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Shanghai
Express (1932)
In director Josef von Sternberg's melodramatic romantic
adventure film filmed with exquisite chiaroscuro, Oscar-winning cinematography
- it was Marlene Dietrich's fourth of seven films with the director:
- in the opening sequence, a 'Shanghai Express' train
was being boarded and loaded with baggage at the bustling Peking
Railroad Station; it was traveling from Peiping (Peking) to Shanghai
in the year of 1931, as an internal civil war raged through embattled
China
- there were many passengers of various and different
backgrounds boarding into the first-class compartments -
comprising the main principals of the film (including two 'fallen women')
- one of the lady passengers
on the train at the Peking station was notorious and bewitching
adventuress Shanghai Lily (Marlene Dietrich) - a lady of questionable
reputation; she was dressed in black with a veil, and was known as a "notorious
coaster...a woman who lives by her wits along the China coast" for
illicit purposes; further close-ups (with keylighting on her face or backlighting) showed her
stunning persona and mystique, filmed with expressionistic shadows
- also in the film's opening, framed by two windows,
and side-by-side on the train, the flirtatious and seemingly-dangerous
'Shanghai Lily' (aka Magdalen) was reunited with her long-lost
former lover - uniformed British Medical Corps surgeon Captain
Donald 'Doc' Harvey (Clive Brook) after five years and four weeks
apart; he was on a mission to perform brain surgery on the Governor-General of
Shanghai, to remedy a blood clot
- Captain Harvey
complimented Shanghai Lily's beauty: "You've changed a lot...You're
more beautiful than ever"; she then went on to say that she had changed her name: "Well,
Doc, I've changed my name" - when he asked if her name change
was due to marriage (not aware of her reputation as a glamorous prostitute
and tempting seductress), she continued with her most memorable line: "It
took more than one man to change my name to Shanghai Lily" -
he was astonished: "So you're Shanghai Lily!" - she added
a sub-title: "the notorious white flower of China"
Shanghai Lily: "It took more than one
man to change my name to Shanghai Lily"
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- one of the train's passengers, Christian missionary
Reverend Carmichael (Lawrence Grant) complained to fellow passenger
Dr. Donald Harvey about the two loose women on-board, and claimed
that Shanghai Lily's seduction made one man go insane and that
she had an awful reputation: "For
the last fortnight, I've been attending a man who went out of his
mind after spending every penny on her. And that's not all I know.
She's wrecked a dozen men up and down the China coast." Doc
Harvey responded by criticizing the Reverend's prejudices and condemnations
- another passenger traveling
on the train, mysterious Eurasian merchant Henry Chang (Warner
Oland) - in actuality a warlord rebel leader - offhandedly warned
the Reverend about how anything could happen in the embattled
country: "You're in China now, sir, where time and life have no value," as
the train paused to remove a cow feeding her calf in the middle
of the tracks
- during the journey, Chang became angered over Chinese
Army government soldiers who boarded the train to examine passports,
and arrested one of his top high-ranking
aides, a spy named Li Fung (Neshida Minoru). Chang secretly sent
a coded message via a telegraph office, to alert his troops to
halt and hijack the train at Te-Shan in the middle of the night
- Chang revealed his heritage to American gambler
Sam Salt (Eugene Pallette) - he had a mixed parentage with a white
father and Chinese mother ("My mother was Chinese. My father was
white....I'm not proud of my white blood"); Salt replied: "What
future is there being a Chinaman? You're born, eat your way through
a handful of rice, and you die. What a country! Let's have a drink"
- during a rendezvous in the observation deck, 'Doc'
and Lily talked about their past relationship when she had acted
to make him jealous - and lost him: "You left me without a
word purely because I indulged in a woman's trick to make you -
jealous. I wanted to be certain that you loved me. Instead, I lost
you. I suffered quite a bit and I probably deserved it." Doc
had left her out of jealousy and was still repelled by her lifestyle,
but retained a lingering love for her. He revealed his continuing
affection when she noticed his watch where he kept a picture of
her inside
- he was concerned about her
loose reputation since they had broken up years earlier: "I
was a fool to let you go out of my life. (He kissed her) I wish
you could tell me there'd been no other men" - she responded: "I
wish I could 'Doc', but five years in China is a long time";
he wished they could have their five lost years back, and imagined
what would have happened if they had not parted ways: "We'd
have gone back to England, married and been very happy. There are
a lot of things I wouldn't have done if I had those five years
to live all over again"
- Captain Harvey was still
very distrusting and ambivalent towards her, however, and she was
confused by his new-found attentiveness to her: (Lily: "Will
you never learn to believe without proof?...When I needed your
faith, you withheld it. And now when I don't need it and don't
