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This is a list of interracial romance films. ==Films== The films in this list satisfy the following requirements: * A professional critic has identified it as an interracial romance film. * The film has been released. * The film is feature length (e.g. not a segment from an anthology). * The film features a romantic relationship, not just partnering, between people of different races. * The film's inclusion or casting of interracial romance is not incidental. * The film is not about romance between species or fictional races. (e.g. ''Star Trek'', ''Twilight'', ''Shrek'') {|class="wikitable sortable" |- ! Title !! Director !! Summary !! Year !! Notes !! References |- | ''The Bronze Bride'' || Henry MacRae || A Canadian fur trapper takes a Native American woman as his bride, a union that meets with much disapproval when they return to civilization. || || || |- | ''The Forbidden City'' || Sidney Franklin || A Mandarin princess betrothed to the Chinese Emperor is sentenced to death when she secretly marries an American diplomat and becomes pregnant. || || || |- | ''The Heart of Wetona'' || Sidney Franklin || The mixed-race daughter of a Comanche chief falls in love with a young engineer. When the young man deserts her, she turns to a white Indian agent who marries her. || || || |- | ''Broken Blossoms'' || D. W. Griffith || A young Londoner abused by her alcoholic father, a Limehouse District prizefighter, is befriended by a sensitive Chinese immigrant with tragic consequences. || || || |- | ''Othello'' || Dimitri Buchowetzki || The treacherous Iago plots to ruin the life of Othello by provoking him to jealousy. Based on the play of the same name by William Shakespeare. || || || |- | ''The Toll of the Sea'' || Chester M. Franklin || While visiting China, an American man falls in love with a young Chinese woman, but he then has second thoughts about the relationship. || || || |- | ''Piccadilly'' || Ewald André Dupont || A young Chinese woman, working in the kitchen of a London nightclub, is given the chance to become the club's main act which soon leads to a plot of betrayal, forbidden love and murder. || || || |- | ''Bird of Paradise'' || King Vidor || A Polynesian girl falls in love when an American sailor visits to her island, however, she is promised to a prince on a nearby island. || |||| |- | ''The Bitter Tea of General Yen'' || Frank Capra || A Chinese warlord and an engaged Christian missionary fall in love during the Chinese Civil War. || |||| |- | ''Black Pearl'' || Michał Waszyński || A Polish sailor returns home from Tahiti with a native girl and a fortune in sacred pearls. He is seduced by a married woman, unaware she is part of a plot to steal his riches. || || || |- | ''Imitation of Life'' || John M. Stahl || African-American daughter of housekeeper and a white suitor. Remade in 1959 || || || 〔 |- | ''Princess Tam Tam'' || Edmond T. Gréville || A French writer traveling in Tunisia becomes infatuated with a local girl and invites her back to his country where she is introduced to Parisian high society. || || || |- | ''God's Step Children'' || Oscar Micheaux || || || || |- | ''Duel in the Sun'' || King Vidor || || || || |- | ''Pinky'' || Elia Kazan || A African-American nurse who was born light-skinned and passes for white in the North returns to her Southern hometown. She and a white Northern doctor are in love, but she eventually turns down his offer of marriage in order to stay and help her community. || || || 〔 |- | ''Broken Arrow'' || Delmer Daves || A dramatization of the story of a white man Tom Jeffords and his interactions with the Apache nation including falling in love with and marrying Apache girl named Sonseeahray. || || || |- | ''The Wild North'' || Andrew Marton || || || || |- | ''Othello'' || Orson Welles || Based on the play of the same name by William Shakespeare. || || Won the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival in 1952. || |- | ''Captain John Smith and Pocahontas'' || Lew Landers || || || || |- | ''His Majesty O'Keefe'' || Byron Haskin || || || || |- | ''The Purple Plain'' || Robert