Lucy Burrows
Lillian Gish
Lucy Burrows

“A tale of forbidden love.”
The love story of an abused English girl and a Chinese Buddhist in a time when London was a brutal and harsh place to live.
Broken Blossoms
Lucy Burrows
Lillian Gish
Lucy Burrows
Cheng Huan
Richard Barthelmess
Cheng Huan
Battling Burrows
Donald Crisp
Battling Burrows
Burrows' Manager
Arthur Howard
Burrows' Manager
Evil Eye
Edward Peil Sr.
Evil Eye
The Spying One
George Beranger
The Spying One
A Prizefighter
Norman Selby
A Prizefighter
Secondary Role (uncredited)
Ernest Butterworth
Secondary Role (uncredited)
Secondary Role (uncredited)
Frederic Hamen
Secondary Role (uncredited)
London Policeman (uncredited)
Wilbur Higby
London Policeman (uncredited)
Buddhist Monk (uncredited)
Man-Ching Kwan
Buddhist Monk (uncredited)
Ringside Employee (uncredited)
Bobbie Mack
Ringside Employee (uncredited)
Richard Barthelmess and an almost porcelain-looking Lilian Gish are both great in this intimate, beautifully photographed, tale of a true love. Gish is a young girl from London's East end who is persistently brutalised by her violent pugilist father. Barthelmess is a man newly arrived from China bent on encouraging the British to seek the peaceful ways of the Buddha. From his small emporium, he espies this young girl and after one particularly horrific attack by her father, takes her in and nourishes her back to health. Sadly, bigotry and intolerance are still pretty rife and when her father discovers where she has taken refuge, tragedy ensues... It's a simple story, very well executed by D.W. Griffith with a delightful style to it. An early outing for Donald Crisp as her bruiser father is a little hammy at times, he flexes his muscles and his grimace a little too theatrically - but the story is tightly told with empathy for the girl, sympathy for the boy and a gently bubbling hatred for the father for whom just desserts can only be a matter of time.
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