The Bitter Tea of General Yen

1932

Action / Drama / Romance / War

5
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh 86% · 58 reviews
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Upright 64% · 500 ratings
IMDb Rating 6.9/10 10 4432 4.4K

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Plot summary

An American missionary is gradually seduced by a courtly warlord holding her in Shanghai.


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Movie Reviews

Reviewed by vincentlynch-moonoi 7 / 10

Surprisingly good pre-code film about interracial desire

This was clearly a rather high budget film for 1933, and interestingly was the first film shown at the new Radio City Music Hall. Directed by Frank Capra, it is a pre-code film, so there are some risqué scenes...well done. Its main distinction, however, is that it was one of the first movies to deal with interracial sexual attraction. Unfortunately, it was before its time...it was a box office failure, although in recent years it has been uniformly praised.

Barbara Stanwyck and Gavin Gordon (a missionary) are preparing to marry in China. But, the Chinese Civil War intervenes when they rush off, just before their wedding, to rescue some orphans. They become separated (great crowd scenes) and Stanwyck is rescued...or is it kidnapped...by warlord General Yen (Nils Asther, a European actor). Stanwyck awakens to find herself in Yen's sumptuous summer palace. She witnesses a mass execution ordered by Yen, writes letters to her fiancé that are never delivered, and because she is thought to be dead, he holds her against her will...well, sort of, because she has erotic dreams about General Yen (wonderfully creative fantasy sequence). Stanwyck meets Yen's financial adviser -- American Walter Connolly. It turns out, however, that the general's concubine is actually a spy, and she is sentenced to death. Stanwyck pleads for her life, and Yen agrees to spare her in order to keep Stanwyck. The general's army deserts him, but Stanwyck goes to him willingly as Yen prepares to drink poisoned tea (hence the title). And, what happens??? You'll have to watch the film to find out. It's simply too stunning to tell you.

There are 3 primary actors of interest here. The primary star is Barbara Stanwyck, who is superb. I've recently watched several of her early films, and I have been very impressed. Although I had heard the name, I was not familiar with Nils Asther, and after watching him here, where he successfully plays an Asian man, I hope to see more of his work. Walter Connolly -- Yen's Western adviser -- usually plays comedies, but this is a serious role for him, and he plays it very well.

Highly recommended, and you may even want it on your DVD shelf.

Reviewed by st-shot 8 / 10

Bitter Tea sweet film making by Capra

A year before his major breakthrough film It Happened One Night director Frank Capra made this romantic tragedy that is filled with provocative topic and outstanding set design sensually photographed by master cinematographer Joseph Walker.

Megan Davis (Barbara Stanwyck) arrives in China in the middle of a civil war to marry her missionary husband Dr. Robert Strike and then work alongside him. Before they even marry they are separated during an evacuation and Davis finds herself in the hands of warlord General Yen (Nils Asther) . Yen at first mocks Davis but soon finds himself falling heavily for her.

The Bitter Tea of General Yen is filled with characters making bad decisions. Davis and Strike are nearly killed due to their naive condescension and trusting Megan is betrayed twice by her maid with huge consequence. General Yen cold and cruel as he may be also succumbs in his case to incurable romanticism. Only Jones (Walter Connolly) the arms dealer is grounded in reality to the dire situation that faces them.

Director Capra ably provides scenes of both chaos ( refugee evacuations, night battles ) and tranquility in the idyllic setting of Yen's compound palace where the General sets about seducing Megan with delicate charm while firing squads outside in the courtyard dispatch his enemy. Capra also finds time to get some satiric shots in at Western superiority and hypocrisy but it is the sexual tension between the leads that is at the center of Yen.

Megan's ambiguity is excellently conveyed by Stanwyck's actions and immature responses to the different world she finds herself. She's totally out of her element and her western ways are constantly checkmated by Yen. As Yen, Nils Asther cuts a dashing figure as the highly cultured warlord. He's cruel by occupation but sensitive in nature, especially around women as Jones informs us and it ultimately brings about his ruin. His scenes with Stanwyck resonate with cultural clash and erotic implication and Capra ups the ante even further with a Freudian dream that Megan has.

Capra went on to make more famous and bigger films but he would never approach the eroticism or cynicism that this provocative thirties work offered causing me to wonder if success took some of the edge out of him..

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