Parrish || || || || |- | ''White Feather'' || Robert D. Webb || || || || |- | ''House of Bamboo'' || Samuel Fuller || || || || |- | ''Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing'' || Henry King || || || || |- | ''Seven Cities of Gold'' || Robert D. Webb || || || || |- | ''The Indian Fighter'' || Andre De Toth || A trail scout leads a wagon train bound for Oregon through hostile Indian territory and unwittingly gets involved with the daughter of a Sioux chieftain. || || || |- | ''The Black Tent'' || Brian Desmond Hurst || || || || |- | ''Giant'' || George Stevens || || || || |- | ''The Halliday Brand'' || Joseph H. Lewis || || || || |- | ''War Drums'' || Reginald Le Borg || || || || |- | ''Island in the Sun'' || Robert Rossen || || || || |- | ''Run of the Arrow'' || Samuel Fuller || || || || |- | ''Band of Angels'' || Raoul Walsh || A young woman, raised as white by her father, a wealthy plantation owner, discovers after his death that she is half black. After she is sold in New Orleans, she and her owner fall in love. || || || |- | ''Sayonara'' || Joshua Logan || || || Won four Academy Awards || |- | ''Touch of Evil'' || Orson Welles || || || || 〔 |- | ''China Doll'' || Frank Borzage || During World War II, an American pilot gets drunk one night and unintentionally buys a young Chinese woman from her destitute father. || || || |- | ''Kings Go Forth'' || Delmer Daves || || || || 〔 |- | ''The World, the Flesh and the Devil'' || Ranald MacDougall || In a post-apocalyptic world, a black man and a white woman appear to be the only survivors. Then a white man shows up. || || || |- | ''Hiroshima, mon amour'' || Alain Resnais || || || || |- | ''I Spit on Your Graves'' || Michel Gast || || || || |- | ''The Crimson Kimono'' || Samuel Fuller || || || || |- | ''Another Sky'' || Gavin Lambert || || || || |- | ''Shadows'' || John Cassavetes || A light-skinned black woman falls in love with a white man, who is unaware of her race. || || || |- | ''The World of Suzie Wong'' || Richard Quine || A foreigner falls for a Chinese prostitute in Hong Kong || || || |- | ''My Baby is Black!'' || Claude Bernard-Aubert || || || || |- | ''Flame in the Streets'' || Roy Ward Baker || || || || |- | ''Bridge to the Sun'' || Etienne Périer || A biographical film about the marriage of Gwen Harold and Japanese diplomat Hidenari "Terry" Terasaki leading up to World War II. || || Nominated for one Golden Globe. || |- | ''West Side Story'' || Robert Wise, Jerome Robbins || || || || 〔〔 |- | ''A Majority of One'' || Mervyn LeRoy || A Jewish-American widow from Brooklyn falls in love with a millionaire businessman while touring Japan. || || Won Golden Globes for "Best Motion Picture" (Musical/Comedy) and "Best Film Promoting International Understanding". || |- | ''All Night Long'' || Basil Dearden || A modern-day version of William Shakespeare's Othello set in the jazz scene of Swinging London. || || || |- | ''Diamond Head'' || Guy Green || A family drama set on a Hawaiian plantation. || || || |- | ''A Taste of Honey'' || Tony Richardson || A plain young English girl becomes pregnant by a black sailor, befriends a homosexual, and gradually becomes a woman. || || Four BAFTA awards || |- | ''One Potato, Two Potato'' || Larry Peerce || A white divorcee marries an African-American. || || || |- | ''A Patch of Blue'' || Guy Green || A blind teenage girl is befriended by a black office worker who she eventually falls in love with. || || || |- | ''Othello'' || Stuart Burge || Based on the play of the same name by William Shakespeare. || || || |- | ''Guess Who's Coming to Dinner'' || Stanley Kramer || A young woman surprises her liberal parents by bringing her African-American fiancé to visit. || || Winner of two Oscar Awards || 〔〔 |- | ''The Story of a Three-Day Pass'' || Melvin Van Peebles || A black U.S. soldier spends the weekend in Paris with a French shop clerk. || || || |- | ''Joanna'' || Michael Sarne || An English art student enjoys a string of lovers in Swinging London eventually becoming the mistress of a black nightclub owner. || || || |- | ''100 Rifles'' || Tom Gries || An African American lawman