Anime and manga • In the
anime and
manga Kuroshitsuji, one of the main side characters,
Lau, owns an opium den.
Film • In the film
Once Upon a Time in America (1984), the character
David "Noodles" Aaronson (
Robert De Niro) frequents an opium den. • In the film
Tombstone (1993), the character
William Brocius aka Curly Bill Brocius (played by
Powers Boothe), is seen smoking opium in an Old West opium den before exiting to the street and shooting the town marshal,
Fred White. In reality, Curly Bill was intoxicated by alcohol rather than opium. • In the film
Wild Bill (1995),
Wild Bill Hickok, played by Jeff Bridges, frequents an opium den in Deadwood. His sessions with the pipe are often the trigger for hallucinogenic flashbacks. • In the
film adaptation of
From Hell (2001), the main character, Inspector Fred Abberline, played by Johnny Depp, frequents opium dens. • The film
Gangs of New York (2002) portrayed rival political ward bosses in search of fraudulent voters rousting Chinese immigrants from an opium den in the
Five Points neighborhood of
Manhattan, in the 1860s. • In the film
Rouge (1987), the main character, Fleur, played by
Anita Mui, is a courtesan working in a 1930s bordello and opium den, where she meets the wealthy Twelve Master Chen, played by
Leslie Cheung. • The ending of the film
McCabe & Mrs. Miller has Constance Miller, played by
Julie Christie, sedated in an opium den while McCabe, played by
Warren Beatty, dies unnoticed after being shot.
Music • ”The Card Cheat” on the album
London Calling by
The Clash has a lyric referencing opium dens. • ”
Down Under” on the album
Business as Usual by
Men at Work has a lyric referring to a (opium) 'den in Bombay', also visualized in the music video.
Literature • In
Agatha Christie's magazine short story "
The Lost Mine"(1923),
Hercule Poirot is forced, much against his will, to conduct part of his investigation in a Limehouse opium den. The story appeared in book form in the American version of
Poirot Investigates (1925) and in the UK in ''
Poirot's Early Cases'' (1974). • In
Cassandra Clare's novel
Clockwork Prince, Will visits an opium den where a faerie version of the drug is smoked. The characters still refer to it as an opium den. • In
Charles Dickens' final and uncompleted novel,
The Mystery of Edwin Drood, an opium den is a critical element of the story. • In
Arthur Conan Doyle's
Sherlock Holmes story "
The Man with the Twisted Lip",
Dr. Watson goes to an opium den in the
East End of London to find Isa Whitney. • In
Hergé's
The Adventures of Tintin story
The Blue Lotus (1934–1935), the main character
Tintin is involved in infiltrating opium dens. •
Rudyard Kipling's short story "
The Gate of a Hundred Sorrows" tells the history of a Chinese opium den in
India. •
Michael McDowell's novel
Gilded Needles revolves around an opium ring in 1880s New York City and features detailed descriptions of both opium dens and opium paraphernalia, heavily based on historical records and the few photos available. • In Alan Moore and Kevin O'Neill's
graphic novel The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen,
Mina Murray finds aged adventurer
Allan Quatermain in an opium den. "Singapore Charlie's" den is the setting of their first encounter with the "Devil Doctor". • In
Sax Rohmer's novel
The Mystery of Dr. Fu-Manchu (1913),
Nayland Smith and Dr Petrie enter Singapore Charlie's
Thames-side opium den in search of Dr
Fu Manchu and his henchmen. • In
Oscar Wilde's novel,
The Picture of Dorian Gray, Dorian visits the opium dens of London when indulging in the pleasures of life whether moral or immoral, having been influenced by the
hedonistic outlook on life of Lord Henry Wotton. •
Jeet Thayil's debut novel,
Narcopolis (2012), is largely set in an opium den in
Old Bombay during the 1970–1990s. • In
Robert E. Howard's 1929 novella,
Skull-Face, a Limehouse opium-den called ''Yun Shatu's Temple of Dreams'' serves as the main locale for the first half of the story. • In the 1899–1925 dime novel magazine series
Secret Service: Old and Young King Brady, Detectives, opium dens in San Francisco and New York City often serve as sites for criminals to conceal their victims and keep them docile under the influence of the drug.
Television • In the
Magnum, P.I. episode "Holmes is Where the Heart Is" David Worth takes Higgins to an opium den. • In
Copper season 2, Elizabeth Haverford Morehouse visits an opium den after her husband, Jonathan Morehouse (who'd introduced her to the drug), cuts off her supply in an effort to wean her off the drug. • In the television drama series
The Knick (2014), set in
Manhattan in 1900, Clive Owen's character, Dr. John Thackery, is both a cocaine and opium addict, and frequently visits an opium den on
Mott Street in
Chinatown to get high and enjoy a Chinese prostitute/worker at the den. • In
Boardwalk Empire episode "
Nights in Ballygran", Jimmy Darmody is shown smoking opium at an opium den in Chinatown. • In
The Blacklist episode "Cape May", Raymond "Red" Reddington is seen as a patron inside of an opium den in New York City's Chinatown. In previous episodes, he speaks about his previous experiences with opium dens. • In the
Highlander series, immortal Brian Cullen develops a fear of fighting other immortals. He escapes from his fear by smoking opium at opium dens in San Francisco during the Gold Rush. • The
Silicon Valley character Erlich Bachman (portrayed by
T.J. Miller) is last seen given a five-year holiday in a Tibetan opium den at Gavin Belson's behest. • In the Korean TV show
Mr. Sunshine, Gu Dong-Mae uses an opium den to rest and recover from his wounds near the show's finale. • In the Korean TV show
Tale of Nine Tailed and
Tale of Nine Tailed 1938, Lee Yeon becomes an opium addict in memory of Ah-eum • In the Netflix TV show
Peaky Blinders, the character
Thomas Shelby played by
Cillian Murphy frequently visits an opium den as a means to cope with his PTSD after WW1. ==References==