Son of the Gods is a 1930 American pre-Code romantic drama film with Technicolor sequences, produced and released by First National Pictures, a subsidiary of Warner Bros. It was adapted from the novel of the same name by Rex Beach. Richard Barthelmess and Constance Bennett star as a couple in love who have a falling-out when she discovers that, though he looks Caucasian, he is actually Chinese.
Son of the Gods | |
---|---|
Directed by | Frank Lloyd |
Written by | Bradley King |
Based on | the novel Son of the Gods by Rex Beach |
Produced by | Frank Lloyd |
Starring | Richard Barthelmess Constance Bennett |
Cinematography | Ernest Haller (Technicolor) |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release date |
|
Running time | 93 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $436,000[2] |
Box office | $1,432,000[2] |
Plot
editSam Lee is the only son of extremely wealthy Chinese merchant Lee Ying. Sam can pass as white. Lee Ying sends him to a prestigious university, where he studies hard. He is tolerated in white social circles, even though it is known there that he is Chinese, because of his money. One day, two fellow students talk him into a triple date, but the white girls are outraged when they find out that they are out with a "dirty yellow Chinaman". They pressure the two white men to make up a transparently fake excuse to leave. Insulted, Sam drops out of school.
He tells Lee Ying that he is going to travel on his own, without his father's financial support. He takes a lowly job aboard a ship and ends up working for a novelist named Bathurst because of his knowledge of Chinese. In the south of France, Sam meets Allana Wagner, the spoiled daughter of an indulgent father.
Allana falls madly in love with Sam. Though Sam loves her too, he is afraid to pursue a relationship until she tells him that she was once engaged to a man from India. Everything goes well for a while. One day, however, Allana's father tells her he has found out that Sam is Chinese. She flies into a rage and repeatedly lashes Sam in public with her riding crop, revealing to all within earshot why. Later, she deeply regrets what she did and telephones to apologize, but Sam has returned home to New York City, having received word that his father is very ill.
Sam rushes home, only to find that his father has died, attended on his deathbed by Eileen, a childhood white friend of Sam's. (Lee Ying never forgot Eileen's uncle's kindness to him, and had made Eileen his very well-paid secretary.) Embittered, Sam renounces the white world and its Christian values and embraces his Chinese heritage. He runs his father's business empire with an iron fist, denying his white customers credit.
Meanwhile, Allana embarks on a wild round of non-stop partying to try to forget Sam, but only succeeds in ruining her health. One day, she collapses and is near death. In her delirium, she calls for Sam repeatedly. Her racist father reluctantly asks Sam to come see her. Sam pays a visit, and Allana recovers.
Finally Eileen sends for her uncle Dugan. He tells Sam that, while a policeman in San Francisco, he found an abandoned child. Assuming that he was Chinese, Dugan gave the boy to Lee Ying and his wife, who had been praying for a child. After a few years, it became apparent that the boy was actually white. Since Sam was never formally adopted, Dugan recommends to Lee Ying that he relocate to New York to avoid risking losing Sam.
Unable to quench her love for Sam, Allana tells him that she wants to marry him before he has a chance to tell her that he is white. The lovers are happily reunited.
Cast
edit- Richard Barthelmess as Sam Lee
- Constance Bennett as Allana Wagner
- Anders Randolf as Wagner, Allana's father
- E. Alyn Warren as Lee Ying
- Claude King as Bathurst
- Frank Albertson as Kicker
- King Hou Chang as Moy
- Mildred Van Dorn as Eileen
- Barbara Leonard as Mabel
Reception
editBox Office
editAccording to Warner Bros records the film earned $1,069,000 domestically and $363,000 foreign.[2]
Critical
editCritic Mordaunt Hall gave the film a negative review in The New York Times, writing that "After a none too hopeful beginning, Richard Barthelmess's latest talking film, 'Son of the Gods,' plods its weary way through banal episodes" and that "Mr. Barthelmess is not the genius who can turn to good account the character allotted to him in this uninspired narrative".[3]
Preservation
editThe film only survives in black and white. One reel was originally in Technicolor, but no color prints seem to have survived.[4] This reel tells the story of how Sam was adopted as a child by the Chinese man he thought was his father. Current prints present this originally color sequence in sepia-tone.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Film of Ex-Kaiser is Dull". The New York Times. January 27, 1930.
- ^ a b c Warner Bros financial information in The William Schaefer Ledger. See Appendix 1, Historical Journal of Film, Radio and Television, (1995) 15:sup1, 1-31 p 10 DOI: 10.1080/01439689508604551
- ^ Mordaunt Hall (January 31, 1930). "The Screen". The New York Times.
- ^ The United Artists Collection