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Florence Britton, Edmund Burns, Dorothy Christy, Thomas E. Jackson, Murdock MacQuarrie, Lillian Rich, Jameson Thomas, and Richard Tucker in The Devil Plays (1931)

Review by CatherineYronwode

The Devil Plays

6/10

A Tea Cozy Mystery

This is a typical mansion murder or cozy mystery, with only four sets: the apartment where the murder takes place, the police captain's office, the low-rent hotel of a hard-bitten show girl and a tea room financed by shady money. I tuned in for the tea room, because collecting tea room memorabilia is one of my hobbies.

The set did not disappoint. It is the Universal "basement restaurant" set (seen in other movies as an Italian restaurant, etc.). Outfitted with a bevy of what seem to be Pretty Little Dutch Girl waitresses and laid out to resemble the Bohemian basement tea rooms of Sheridan Square and Greenwich Village in the 1910s to 1920s, mostly fading from view by the time this was filmed in 1931.

There were some nice deco touches in the show girl's hotel room set as well. .

That was about it. The acting was slow and halted, the actors' mannerisms stylized and stagey, and the plot was totally random.
  • CatherineYronwode
  • Sep 23, 2020

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