reluctantly becomes involved in a Yaqui rebellion against the Mexican government. || || || |- | ''The Liberation of L.B. Jones'' || William Wyler || A wealthy African American funeral director is murdered by his wife's lover, a white police officer. || || || |- | ''The Landlord'' || Hal Ashby || A privileged WASP becomes landlord of an inner-city tenement building and begins a relationship with a black nightclub dancer. || || || 〔 |- | ''The Grasshopper'' || Jerry Paris || An African American ex-football player falls in love with a Las Vegas showgirl. When she is sexually assaulted by a wealthy patron, he viciously beats her attacker and the two are forced to go on the run. || || || |- | ''The Hawaiians'' || Tom Gries || In Hawaii around the end of the 19th century, the black sheep of a prosperous white family marries a mentally unstable Hawaiian. Later, his son falls in love with the daughter of one of his Chinese immigrant workers. || || || |- | ''Dreams of Glass'' || Robert Clouse || Two California teenagers, a Japanese-American girl and a fisherman's son, secretly keep their budding romance a secret from their parents. || || || |- | ''The Great White Hope'' || Martin Ritt || A fictionalized account of the turbulent relationship between African American boxer Jack Johnson and his first wife, New York socialite Etta Terry Duryea. || || || |- | ''Little Big Man'' || Arthur Penn || White boy is captured, raised by Cheyenne, falls in love with Cheyenne woman. || || || 〔 |- | ''The Omega Man'' || Boris Sagal || White army doctor Robert Neville struggles to create a cure for the plague that wiped out most of the human race and in the meantime falls in love with the African-American survivor Lisa. || || || |- | ''Honky'' || William A. Graham || Two high school students, a wealthy African-American girl and poor white teenager, begin a relationship. || || || |- | ''Georgia, Georgia'' || Stig Björkman || An African-American nightclub singer falls in love with a U.S. Army deserter while performing in Stockholm. || || || |- | ''Together for Days'' || Michael Schultz || An African-American radical activist and a white woman experience a variety of reactions when their family and friends discover their relationship. || || || |- | ''Heavy Traffic'' || Ralph Bakshi || A young New York cartoonist has surreal fantasies which include a romance with a female African-American bartender. || || || |- | ''Mandingo'' || Richard Fleischer || || || Golden Screen Award || |- | ''Aaron Loves Angela'' || Gordon Parks, Jr. || A teenage couple, an African-American and a Puerto Rican, live in the slums of New York City. || || || |- | ''The Human Factor'' || Otto Preminger || An MI6 official becomes the focus of an internal investigation when a mole is suspected of leaking information to the South African apartheid government. || || || |- | ''Soul Man'' || Steve Miner || After his family decides to take his money for college away from him, a rich kid pretends to be African-American to win a minority scholarship offered by Harvard University, only to discover that upon getting there that he has fallen for another student, who was supposed to be the actual recipient of the scholarship. || || || |- | ''The Squeeze'' || Roger Young || || || || |- | ''La Bamba'' || Luis Valdez || || || || 〔 |- | ''Hairspray'' || John Waters || Teenager Tracy Turnblad becomes the hero in trying to get a TV dance show integrated in 1962 Baltimore, while a romantic relationship between Penny Pingleton and Seaweed is sparked. || || || |- | ''Mama, There's A Man in Your Bed'' || Coline Serreau || A French comedy about a business owner who is framed during a food-poisoning scandal and turns to help from a cleaning woman. || || || |- | ''Pummarò'' || Michele Placido || || || || |- | ''Letters from Alou'' || Montxo Armendáriz || A Senegalese immigrant in Spain writes a series of letters of his adventures; he falls in love with a woman there, but is eventually deported. || || || 〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The 26th Chicago International Film Festival )〕 |- | ''Come See the Paradise'' || Alan Parker || A New