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The Devil Commands

  • 1941
  • Approved
  • 1h 5m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Boris Karloff in The Devil Commands (1941)
Trailer 1
Play trailer1:24
1 Video
52 Photos
HorrorSci-Fi

Scientist becomes obsessed with the idea of communicating with his dead wife.Scientist becomes obsessed with the idea of communicating with his dead wife.Scientist becomes obsessed with the idea of communicating with his dead wife.

  • Director
    • Edward Dmytryk
  • Writers
    • Robert Hardy Andrews
    • Milton Gunzburg
    • William Sloane
  • Stars
    • Boris Karloff
    • Anne Revere
    • Amanda Duff
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Edward Dmytryk
    • Writers
      • Robert Hardy Andrews
      • Milton Gunzburg
      • William Sloane
    • Stars
      • Boris Karloff
      • Anne Revere
      • Amanda Duff
    • 47User reviews
    • 44Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Karloff at Columbia
    Trailer 1:24
    Karloff at Columbia

    Photos52

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    Top cast20

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    Boris Karloff
    Boris Karloff
    • Dr. Julian Blair
    Anne Revere
    Anne Revere
    • Mrs. Blanche Walters
    Amanda Duff
    Amanda Duff
    • Anne Blair
    Richard Fiske
    Richard Fiske
    • Dr. Richard Sayles
    Ralph Penney
    Ralph Penney
    • Karl
    Dorothy Adams
    Dorothy Adams
    • Mrs. Marcy
    Walter Baldwin
    Walter Baldwin
    • Seth Marcy
    Kenneth MacDonald
    Kenneth MacDonald
    • Sheriff Ed Willis
    Shirley Warde
    • Helen Blair
    Ernie Adams
    Ernie Adams
    • Elam
    • (uncredited)
    Lester Allen
    Lester Allen
    • Dr. Van Den
    • (uncredited)
    Wheaton Chambers
    Wheaton Chambers
    • Dr. Sanders
    • (uncredited)
    Earl Crawford
    • Johnson
    • (uncredited)
    Harrison Greene
    • Mr. Booth, Bakery Proprietor
    • (uncredited)
    Erwin Kalser
    Erwin Kalser
    • Professor Kent
    • (uncredited)
    Eddie Kane
    Eddie Kane
    • Professor Walt
    • (uncredited)
    George McKay
    • Station Agent
    • (uncredited)
    Al Rhein
    • Truck Driver
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Edward Dmytryk
    • Writers
      • Robert Hardy Andrews
      • Milton Gunzburg
      • William Sloane
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews47

    6.11.6K
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    Featured reviews

    7dzondzon

    Karloff as an extremely MAD scientist

    I saw this movie over 35 years ago, as a child, late at night.It left a big impression on me and scared me to death. I recently saw it again and my earlier impressions were justified. Karloff tries to contact the soul of his dead wife using an apparatus comprised of metal helmets through which he directs psychic electricity. The whirling vortex of soul energy is a high point in the film. Karloff gets more and more creepily deranged as the movie goes on. Presumably the devil makes him do it. This film is really a well done minor gem. Fans of the mad scientist/laboratory genre will find much to enjoy. This film is a must for Karloff afficianados. It is unfortunately very difficult to find as it hasn't been on T.V.for years and no commercial video tapes exist. See it if you can!
    6preppy-3

    Ridiculous but Karloff saves it

    Kindly Dr. Revere (Boris Karloff) has found a way to record the brain waves of people. His loving wife is tragically killed in a car accident. Revere however gets a reading from his dead wife (he thinks) when alone in is lab. He becomes obsessed with trying to communicate with her beyond the grave. He ends up with a cruel conniving fake medium (Anne Revere) and some corpses borrowed from the nearby cemetery.

    OK--the plot doesn't make a lick of sense. He does turn on the machine after his wife dies and he DOES get a message--but how can he know it's her? Why does he need to use other dead bodies to communicate with his wife? Why not dig up HER body and try it? Too many questions. The sets are threadbare (looks more like a PRC production than Columbia), talented character actress Revere gives out her worse performance, the silly narration doesn't work and it just completely derails at the end. Still Karloff is good (as always) and gives this junk a better performance than it deserves. He single handedly makes this an OK movie. It just isn't that scary. It does have a somewhat spooky scene where a maid is stuck in a room with a bunch of dead bodies but that's it. Minor but a must for Karloff fans.
    6Doylenf

    Creepy tale has lots of atmosphere but silly plot...

    BORIS KARLOFF is a scientist who wants to communicate with the brain waves of his dead wife. His daughter narrates the tale and concludes with: "It is dangerous to communicate with the dead." That's about the impression the viewer gets after seeing what happens in the course of a brisk one hour and six minutes.

