Broken BlossomsBased on "The Chink and the Child", a story by
Thomas Burke, Broken Blossoms is one of D.W. Griffith's most poetic films.
Richard Barthelmess plays a young Chinese aristocrat who hopes to spread the gospel of his Eastern religion to the grimy corners of London's Limehouse district. Rapidly disillusioned,
Barthelmess opens a curio shop and takes to smoking opium. One evening,
Lillian Gish, the waif-like daughter of drunken prizefighter
Donald Crisp, collapses on
Barthelmess' doorstep after enduring one more of her father's brutal beatings.
Barthelmess shelters the girl, providing her with the love and kindness that she has never known.
Crisp, offended that his daughter is living with a "heathen," forces the girl to return home with him. In a terrible drunken rage,
Crisp beats
Lillian to death.
Barthelmess arrives on the scene, kills
Crisp, then kneels beside
Lillian's body and takes his own life. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide