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The Devil's Sleep

  • 1949
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 17m
IMDb RATING
3.9/10
269
YOUR RATING
The Devil's Sleep (1949)
CrimeDrama

The head of an illegal drug ring uses a women's health spa as a front for his sleeping-pill racket.The head of an illegal drug ring uses a women's health spa as a front for his sleeping-pill racket.The head of an illegal drug ring uses a women's health spa as a front for his sleeping-pill racket.

  • Director
    • W. Merle Connell
  • Writers
    • Danny Arnold
    • Richard S. McMahan
  • Stars
    • Lita Grey
    • William Thomason
    • Timothy Farrell
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.9/10
    269
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • W. Merle Connell
    • Writers
      • Danny Arnold
      • Richard S. McMahan
    • Stars
      • Lita Grey
      • William Thomason
      • Timothy Farrell
    • 18User reviews
    • 4Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos1

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    Top cast19

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    Lita Grey
    Lita Grey
    • Judge Rosalind Ballentine
    • (as Lita Grey Chaplin)
    William Thomason
    • Detective Sgt. Dave Kerrigan
    Timothy Farrell
    • Umberto Scalli
    Laura Travers
    • Jerri Winter
    Jim Tyde
    • Bob Winter
    Fred Smith
    • Tony Donardi
    Muriel Gardner
    • Ruby McKenzie
    John Mitchum
    John Mitchum
    • Interne
    Stan Freed
    • Hal Holmes
    • (as Stanley Freed)
    Will Charles
    • Inspector Darnell
    George Eiferman
    • Self
    Bebe Berto
    • Zee Zee
    • (uncredited)
    Mildred Davis
    • Tesse T. Tesse
    • (uncredited)
    Pat Lawless
    • Police Officer
    • (uncredited)
    Bob Lenihan
    • Frankie Clinton
    • (uncredited)
    Tracy Lynne
    • Margie Ballantine
    • (uncredited)
    Stan Modic
    • Pug
    • (uncredited)
    Margaret Roach
    Margaret Roach
    • Nurse
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • W. Merle Connell
    • Writers
      • Danny Arnold
      • Richard S. McMahan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    3.9269
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    Featured reviews

    Michael_Elliott

    Silly

    Devil's Sleep, The (1951)

    ** (out of 4)

    Incredibly silly "drug warning"/exploitation film from legendary producer George Weiss (Glen or Glenda?). A pusher (Timothy Farrell) is selling pills to fat women in a gym and the school kids. A tough as nails Judge (Lita Grey Chaplin) wants to hammer him down but her daughter gets set-up and now the pushers blackmail the Judge with a nude photo. Poor acting, poor directing and a poor script adds to the overall "so bad it's good" nature of this film. There's some insanely funny dialogue that matches Ed Wood, especially one un-PC scene where the overweight women are the "butt" of all the jokes. Very funny throughout and contains some of the same sets as Glen or Glenda?. Lita Grey Chaplin was the former wife of Charles and it's clear he wasn't teaching her how to act. Also contains some full frontal nudity, which certainly wasn't the norm for 1951.
    2Hitchcoc

    Lots of Speeches

    Wow, Mr. America of 1948. What a big lunk. I guess Laurence Olivier wasn't available for this film. They don't get much more preachy and dumb than this one. The authorities are so dull, most of the kids would have died of boredom rather than from the drugs presented. It is the tale of youth running rampant, doing things because they have been given drugs. They are holding up banks, burglarizing houses, doing lewd things in public. Then there's the old health club with its reducing drugs. Of course, all these drugs cause memory loss so people have trouble trying to figure out what they did. The circuit judge's daughter gets something in a coke and poses nude. One thing I did notice is that there are some pretty risqué little scenes here. That surprised me. It's cheesecake that must have got the censors involved to some degree. Just plain awful in a Reefer Madness kind of way. Don't miss the doctor's speech at the end. At one point he squints to read the card in front of him.
    3wes-connors

    Getting Wet

    "There is a terrible scourge running through the community in the form of pills be pushed to the youth through a local women's health club. A female judge, with the aid of a police detective, looks to crusade against this problem in the community and eliminate it. Unfortunately, the drug ring has some compromising photos of the judge's daughter they hope to use as an advantage against her," according to the DVD sleeve's synopsis. For producer George Weiss, Timothy Farrell's sleazy "Umberto Scalli" makes his debut.

    This isn't a movie as much as it is a chance to for the producer to show off as many muscles and midriffs as he could manage to get away with. Bikinis and briefs abound. "Mr. America of 1948" George Eiferman appears as a women's exercise instructor. And, put your "headlights" on "high beam" for the skin scene highlight, when a towel-clad woman shows everything she can, before stepping into a steam bath. The movie ends with one of those preachy "messages", so you won't feel too bad about enjoying the flesh.

