Research - Opium Dens in popular culture
Film
- In Dodgeball, the mockumentary on how to play dodgeball claims that the game was invented in Chinese Opium Dens.
- Williams from Enter the Dragon met his end in one of these at the hands of Mr. Han.
- The Doctor Mabuse films feature a few ones. The titular Doctor finds his victims there, among corrupt millionaires and aristocrats.
- Once Upon a Time in America.
- In Brick, the area behind Carrow's Restaurant where Dode and the other stoners hang out is intended to reference this, as evidenced by the Asian-sounding musical cues.
- Both the graphic novel and film versions of Alan Moore's From Hell.
- Thoroughly Modern Millie has one of these that doubles as a prostitution/white slaving ring.
- Harvey Keitel's eponymous (and nameless) Bad Lieutenant visits a latter-day heroin den that otherwise fits the trope.
- In Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, Anthony passes by one while traveling through London.
- The Oscar-winning French film Indochine: The protagonist is an addict who introduces her younger lover to them (even though he's supposed to be police its traffic). He drags her out of a den at one point.
- Eddie visits one toward the end of 1935's The Cocaine Fiends.
- In Tombstone, Curly Bill comes out of an opium den just before he shoot Marshall White. Later a character picks up an opium pipe in a den that instead turns out to be Wyatt Earp's peacemaker, with Wyatt Earp still attached to it.
- In Inception, the dream-den beneath Yusuf's shop seems intended to evoke this.
- D.W. Griffith's tragedy Broken Blossoms takes place in Limehouse. The Chinese hero, a Buddhist missionary, falls on hard times and takes to the pipe.
LITERATURE
Anime and Manga
- Lau runs one of these in Black Butler.
- Granny Hao, Minnie May's old associate and underworld contact runs one of these off screen in Gunsmith Cats. She also provides all sorts of highly effective Chinese herb remedies as a side business, that rival synthetic drugs in their effectiveness.
Comic Books
- In the beginning of The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen comic, Alan Quatermain is in an opium den.
- Towards the end he has to enter another one, and nearly relapses.
- The Blue Lotus in the Tintin book of the same name. This being a more upmarket, well-painted example, frequented by businessmen and diplomats.
- The least romanticized version possible appears in Y The Last Man as virtually the entire continent of Australia.
- Peter David's Fallen Angel has an arc where Lee smokes opium in a hookah in Asia Minor's place.
Literature
- One shows up in the Sherlock Holmes story "The Man with the Twisted Lip". Watson got sent to retrieve another man and finds Holmes there; Holmes must reassure Watson that he's only there undercover as part of an investigation and has not "added opium to the list of my vices".
- Charles Dickens' The Mystery of Edwin Drood begins in one.
- Appears in at least one of the Fu Manchu stories as a front for the Devil Doctor's activities.
- Robert E. Howard 's Rhomerian "weird menace" novel Skull Face starts with protagonist Steven Costigan (a u.s. veteran of WWI) escaping the nightmares of the Argonne trench warfare in an Opium Den located, of all places, in the Londinese limehouse.
- Jack Black's (not that Jack Black) "You Can't Win" is a brilliant memoir about his experiences as a train-hopping thief. He becomes addicted to opium and writes extensively about his experiences in these places.
- In Around the World in Eighty Days by Jules Verne, the detective Fix gets Passepartout drunk and stoned in an opium den in Hong Kong in order to separate him from Phileas Fogg.
- Rudyard Kipling's "The Gate of the Hundred Sorrows".
- The title character in The Picture of Dorian Gray frequents opium dens.
- This amateur story (ads on page may be NSFW) features a futuristic tobacco den.
- Opium dens are depicted in all their squalor in Mercedes Lackey's The Fire Rose, which is set in California during the age of trains.
- Agatha Christie's "The Lost Mine" on "Poirot's early cases" features one.
- The Ruby in the Smoke by Philip Pullman.
- Darius goes to one regularly in The Phantom Of Manhattan.
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