-campy classic” that still captured the essence of diplomatic service
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