In San Francisco, a villainous land owner with underworld connections seeks to steal the property of an old Spanish family.In San Francisco, a villainous land owner with underworld connections seeks to steal the property of an old Spanish family.In San Francisco, a villainous land owner with underworld connections seeks to steal the property of an old Spanish family.
Anders Randolf
- Michael Brandon
- (as Anders Randolph)
Charles Emmett Mack
- Terrence O'Shaughnessy
- (as Chas. E. Mack)
Angelo Rossitto
- Chang Loo - the Dwarf
- (as Angelo Rossita)
Louise Carver
- Big-nosed Woman on the Mile of Hell
- (uncredited)
Rose Dione
- Madame in Den of Iniquity
- (uncredited)
Willie Fung
- Chang Sue Lee's Laughing Servant
- (uncredited)
Sôjin Kamiyama
- Lu Fong
- (uncredited)
Andy MacLennan
- Man at Lu Fongs Place
- (uncredited)
Scotty Mattraw
- Coach Driver
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured review
The climax of the 1906 San Francisco earthquake might be model work made for the film, but it also looks like it might be stock footage (perhaps from Lon Chaney's movie THE SHOCK or something else). In any case, this film and THE SHOCK adopt the "cosmic retribution" angle that the dust-up was really a Gomorrah-like act of divine intervention against the Barbary excesses of Chinatown and such. Anna May Wong is thanklessly wasted as the sinfully exquisite assistant of future Charlie Chan Warner Oland, a ruthless land shark who doesn't let anyone know he's really Chinese. He keeps his jeering dwarf brother in a cage and terrorizes the heiress of an old Spanish family, whose righteous Christian iconography pierces his "mongol heart." He codifies the social and sexual threat of "passing" and miscegenation, which is depicted as repulsive to both races. But this is all articulated in religious terms. The anglos refer to his "heathen gods," while the Chinese get irate that he "betrays his ancestors." For a festival of Asian-American images in silent films, compare this with the more ambiguous sexual morality of Cecil B. DeMille's THE CHEAT with Sessue Hayakawa, the tragedy of Wong's role in THE TOLL OF THE SEA, the later films made by Hayakawa, or even Griffith's BROKEN BLOSSOMS.
- michael.e.barrett
- Apr 7, 2003
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaA restaurant called "The Poodle Dog" is the setting for some scenes in this film. There was an actual upscale eatery with that name in San Francisco that operated from several locations, opening in 1849 until it closed in 1985.
- Quotes
Terrence O'Shaughnessy: Please, Senorita - I am not bold - I'm Irish.
- Alternate versionsThe print in the Turner library is a UCLA preservation print containing music and sound effects.
- ConnectionsEdited into Nuits de bal (1938)
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $300,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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