York Irish-American labor union organizer falls in love with his employer's daughter. Set during the internment of Japanese-Americans during World War II. || || || |- | ''Flirting'' || John Duigan || The sequel to ''The Year My Voice Broke'', an Australian boy becomes hopelessly in love with an African exchange student. || || || 〔 |- | ''Jungle Fever'' || Spike Lee || A successful African-American architect has an affair with his Italian-American secretary. || || || 〔〔〔 |- | ''Mississippi Masala'' || Mira Nair || An African-American man and an Indian immigrant begin a relationship despite the disapproval of both their families. || || || 〔〔 |- | ''Indochine'' || Régis Wargnier || || || || |- | ''One False Move'' || Carl Franklin || An African-American woman, in the company of fugitives, returns to her hometown where her ex-lover is the local sheriff. || || || |- | ''The Lover'' || Jean-Jacques Annaud || In 1950s French Indochina, a French teenage girl has an affair with a wealthy, older Chinese merchant. || || Nominated for Best Foreign Film at Awards of the Japanese Academy in 1993. || |- | ''The Bodyguard'' || Mick Jackson || A white bodyguard and the African-American singer he is assigned to protect form a romantic relationship. || || || |- | ''Zebrahead'' || Anthony Drazan || Relationship between two inner city teenagers in Detroit. || || Won Grand Jury Award at the Sundance Film Festival in 2006. || 〔 |- | ''Made in America'' || Richard Benjamin || || || || |- | ' || Ang Lee || A Taiwanese-American guy and his gay white lover. || || || 〔 |- | ''The Ballad of Little Jo'' || Maggie Greenwald || || || || |- | ''The Joy Luck Club'' || Wayne Wang || Relationship between four young Chinese-American women born in America and their respective mothers born in feudal China. || || Winner of the Young Artist Awards in 2004. || 〔 |- | ''Double Happiness'' || Mina Shum || A Canadian-born Chinese girl falls in love with a white university student. || || Winner of Best Canadian Feature Film at Toronto International Film Festival in 1994. || |- | ''A Bronx Tale'' || Robert De Niro || || || || 〔 |- | ''Foreign Student'' || Eva Sereny || A young French college student studies in America and falls in love a black teacher. || || || 〔 |- | ''Corrina, Corrina'' || Jessie Nelson || || || || |- | ' || Maria Maggenti || Randy and Evie have an interracial teenage lesbian romance. || || || |- | ''Bleeding Hearts'' || Gregory Hines || || || || |- | ''The Jungle Book'' || Stephen Sommers || || || || |- | ''Talking About Sex'' || Aaron Speiser || || || || |- | ''Jefferson in Paris'' || James Ivory || || || || |- | ''Pocahontas'' || Mike Gabriel, Eric Goldberg || || || || |- | ''Madame Butterfly'' || Frédéric Mitterrand || || || || |- | ''Othello'' || Oliver Parker || || || || 〔 |- | ' || Cheryl Dunye || || || || 〔 |- | ''Fools Rush In'' || Andy Tennant || || || || 〔 |- | ''Fakin' da Funk'' || Tim Chey || A Chinese teenager whose adoptive parents are black falls in love with a black girl. || || || 〔〔 |- | ''Chinese Box'' || Wayne Wang || Romance between a Western reporter and a Chinese woman during the return of Hong Kong to China. || || Nominated for the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival in 1997. || |- | ''One Night Stand'' || Mike Figgis || A black Los Angeles commercial director has an affair with a white woman in New York while he is married to a Chinese-American woman and she is engaged to his gay friend's brother respectively. || || || |- | ''Tomorrow Never Dies'' || Roger Spottiswoode || James Bond partners with a Chinese spy to stop a media mogul from starting World War III. || || || 〔 |- | ''Jackie Brown'' || Quentin Tarantino || The title character is a black drug-smuggling flight attendant who is wooed by a white bail bondsman. || || || 〔 |- | ''Heaven's Burning'' || Craig Lahiff || || || || |- | ''Restaurant'' || Eric Bross || A romance develops between two waiters, both aspiring to enter the entertainment industry. || || Jury Award winner for Best Drama at the Atlantic City Film Festival in 1999. || |- | ''Bulworth'' || Warren Beatty || A white senator pursues a romantic