Burrows however rushes at Cheng with a hatchet, no doubt intending to kill him too. In retaliation, Cheng empties the rounds of his Shotgun on Burrows killing him instantly. Cheng carries the lifeless Lucy to his home where he performs a rite to Buddha. At the end, Cheng stabs himself in the stomach taking his own life Reception by Critics The film was very well received by critics when it was released. Earlier, the Director D.W Griffith had been attacked by Critics for the earlier film Birth of a Nation that depicted the Ku Klax Klan as heroes and Negroes as brutal savages (Lesage, 1987).
However, critics were more pleased by Broken Blossoms which attacks racial intolerance and the patriarchal characteristic of the society in the early 19th century (Marchetti, 1993). Set in a period when racial intolerance against oriental people was at its peak, Critics saw “White Blossoms’ as an attempt to urge the American people to change their prejudiced view of people from Asia. According to Lewis, Griffith and Crespo-Kebler (2008), Asians were characterised as unkempt, lazy and opium addicted brutes.
The critics who originally reviewed Broken Blossom concluded that it was an attempt to reduce these stereotypes and thus result in a more tolerant society. Other critics praised D.W Griffith’s bravery in expressing support for Asians in a period where Anti-Asian sentiments were very high. “Yellow peril” was a popular term in this historic period and expression of the xenophobic feeling of the period (Dong, 2008). Griffith’s suggestion of interracial relationships also went against the white supremacist ideas that were dominant in the American society.
A few years later, the immigration Act 1924 burnt marriages between white men and Asian women (Dong, 2008). Earlier critics interpreted the film as an attack on a racist society which was very intolerant against people of other races. According to Lynn (1990), Broken Blossoms was open minded and could be termed as liberal in reference to its target audience and time of release. Blossoms were a gentle nudge to the xenophobic American society towards becoming a more racial tolerant community. Some of the scenes in this popular movie go against the established racial relations of the day.
According to Marchetti (1993), interracial marriages in 1919 were a crime, and thus the scenes were Cheng almost kisses Lucy serve to show that a relationship between a Chinese man and Caucasian woman is impossible. According to critics the attitudes to race in Broken Blossoms are more positive and well-meaning than Griffith’s earlier film Birth of a Nation (Dong, 2008). In some scenes, the scenes almost lead to sex between the Yellow man and Lucy. By virtue of holding the notion a white woman could sleep with a Chinese man, critics saw Griffith as more liberal and racially tolerant individual.
Broken Blossoms Depicted as Sexist According to Broken Blossoms is viewed by feminist critics as a sexist film that seeks to show that women are inferior to men. According to Lynn (1990), the film comprises of acts that can be considered sexual excesses or crimes, perversions, rape, sadisms, incest paedophilia which have no place in modern film making. Interracial sexual relations are the least innocent representation of women in Broken Blossoms. One critic credits Broken Blossoms sexist attitudes to its director’s sexual pervasion.
According to (), Griffith liked to bring out underage girls as objects of erotic desire in his films. According to Marchetti (1993) in her book; The Rape Fantasy in The Cheat and Broken Blossoms accuse Broken Blossoms of disrespect to women and treatment of women as objects of sexual desire. She characterizes Broken Blossoms as a pornographic text. She describes how scenes in Broken Blossoms are designed to arouse the sexual interest of the audience. In her views erotic involvement of the male view takes precedent over the anti-racist message of the film.
Broken Blossoms superficially characterizes the West as brutal, violent and racist and society that treats outsiders and women indignantly (Lesage, 1987).
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