Sinners In Paradise (1938)

Directed by James Whale—best known for Frankenstein and Bride of FrankensteinSinners in Paradise is a moody, character-driven adventure set on a remote Pacific island. Released by Universal Pictures, this 65-minute film blends survival drama with romantic tension and moral reckoning, all wrapped in a tropical setting that’s anything but idyllic.

Plot Summary
A passenger aircraft crashes in the mid-Pacific, and a group of survivors washes ashore on a remote island inhabited only by Jim Taylor (John Boles), a reclusive American fugitive, and his loyal Chinese servant Ping (Willie Fung). Taylor refuses to help the castaways, forcing them to fend for themselves. As tensions rise and personalities clash, Taylor gradually softens—especially toward Anne Wesson (Madge Evans), a nurse escaping a troubled marriage. When two crooked businessmen steal Taylor’s boat, Ping sacrifices himself to return it, allowing the others to escape and leaving Taylor to face his past.

Cast Highlights

  • Madge Evans as Anne Wesson
  • John Boles as Jim Taylor
  • Bruce Cabot as Robert “The Torpedo” Malone
  • Gene Lockhart as Senator Corey
  • Marion Martin, Charlotte Wynters, and Don ‘Red’ Barry in supporting roles
  • Willie Fung as Ping, in a role that mixes loyalty with tragic heroism

Behind-the-Scenes Insights

  • Actress Madge Evans later described the film as “dreadful” in a 1972 interview, noting that Whale was “much too good a director for this kind of nonsense”
  • The film had a modest budget of $273,670, and its copyright was not renewed, placing it in the public domain since 1966
  • Though not a horror film, Whale’s signature style—tight framing, psychological tension, and moral ambiguity—can still be felt
  • The film aired on early television in the late 1940s and 1950s, making it one of Whale’s more widely seen non-horror works

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