relationship with a young black activist. || || || |- | ''Besieged'' || Bernardo Bertolucci || || || || |- | ''Next Time'' || Alan L. Fraser || || || Won the "Hollywood Discovery Award" and "Hollywood Independent Filmmaker Award" at the Hollywood Film Festival in 1998. || |- | ''The Breaks'' || Eric Meza || || || || |- | ''Row Your Boat'' || Sollace Mitchell || || || Won "Audience Choice Award" at the Stony Brook Film Festival in 1999. || |- | ''Colorz of Rage'' || Dale Resteghini || || || || |- | ''The Annihilation of Fish'' || Charles Burnett || || || || |- | ''Liberty Heights'' || Barry Levinson || A Jewish white guy falls in love with a black girl at a recently desegregated school. || || || 〔 |- | ''The Secret Laughter of Women'' || Peter Schwabach || || || || |- | ''Unbowed'' || Nanci Rossov || Set after the Civil War, a defiant Native American man and a high spirited Black woman fall in love while attending college. || || Won "Best Film" at the American Indian Film Festival in 1999. || |- | ''Romeo Must Die'' || Andrzej Bartkowiak || A ''Romeo and Juliet'' story set between African American and Asian families. || || || 〔 |- | ''Catfish in Black Bean Sauce'' || Chi Muoi Lo || A comedy-drama about a Vietnamese brother and sister raised by an African American couple. || || || 〔 |- | ''Mission Impossible II'' || John Woo || Ethan Hunt, a white man, has a romance with Nyah, a black woman, as they try to recover a virus.|| || || 〔 |- | ''O'' || Tim Blake Nelson || Retelling of Othello with modern high school students. || || || 〔 |- | ''Save the Last Dance'' || Duane Adler || A teenage girl from the Midwest and an African-American teen from South Side Chicago fall in love though their mutual love of dancing. || || || |- | ''Crazy/Beautiful'' || John Stockwell || Nicole Oakley, the spoiled, rich, out-of-control daughter of congressman Tom Oakley, meets a working class Mexican-American straight-A student, Carlos Nuñez, resulting in a clash of cultures, values, and a love affair. || || || 〔 |- | "Monster's Ball" || Marc Forster || After a family tragedy, a white racist prison guard reexamines his attitudes while falling in love with the African-American widow of the last prisoner he murdered. || || || 〔 |- | ''Far From Heaven'' || Todd Haynes || Housewife has flirtation with her African-American gardener || || || 〔 |- | ''Alfie'' || Charles Shyer || White British guy and African-American girlfriend of his best friend. || || || |- | ''Guess Who'' || Kevin Rodney Sullivan || Romantic comedy about an African-American girl introducing her white fiancé to her parents. || || || 〔 |- | ''Romancing the Bride'' || Kris Isacsson || Romantic comedy about a confused bride, Melissa, who wakes hand-cuffed to a Mexican stranger who claims to be her husband; she has no recollection of the marriage after having consumed a Mexican "moonshine" drink and having forgotten the events that occurred the previous night. || {dts|2005||| |- | ''Something New'' || Sanaa Lathan || Romantic comedy about an African-American woman falling in love with her Caucasian landscape gardener. || || || 〔〔〔 |- | ''Rome & Jewel'' || Charles T. Kanganis, Neil Bagg || Musical take on ''Romeo & Juliet'' with a black guy and white girl. || || || |- | ''Lakeview Terrace'' || Neil LaBute || Thriller about a LAPD sergeant who terrorizes his new next-door neighbors because they are an interracially married couple. || || || 〔http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/19/movies/19terr.html?_r=0〕 |- | ''Our Family Wedding'' || Rick Famuyiwa || An African-American guy plans to marry a Mexican-American girl, but they must meet each other's families. || || || |- | ''Belle'' || Amma Asante || Period drama set in the 18th century about Dido Belle, the illegitimate daughter of a black former slave and a white British naval officer, who is raised by her wealthy great-uncle, but struggles to find her place in society. || || || |- |} 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「List of interracial romance films」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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