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The Devil's Holiday

  • 1930
  • Passed
  • 1h 20m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
282
YOUR RATING
Nancy Carroll in The Devil's Holiday (1930)
DramaRomance

A savvy city girl is hired to sugar an earnest farm boy into a business deal, but loses her heart.A savvy city girl is hired to sugar an earnest farm boy into a business deal, but loses her heart.A savvy city girl is hired to sugar an earnest farm boy into a business deal, but loses her heart.

  • Director
    • Edmund Goulding
  • Writer
    • Edmund Goulding
  • Stars
    • Nancy Carroll
    • Phillips Holmes
    • James Kirkwood
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    282
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Edmund Goulding
    • Writer
      • Edmund Goulding
    • Stars
      • Nancy Carroll
      • Phillips Holmes
      • James Kirkwood
    • 11User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 3 wins & 1 nomination total

    Photos28

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    Top cast15

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    Nancy Carroll
    Nancy Carroll
    • Hallie Hobart
    Phillips Holmes
    Phillips Holmes
    • David Stone
    James Kirkwood
    James Kirkwood
    • Mark Stone
    Hobart Bosworth
    Hobart Bosworth
    • Ezra Stone
    Paul Lukas
    Paul Lukas
    • Doctor Reynolds
    Ned Sparks
    Ned Sparks
    • Charlie Thorne
    Morgan Farley
    Morgan Farley
    • Monkey McConnell
    Jed Prouty
    Jed Prouty
    • Kent Carr
    Guy Oliver
    Guy Oliver
    • Hammond
    Zasu Pitts
    Zasu Pitts
    • Ethel
    Wade Boteler
    Wade Boteler
    • House Detective
    Morton Downey
    Morton Downey
    • Freddie
    Laura La Varnie
    Laura La Varnie
    • Madame Bernstein
    • (as Laura Le Vernie)
    Jessie Pringle
    • Aunt Betty
    Jimmy Aubrey
    Jimmy Aubrey
    • Drunk
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Edmund Goulding
    • Writer
      • Edmund Goulding
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    5.9282
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    Featured reviews

    71930s_Time_Machine

    This feels much more modern than a typical 1930 film.

    Right from the start, you know what you're going to get. A well made (amazingly well made for 1930) fast-paced, crazy romance with a subtle sense of humour. Possibly it's Nancy Carroll's best film?

    The first few minutes set the scene: in a stylishly lit hotel telephone exchange, chiseller Ned Sparks is searching, like many others for Hallie, a girl whose talent is to persuade businessmen by her 'favours' to sign any deal. This scene is a symphony seediness with wonderful 1930s accents: Zasu Pitt's a droning midwest descant against Ned Sparks' crazy deadpan Gangsterville. In just those first minutes, you know two things: 1) this is going to be good and 2) this is NOT one of those typically terrible, stagey, static pictures so common in very early talkies. It has a much more modern feel than you might expect from 1930. If you didn't know you might guess that this was made years later.

    Then the screen lights up a Hallie, Nancy Carroll appears. It's probably the lighting but it seems like all the light, the life and the energy is coming from Nancy Carroll. For the next hour she glows and completely owns every frame. You can see exactly why these businessmen would be persuaded by her presence to agree to whatever deal she is being paid to promote. It's not just her pretty face, it's her joy, love of life and bubbly personality which makes her so irresistible to men. It's an astonishing performance - she should have won the Oscar instead of Norma Shearer in THE DIVORCEE; she's ten times more believable.

    In fact the whole film is ten times more believable than Norma Shearer's film. Well, it is when you're watching it - but don't think about the plot too much. Besides Nancy Carroll, the other reason this is so good is down to its director Edmund Goulding. He actually wrote this (and wrote the music too!) so this was his pet project - he loved this film and put all his skills and efforts into it.

    The result is a completely enthralling, naturally acted pot boiler. You don't notice how stupid the plot gets, you don't notice that Hallie's love interest, Phillips Holmes is the most pathetic, feeble-minded drip in the world. That someone so full of life as Hallie could love someone like this is absurd but you'll be so drawn into this that you'll not question it. That's the skill of a good movie: to make the unbelievable believable.
    5mukava991

    bearable if you like the stars

    Edmund Goulding's morality tale stars Nancy Carroll as a pretty, gold digging manicurist who attracts the wealthy heir to a harvesting machine fortune (Phillips Holmes). After he pursues her energetically, she agrees to marry him, but when he brings her home to his family's country estate, his father (Hobart Bosworth in a plummy performance right out of 19th century melodrama) summons her to his den for a confrontation about her true motives. There, he swiftly draws out the worst in her and offers her $50,000 to end the marriage. Meanwhile, out on the staircase, the young husband falls and injures himself severely during a violent confrontation with his disapproving older brother. Nouveau riche Nancy nevertheless high tails it back to the big city to spend freely and pack for a dream trip to Paris. Trouble is, she slowly realizes she actually loves Holmes, now a semi-invalid. Can she, will she, redeem herself? It doesn't take long to find out in the perfunctorily structured plot resolution. Holmes and Carroll are more convincing here than in another pairing from around the same time ("Stolen Heaven," 1931).
    GManfred

