Angela e Bob sono una bella coppia. Ma Bob è marito infedele. Angela per riconquistarlo si traveste da donna diavolo a un ballo in maschera a bordo di un dirigibile e seduce il marito ignaro... Leggi tuttoAngela e Bob sono una bella coppia. Ma Bob è marito infedele. Angela per riconquistarlo si traveste da donna diavolo a un ballo in maschera a bordo di un dirigibile e seduce il marito ignaro e gli dà una lezione.Angela e Bob sono una bella coppia. Ma Bob è marito infedele. Angela per riconquistarlo si traveste da donna diavolo a un ballo in maschera a bordo di un dirigibile e seduce il marito ignaro e gli dà una lezione.
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Premi
- 3 vittorie totali
- Biff
- (as Edward Prinz)
- Call of the Wild
- (as Vera Marsh)
Recensioni in evidenza
In any case, "Madam Satan" is rather slow-moving, clumsy, and awkward, much as is the case with early sound films. It never makes up its mind either as it delves into melodrama, comedy, music, and even a little horror. Nevertheless, it has some garish, spectacular moments. The mechanical ballet on the moored dirigible is rather fascinating and certainly quite peculiar. It is the height of Hollywood kitsch. The best sequence is when the dirigible is struck by lightning during a ferocious thunderstorm and everyone on the airship must parachute to safety.
We will always wonder what DeMille had in mind when he made the film. It was certainly risqué and daring for its time, but it actually didn't do very well at the box office and the critics were puzzled by it. It remains today as a curiosity at best.
This Cecil B. DeMille* film begins with a lovely wife, Angela (Kay Johnson) waiting and waiting for her no-good husband, Bob (Reginald Denny) to return home. However, the guy has been out whooping it up with his friend--drinking (this is during Prohibition, by the way) and chasing other women. Surprisingly, Angela is rather good-natured about it--and seems to accept the age-old notion that 'boys will be boys'. However, Bob is a real jerk. Not only isn't he apologetic but blames Angela for being too boring. In fact, he later announces that he's leaving, as his mistress is much more of a woman than Angela will ever be! At this point you'd assume Angela would be ready to kill or divorce this worm--this WOULD be the case in the Post-Code world. Instead, after getting over her initial hurt and shock, she's decided to cook up a plan to get him back! After all, in this era, men must be excused their little...peccadilloes (a nice word used at the time to cover a multitude of sins...but mostly adultery).
What exactly is the plan? Well, it all unfolds during an insane society costume party--the most bizarre party EVER thrown on this planet--and not just because of its locale but because of the costumes and song and dance numbers! A bunch of rich philanderers rent out a zeppelin (you know, one of those massive airships like the Hindenburg) and invite all their mistresses for a rip-roaring good time. Naturally Bob and his floozy are there. However, just before this woman is crowned the Belle of the Ball, in steps Madam Satan--a very mysterious masked woman of the world. And Madam Satan is NOT there to make new friends or go for a zeppelin ride...nope. She's there to screw Bob...and she's not very subtle about it! Using her thick foreign accent, she vamps Bob and announces 'who wants to go to Hell with Madam Satan?'. Well, obviously Bob does, and he pursues this mystery woman like a dog chasing after a pork chop! Eventually, Bob discovers who this mystery woman is that he so wants to....um...get to know better. But, before he can deal with this, the zeppelin breaks loose from its mooring mast and goes careening through the clouds! Then, the costumed party-goers and crew jump from the airship and parachute to the ground...with a few comical (and one mildly racist) scenes as the folks land.
Does this sound completely crazy? Of course. But the craziest part are the costumes and sets. It must have cost a fortune to make the film and this was at the worst part of the Depression!! Just think of the millions of folks out of work and a film about Madam Satan vamping a rich no-goodnick like Bob! Crazy...but almost impossible to stop watching! If you want to see it, you can get a copy from Amazon, Turner Classic Movies' website or perhaps they'll show it again on TCM. You DEFINITELY ain't seen nothing' yet with this one!!
*If you are an old film nut, you'll probably recognize DeMille as the guy who brought us a long series of overblown religious epics like "The Ten Commandments".
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe party's "Ballet Mechanique" scenes were shot in the Multicolor two-strip process and required extra-intensive lighting. No print containing the color sequence is known to survive as of 2022.
- BlooperEven though the dirigible was caught up in a fierce storm just a few hundred feet off the ground, there was no sign of a storm on the ground where the parachuting party guests landed.
- Citazioni
Romeo: I never repented a sin.
Jimmy Wade: I never repeated one.
Bob Brooks: Well, I've never been able to believe that anything I did - was a sin.
- Curiosità sui creditiOpening credits are shown with smoke rising in the background, a reference to "satan", as mentioned in the title.
- ConnessioniEdited into Hollywood: The Dream Factory (1972)
- Colonne sonoreThe Cat Walk
(1930) (uncredited)
Music by Herbert Stothart
Lyrics by Clifford Grey
Sung and danced by party guests boarding the zeppelin
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- Sito ufficiale
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- Madam Satan
- Luoghi delle riprese
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- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
Botteghino
- Budget
- 980.000 USD (previsto)
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 1005 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione
- 1h 56min(116 min)
- Colore