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Bitter Tea of General Yen, The

Bitter Tea of General Yen, The

Frank Capra's only all-out attempt to make what he called "an art film" was one of his few box-office flops, despite earning a place in history as the film that opened the Radio City Music Hall in New York. Dealing with the then-touchy subject of miscegenation, it stars Barbara Stanwyck (in the last of her four Columbia films with Capra) as a woman arriving in China to marry her missionary fiance. But it's a time of great upheaval, and she's kidnapped by a ruthless warlord (Nils Asther) who's very attracted to her. Stunningly photographed by Joseph Walker, this is a haunting, dream-like movie that is indeed unlike almost everything else Capra ever made. The cast also includes Toshia Mori, Gavin Gordon, Lucien Littlefield, and Walter Connolly, brilliantly cast against type as a renegade American gun-runner.

Year
1932
Rating
Not Rated
Genre
Drama

Director

Frank Capra

Executive Producer

Writer

From the story by Grace Zaring Stone; Screenplay by Edward E. Paramore Jr.

Producer

Cast

Barbara Stanwyck
Megan Davis

Nils Asther
Gen. Yen

Toshia Mori
Mah-Li

Walter Connolly
Jones

Gavin Gordon
Dr. Robert 'Bob' Strike

Lucien Littlefield
Mr. Jacobson

Video Clips

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