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Forbidden City
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In cinema's first few decades it was common for Caucasians to play Asian roles, and here Norma Talmadge is San San, the daughter of a Chinese mandarin (in fact, no Asians hold any major roles in this film). San San is in love with John Worden (Thomas Meighan), the secretary of the U.S. consulate, and they secretly marry. But while Worden is away, her status-seeking father gives her to the emperor (L. Rogers Lytton). But when the emperor finds out she has a child, he has her killed. The little girl, Toy (played as an adult by Talmadge), grows up and escapes from China to be a Red Cross nurse in Manila. There she meets Lieutenant Philip Halbert (Reed Hamilton) and they fall in love. However, Halbert's boss is Worden and he forbids them to marry. After sending Halbert away on a mission, Worden falls ill and is nursed back to health by Toy. He discovers that Toy is his own daughter and, remembering his own tragic young romance, changes his mind and gives his blessing to the couple. ~ Janiss Garza, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
The Forbidden City opens with a famous quote from Kipling: "East is East and West is West. And never the twain shall meet." What follows is what you would expect from a Mary Murillo screenplay: loads of people speaking in "Charlie Chan"-like epigrams (via titles of course); the fatal outcome of miscegenation; and Occidental actors done up in Oriental makeup interacting with genuine Asian bit players; in other words, a slightly uneasy experience for a modern audience. But The Forbidden City is also a rare chance to watch in action one of the genuine mega-stars of the silent screen, Norma Talmadge, who suffers prettily and plays her choice dual role with commendable restraint. The same, alas, cannot be said of the screenplay. Much admired in her day, Mary Murillo was the Elinor Glyn of the 1910s and The Forbidden City comes with titles such as "San San die if love-man go away" or "Whilst San San watched from the shadow world -- the two she had loved found each other." Not even an actress as obviously accomplished as Norma Talmadge can emerge entirely unscathed from that kind of hokum. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
 

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