    Columbia produced this low-budget feature and gave the directing chores to Edward Dmytryk, who would later go on to bigger and better things at RKO. But it's an efficient thriller thanks to his direction and the low-key, shadowy photography that makes the absurd story at least come to life on occasion.

    Enjoyable too are the performances of ANN REVERE as a sinister housekeeper who knows all about Karloff's experiments and what goes on behind the locked doors of his laboratory; DOROTHY ADAMS as an inquisitive servant who agrees to check out the lab and gets locked inside; and KENNETH MacDONALD as the Sheriff determined to find out who is responsible for all the missing bodies from the graveyard.

    It's typical Karloff stuff and he lends his commanding presence to the role with more dignity than it deserves. If it emerges as a better than average horror vehicle, it's because director Dmytryk is at the helm, but the script is absurd. The low-budget production values are neatly hidden by all the shadowy photography.
    8kennethwright2612

    Don't open that door!

    Corny and cliche'd as The Devil Commands may look to the superficial gaze, it's a powerful expression of the inextinguishable and far from trivial human wish to believe that death is not the end and that the dead we loved are not forever lost to us. Karloff starred in a whole sub-genre of films on this theme from the middle 1930s to the early 1940s (cf The Invisible Ray, Before I Hang, The Man They Could Not Hang, etc), invariably as a misunderstood scientific genius, embittered by tragedy or injustice, whose desire to conquer death clashes fatally with the prerogatives of the Almighty.

    Whether one believes in an afterlife or not, it would be a coarsely reductionist mind that could consider the subject ridiculous. What gives these films (and this one in particular) their eerily modernist slant on the matter lies in the way they reflect the public's awe of science in the first half of the twentieth century, when astonishing developments such as radio and television (and that weird form of immortality, the motion picture), made it seem believable that technology might solve the supernatural as well as the physical mysteries. It is worth remembering in this context that the contemporary electrical wizards Thomas Edison and Nikola Tesla, classical Mad Scientists both, attempted to build machines with which to talk to the dead.

    In this morbidly obsessive cinematic byway The Devil Commands stands out as one of the most insidiously poignant and nearly blasphemous films of its kind, sailing very close to the emotional and spiritual wind in its depiction of Karloff's bizarre attempts to communicate with his dead wife. As a mad-scientist entertainment it contains some of the most magnificently deranged laboratory scenes ever filmed, surpassed in this context only by James Whale's Frankenstein and Bride Of Frankenstein. I still succumb to its mournful fascination. And if your first viewing doesn't scare you half to death, you can't be more than half alive.
    dougdoepke

    Rockin'-Out on Brain Waves

    At last, Karloff has met his match. One glance from the steely-eyed Ann Revere (Mrs. Walters) is enough to freeze even Frankenstein. She doesn't need make-up—she's scary enough just walking onto the set. I'd love to see a stare-down between her and an icy Bette Davis. Anyway, the movie is occasionally atmospheric, especially the cliff house scenes. The plot doesn't make much sense—I guess that's why we get the voice-over narration. It's something about getting brain waves from the dead and turning them into talk. Apparently, that requires that Dr. Blair (Karloff) assemble a junk pile in his laboratory. On special occasions, the metal heaps sit around a table in diving helmets and sort of rock out on brain waves. Then there's the live person who puts on a helmet and sticks neon tubes in her ears. Apparently, that triggers an indoor wind, and then wispy ghost-like things appear. The wind doesn't bother them, but it sure musses-up Karloff's hair. It's one wild and crazy lab scene.

    The cast and crew are an interesting bunch. Director Dmytryk was one of the blacklisted Hollywood Ten, who then decided to sing to the House committee, and so, went back to work. On the other hand, Revere never did sing and stayed blacklisted for a decade or so. There's also young Robert Fiske who plays Dr. Sayles. He has the distinction of being one of a handful of movie actors killed in action during WWII— don't they deserve some kind of Hollywood memorial. And between Dorothy Adams (Mrs. Marcy) and the equally familiar Ellen Corby, housekeeper roles stayed monopolized in Hollywood for about twenty years. Nothing special in this 50 or-so minutes, except for the goofy lab scenes. But something should be said for the great Karloff. Even in this routine programmer, he gives it his all, a spirited performance that almost makes the hocus-pocus believable. I hope there's a place in Hollywood heaven for great old pro's like him.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Completed December 1940, released February 3, 1941.
    • Goofs
      Dr. Julian tells Mrs. Walters she had 10,000 volts pass through her body. Volts do not flow or pass, amps do.
    • Quotes

      Dr. Julian Blair: Anne dear, your mother is not dead, not really. She's come back to me!

    • Connections
      Featured in Hollywood and the Stars: Monsters We've Known and Loved (1964)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 3, 1941 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Más allá de la tumba
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 5m(65 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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