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The Devil Commands

1941

Action / Horror / Sci-Fi

2
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled56%
IMDb Rating6.1101208

mad scientist

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Boris Karloff Photo
Boris Karloff as Dr. Julian Blair
Anne Revere Photo
Anne Revere as Mrs. Blanche Walters
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
592.42 MB
956*720
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 4 min
P/S 2 / 2
1.07 GB
1424*1072
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 4 min
P/S 0 / 5

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by Leofwine_draca6 / 10

Throwback B-picture

THE DEVIL COMMANDS is an enjoyable slice of hokum starring the great Boris Karloff once more reprising one of his most popular roles - that of the misguided mad scientist, trying to further the boundaries of human knowledge but coming unstuck somewhere along the way. It's an entertaining B-picture with a classy look thanks to strong direction, alongside plenty of homages to the original FRANKENSTEIN. The plot is a little woozy, but the presence of fun tropes - the laboratory, the hulking manservant - give this a frisson of excitement for seasoned veterans of the genre.

Reviewed by bkoganbing6 / 10

Places We Dare Not Go

Though the science involved in what Boris Karloff is trying to do is very flawed, in The Devil Commands Karloff gives a very good performance as a man obsessed with contacting his late wife. Unfortunately he falls into the clutches of a fake medium played by Anne Revere who takes advantage of him.

The first few minutes of the film show a happy well adjusted Karloff married to Shirley Warde with daughter Amanda Duff also getting ready to marry scientist Richard Fiske. After a car accident where Warde dies in his arms, Karloff goes off the deep end as he becomes obsessed with the idea that Warde is trying to communicate with him via electrical impulses. His efforts to combine science and the occult lead him to Revere and ultimately to tragedy.

The electrical devices in his laboratory have the familiar Frankenstein like look about them, no doubt Edward Dmytryk in one of his early directorial efforts was trying to capture the mood of the Frankenstein films from Universal. Though the rest of the cast is pretty bland, Karloff and Revere play well off each other and carry the film.

One exception to the blandness is that of Dorothy Adams whom I recognized immediately as Bessie the maid from Laura. Her part here is similar to that one and her acting has some real bite to it.

The Devil Commands is from Columbia's B unit and it's not invested with a lot of production values. Still it's a good horror film from the master himself.

Reviewed by MartinHafer5 / 10

Same old song, different studio

In the 1930s, Boris Karloff was initially with a relatively important studio (Universal) and was enjoying a lot of success. Later, he did some dandy films for Warner Brothers, but he also made some grade-Z films for poverty row studio, Monogram. All these films were fun to watch and often a bit silly, but the Monogram ones were known for their very low production values and silly plots. After THE APE (1940),Karloff was thrilled to get out of his contract with Monogram and ready to go on to better things. It SHOULD have been that way when he made THE DEVIL COMMANDS for Columbia. Sure, like Universal in the 1930s, Columbia was not the biggest of studios but it did have decent budgets and production values and I expected this to be a much better style of film than THE APE....but unfortunately, it seemed a lot like the exact same old style of film and nothing more. Like THE APE and the rather bland Mr. Wong films for Monogram, this one was nothing special.

It stars Karloff as a kindly scientist with the best of intentions that ultimately becomes a mad man--using science to create abominations. Considering how often he did this, the whole thing seems very, very derivative and stale. We've seen this all before and there is nothing that makes this film stand out from many others just like it. Also, the narration and the epilogue just seem heavy-handed and unnecessary.

Is it fun and worth a look (particularly to lovers of B-horror films),yes. But it could have been so much better.

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