    Yokel Meets Party Girl

    Hallie Hobart (Nancy Carroll), veteran party girl, works the conventions in the Big City and makes money from the agents who sic her on to prospective buyers - in this case, for farm equipment. Into her clutches falls David Stone (Philips Holmes), fresh from a fall off a turnip truck, and Wowzers! David falls head-over-heels for her and wants to marry her. His family is loaded with money and advice, but David is hearing none of it. He marries her and brings her home to his horrified family.

    What follows is hard to swallow. Suffice it to say there is much pathos, contrivance, animosity, strife and bitterness. There is also reconciliation but, as I say, this second half of the picture must be taken cum grano salis. The main reason to watch this soaper is to watch Nancy Carroll's best acting job. Prior to "The Devil's Holiday" she made several lightweight musical comedies, so her performance here is a jolt. In fact, she was nominated for an Oscar for this film but lost to Norma Shearer in "The Divorcée". 1930's audiences were probably prostrate with grief as the weepy plot unfolds, but 1930 is a long time ago.
    drednm

    Phillips Holmes and Nancy Carroll Are Fine

    Turgid by today's standards and pretty stagy, yet THE DEVIL'S HOLIDAY offers solid performances by Nancy Carroll as a party girl who lands a hick (Phillips Holmes), in from the wheat belt, in a scam. As Hallie, a woman who no scruples and who hates men, Carroll won an Oscar nomination in a flashy role. Holmes is also excellent as the sensitive and naive youth.

    Hobart Bosworth and James Kirkwood (as the father and brother) are oddly effective in their stereotypical roles. Ned Sparks and Jed Prouty play a couple of sharpies, and Zasu Pitts has a small role as the hotel operator. Paul Lukas shows up (badly cast) as a rural doctor.

    While the plot veers toward the ludicrous, the actors remain solid and convincing, no easy job.
    7wes-connors

    Nancy Carroll gets Phillips Holmes

    Beautiful manicurist Nancy Carroll (as Hallie Hobart) sets her sights on handsome Philips Holmes (as David Stone), the son of wealthy wheat farmer Hobart Bosworth (as Ezra Stone). Professing to hate men, Ms. Carroll is only interested in luring Mr. Holmes in for a lucrative business deal. Holmes easily falls in love, but older brother James Kirkwood (as Mark Stone) brands Carroll a low-life gold-digger. To get even with the straight-laced Stone family, Carroll accepts Holmes' marriage proposal. Then, while Carroll and the family negotiate the cost of her departure, she falls unexpectedly in love…

    Well, make that expectedly… "The Devil's Holiday" is a creaky, but worthwhile "early talkie" drama. First of all, it features Carroll's second-place finishing "Academy Award" performance as "Best Actress" (Norma Shearer won for her "Divorcée"). At the time, Carroll was a considered a "new" talking pictures star; in that respect, she was the first "talkie"-dominant actress to move in on the "Quigley Poll" top ten list of established "silent" stars. Carroll was #10 in 1929, and seemed assured of super-stardom with the new dramatic range she showed in "Devil's Holiday" (where she displayed real sweat and tears).

    Holmes is also at his best, playing the love-struck rich kid with wide-eyed innocence. And, he gets one of those great "smacked on the staircase" scenes. Holmes falls in love three times in this movie, but only for Nancy Carroll. She and Holmes had great chemistry, as you'll see; and, box office returns dictated they would be re-teamed fairly quickly (for the close to, but not quite "Stolen Heaven"). Writer/director Edmund Goulding manages well considering it was early 1930. You also get two pioneer players, Messrs. Kirkwood and Bosworth, in featured roles; and, the minor cast members are used very well.

    ******* The Devil's Holiday (5/9/30) Edmund Goulding ~ Nancy Carroll, Phillips Holmes, James Kirkwood, Hobart Bosworth

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Features Nancy Carroll's only Oscar nominated performance.
    • Connections
      Alternate-language version of En kvinnas morgondag (1931)
    • Soundtracks
      You Are a Song
      Lyrics by Leo Robin

      Music by Edmund Goulding

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 9, 1930 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Diabelskie wakacje
    • Filming locations
      • Paramount Studios - 5555 Melrose Avenue, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(Studio)
    • Production company
      • Paramount Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 20m(80 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.20 : 1

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