    Top-billed Lita Grey (as "Judge" Rosalind Ballentine), one of Charlie Chaplin's wives, contributes little; her best line is, "Somehow all of this has a familiar smell." Harold Lloyd's wife, Mildred Davis (as Tessie Tallulah Tesse) makes an arguably embarrassing "talking pictures" debut; her best line, considering her 51-47-64 measurements, is "Ain't two Tessies enough?" But, hey, whoever hired Stan Freed (as Hal Holmes) to play a hopped-up Benzedrine dealer had a sense of humor, since he went to town as "Hoppity" (1941).

    *** The Devil's Sleep (5/18/49) W. Merle Connell ~ Timothy Farrell, Hal Holmes, Lita Grey Chaplin
    rufasff

    A Septic Tank Of Greatness

    The print of "The Devil's Sleep" available through Sinister Cinema is probably the the best in existence and it burps, skips, and tears all the way trough. No matter, "The Devil's Sleep" the first film in producer George Weiss's Umberto Scalli" trilogy, in an invincible classic, a virtuoso guttersnipe flemball of a film, and the most filthy minded vision ever committed to the screen.

    Timothy Farrell's Umberto Scalli, the dark, pencil mustached keeper of the keys that stick together; makes his maiden voyage here, working as a pill pushing honcho of a hole in the wall fat farm for "society dames". In an entrance befitting one of the greats, Scalli looks over his clients and smirks to a typically unsavory side kick; "I gotta laugh, they're like trained elephants, give them a pill and send them on their way."

    In what plays out like the A.C.L.U.'s ultimate nightmare, a crusading Lady Judge is working hand in hand with the cops to fight juvenile crime. Her problem is that Scalli; through an insanely elaborate practical joke, has a photo of the judge's daughter...NUDE. Alas, morality rears it's ugly head when the "Mr. America" Scalli hired to amuse the elephants turns goodie two shoes. I won't give away the ending, but suffice to say in the final scene a character we don't know ties things up from a camera angle too far away to see what he looks like. It's that kind of movie.

    Some mere trivia: Weiss seemed to have a soft spot for Silent Movie people: the ex wives of Chaplin and Loyd both are given prominent parts, in the latter's case a horribly degrading one. Also, Jim (Robert's brother) Mitchum makes an early appearance. The only conventionally competent performances are by young unknows playing mixed up kids. "Racket Girl" fans beware: Scalli does no pimping in this film.

    But again, no matter. What counts is that, not so very long ago, there were people who looked like the people in "The Devil's Sleep", and others who behaved something like the characters. Somehow individuals got together and made "The Devil's Sleep", and it played in small, dingy, urine smelling theaters in horrible neighborhoods, and some people watched it. Truly this was The Greatest Generation. Ten out of ten.
    1bkoganbing

    Gotta keep those young ones moral after school

    This independent stinker of a film is on the order of Reefer Madness. Done in the spirit of that cult classic it's a public service film warning of the dangers of addiction to prescription meds. It stars one of Charlie Chaplin's ex-wives, Lita Grey Chaplin and why she did it God only knows. She couldn't act worth anything.

    But that does not separate her from most of the rest of the cast. Most of them you've never heard of, most only did this film maybe one or two others. Only villain Timothy Farrell and John Mitchum have some appreciable screen credits. Brother Bob Mitchum did a few clinkers in his career, but he must have razzed his brother something awful about this one. John Mitchum appears briefly in the role of a doctor.

    Farrell who is a modern gangster type took his acting lessons from the Snidely Whiplash school of villainy. Judge Chaplin who now heads the town's juvenile court, once sent him to prison.

    Farrell now runs a health club as a cover from which he can sell his pills to fat ladies trying to reduce, but that ain't enough profit. Gotta get those kids hooked and he decides that maybe if he can get Chaplin's daughter hooked he'll have had his revenge.

    What can I say, the direction is non-existent, the film looks like it was shot with my father's old Bell&Howell home movie camera, the production values are nil.

    But some might fine some humor in The Devil's Sleep's very awfulness. Ed Wood might hold his nose on this one.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The character Umberto Scalli brilliantly returns in Racket Girls from 1951. Making that movie something of a sequel with a very similar story line.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Racket Girls (1951)
    • Soundtracks
      It's Raining
      Written by John J. Potpinko

      Sung by Annette Warren

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 18, 1949 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Até o Diabo Dorme
    • Production company
      • Screen Art Pictures Corp.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 17 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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