deserve it, you give it to me")
- at midnight, Chang's revolutionary
rebel army ambushed and attacked the train when it stopped to take
on water. The soldiers killed the government troops, and then he
took hostages, including Captain Harvey as his prized ransom, to
be exchanged for his arrested "right
hand" top-ranking aide; American-bred Chinese prostitute Hui Fei
(Anna May Wong), a 'coaster' prostitute like Shanghai Lily, recognized
Chang as the revolutionary's Commander-in-Chief with
a $20,000 dollar reward offered for his capture ("alive or dead")
Threatening Rebel War Lord Chang
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Chang Propositioning Shanghai Lily
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Chang's Rape of Hui Fei
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- Chang also propositioned Shanghai Lily to join him
at his palace in the interior of China as his mistress, but she
refused, citing that she was "reformed." To defend her
when Chang forced himself on her, Captain Harvey broke into the
room, punched Chang in the face and knocked him down to the floor; that
evening, Chang also raped Hui Fei, and kept her imprisoned for
the night
- unbeknownst to the doctor and at the Reverend's
urging, Shanghai Lily prayed for the Captain's release (and surprised
the Reverend). The next morning, Division Superintendent Albright
(Claude King) of the British Legation arrived by train with Li Fung
for the prisoner swap. When Lily protested that she loved the Captain,
Chang threatened to blind him for his insolence, to force Lily to
accompany him back to the palace. To insure Harvey's unharmed and
safe release, Lily offered to sacrifice herself to the warlord, with
her "word
of honor" -
and decided of her own "free will" to accompany Chang (who
told her: "I could love a woman like you")
- the wronged Hui Fei, angry over being raped earlier
by the rebel leader, snuck into Chang's quarters and vengefully
stabbed him to death in the back as he was packing. Hui Fei then
informed Captain Harvey about the murder ("I've just killed Chang")
and told him to retrieve Lily. Harvey rescued Lily before Chang's
body was discovered, and they were able to return to the train before
its departure. Hui Fe fortuitously freed the Shanghai Express and
all the captives to continue their journey - with arrival four hours
late in Shanghai
- upon their arrival, Hui Fei was to receive the
$20,000 reward for Chang's demise, and Reverend Carmichael had commended
Lily for her sacrifice. He tried to convince Captain Harvey of
Lily's good and honorable intentions in offering herself to go
with the warlord, since she had prayed all night for his release.
However, he was initially doubtful and unconvinced
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Lily Buying the Captain a Replacement
Watch
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- in the conclusion, Captain Harvey and Shanghai
Lily were reconciled to each other when he spied Lily buying
him a new replacement watch in a train station shop; he finally
relented, asked her to forgive him for his lack of faith in her,
reaffirmed his faith in her, and asked for "another
chance for a new start" - a rekindling of their relationship
from the past:
'Doc': What good is a watch without you? (She attached
the watch to his left wrist)
Shanghai Lily: I wish I could replace everything else, too. Goodbye,
Donald.
'Doc': I'm not going to let you out of my life again, Magdalen,
when everything else has become so unimportant. I don't care if you
were going to leave with him or not. I don't care in the least. All
I want is another chance for a new start. I'll be different. You'll
never have any cause for regret. Please forgive me for my lack of faith.
Please do. I know I've no right to ask you even to listen to me.
Shanghai Lily: It's very easy to listen to you, Donald. You know
I love you. I always have and I always will.
'Doc': I don't deserve that. I know I behaved badly.
Shanghai Lily: Perhaps it was my fault. I should have told you
everything.
'Doc': There's only one thing I want you to tell me, Magdalen.
Shanghai Lily: What's that?
'Doc': How in the name of Confucius can I kiss you with all these
people around?"
Shanghai Lily: But, Donald, there's no one here but you and I.
Besides, many lovers come to railroad stations to kiss without attracting
attention
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Curtain Closing Embrace and Kiss
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- the film ended on their curtain-closing embrace
and kiss on the crowded Shanghai station platform - he looked around,
then assisted her in putting her arms around him
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Hui Fei (Anna May Wong)
Shanghai Lily (Marlene Dietrich)
Side by Side in Train Windows: Shanghai Lily with ex-lover Capt. Doc
Harvey (Clive Brook)
Capt. Harvey At First Put Off by Shanghai Lily's Reputation
Henry Chang (Warner Oland)
Chang's Telegraph Message to His Rebel Troops
Picture of Lily Noticed in Captain's Watch
Falling In Love Again While Talking About Their Past Relationship
Lily Giving Her "Word of Honor" to Sacrifice Herself to Chang, to Save
the Captain
Chang Stabbed in the Back by Vengeful Hui Fei
Rev. Carmichael Commending Lily to the Captain for Her Self-Sacrifice
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