Society woman Joan Fry falls in love with Chuck Riley, the white leader of a powerful gang in Chinatown, and he quickly drags her down into the depths with him. But seeing her so much in lov... Read allSociety woman Joan Fry falls in love with Chuck Riley, the white leader of a powerful gang in Chinatown, and he quickly drags her down into the depths with him. But seeing her so much in love with him causes him to realize that he is in love with her, and he determines to lift he... Read allSociety woman Joan Fry falls in love with Chuck Riley, the white leader of a powerful gang in Chinatown, and he quickly drags her down into the depths with him. But seeing her so much in love with him causes him to realize that he is in love with her, and he determines to lift her up again. "Boston" Charley, the rival gang-leader, has other plans.
- The Gambler
- (uncredited)
- Woman on Stairway
- (uncredited)
- One of Riley's Henchmen
- (uncredited)
- Woo Chung
- (uncredited)
- Cop
- (uncredited)
- Miss Van Dyke
- (uncredited)
- Bartender
- (uncredited)
- Bartender
- (uncredited)
- Doctor
- (uncredited)
- Bartender
- (uncredited)
- The Maid
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
The film begins on an incredulous note: the leader in Chinatown (USA) is a white man: Beery. Because of arranged hits - by both sides - Beery decides to even the score, this, while Oland is deciding to decide the score in his favor for good. Meanwhile, a very bored uptown girl, Vidor, comes to Chinatown to see how the other poor/wild/Chinese half lives. She comes as a murder is committed before her eyes, meets Beery, becomes more than intrigued, eventually falls in love with him, moves in with him (yes, this is a Pre-Code's Pre-Code and doesn't leave anything out!), sees she can't stay because "it'll never work out", gets let go (so to speak), becomes amazed that she can't go because she truly loves Beery, becomes disenchanted with the life Beery leads, gets thrown out, becomes almost a bum(messe?), tries to drink herself silly, becomes sick, nearly dies - but I won't let you know the ending. Suffice it to say the ending nearly seems tacked on. It's not a disappointment as much as it is...well, no, I won't say. You watch.
Beery is amazing in this film. Vidor's a pleasure to watch, though some of the dubbing is wobbly where she's dubbed. Oland is always fine. The rest of the cast, especially Jack McHugh who plays The Shadow, is really great. But why shouldn't it be? It includes Jack Oakie as a stuttering news-news-news-newspaper m-m-man, Tetsu Komai as Beery's watch-out guy, Richard Cramer, Willie Fung, Broderick O'Farrell, Bess Flowers (with a line or two!), and others who play flawlessly. One other thing shows up here: a lot of very violent scenes. One in particular is heartbreaking. None of the violence is grade "D" exploitation, either; it's very real and it's very much a part of the plot and it's strikingly well done.
A real find, not perfect, but a joy to watch anyway. If you're a Wellman fan, you'll see some precursors to things he did two years later in "The Public Enemy" and some things he'd already done in "Wings" a year or two previously. He has a very masculine directing style, and he's very sure of his direction and editing. It shows. Recommended!
It doesn't work very well, a common issue of talkie movies in 1929, when the novel mysteries of where to put the microphones and how to get people to stand still around them was a major drag, as well as how to dampen the sounds of the whirring cameras. These are not the issues of this movie. This movie was shot as a silent movie, and then everyone came back later to record their lines -- except for Mrs. Vidor, who refused. Her movie career ended, and Nella Walker spoke her lines. No, this movie doesn't work because of its stop-and-start pacing, caused by some scenes being dialogue scenes that move at one rate, and others being silent scenes, which move at another. Imagine it as a silent movie and it works very well. But as it is, not at all.
Did you know
- TriviaCompleted as a silent film, but was dubbed with sound for release. Florence Vidor did not return to record her character's dialog, so Nella Walker supplied her voice instead.
- Quotes
Chuck Riley: Go on, clear out.
Joan Fry: You can't order me around like one of your Chinamen!
Details
- Runtime1 hour 23 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.20 : 1