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The World's Greatest Sinner

  • 1962
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 22m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
972
YOUR RATING
The World's Greatest Sinner (1962)
Drama

A restless insurance agent leaves work to enter politics, promoting human immortality and potential. He creates "The Eternal Man" party and gains the nickname "God," but later questions his ... Read allA restless insurance agent leaves work to enter politics, promoting human immortality and potential. He creates "The Eternal Man" party and gains the nickname "God," but later questions his beliefs.A restless insurance agent leaves work to enter politics, promoting human immortality and potential. He creates "The Eternal Man" party and gains the nickname "God," but later questions his beliefs.

  • Director
    • Timothy Carey
  • Writer
    • Timothy Carey
  • Stars
    • Timothy Carey
    • Gil Barreto
    • Betty Rowland
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    972
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Timothy Carey
    • Writer
      • Timothy Carey
    • Stars
      • Timothy Carey
      • Gil Barreto
      • Betty Rowland
    • 21User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos6

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    Top cast31

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    Timothy Carey
    Timothy Carey
    • Clarence Hilliard
    Gil Barreto
    • Alonzo
    • (as Gil Baretto)
    Betty Rowland
    • Edna Hilliard
    James Farley
    • The Devil
    Gail Griffin
    • Betty Hilliard
    • (as Gail Griffen)
    Tyde Rule
    • Follower
    Gene Koziol
    • Follower
    Dayna Madison
    • Follower
    • (as Dana Madison)
    Gitta Maynard
    • Elderly Woman
    Titus Moede
    Titus Moede
    • Follower
    Betty Sturm
    • Follower
    Marty Prisco
    • Follower
    Grace De Carolis
    • Mother
    Carolina Samario
    • Nate
    George F. Carey
    • Follower
    Duana Dedda
    • Follower
    Doris Carey
    • Follower
    Victor Floming
    • Office Boss
    • Director
      • Timothy Carey
    • Writer
      • Timothy Carey
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews21

    6.3972
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    Featured reviews

    9ElijahCSkuggs

    The World's Greatest Under-Appreciated Actor

    Recommended to me by a complete and utter "World's Greatest Sinner" fanboy, I decided I should check it out. He said something like, "If you're a fan of insane acting performances you will not be let down." Hell, I love insane acting performances! Probably more than the next guy. F that, way more than the next guy! So, the WGS Fanboy, or he may be a Timothy Carey fanboy....anyways, WGS/Tim Carey fanboy called me out pretty much. So, the next chance I had, I popped on The World's Greatest Sinner. And I'll tell you what, it was most definitely an insane acting performance. One so great, that it made the movie. It is the movie.

    The film is simply about a tired Insurance Salesman who just doesn't want to do what he does anymore. He wants to be a somebody. And does he ever. He strives for power, and before he knows it, he has it. Watching Carey's character evolve from an everyday joe shmoe to uber-personality is basically the premise here.

    The film itself is a smart flick. Some other comment said it was ahead of it's time, but it's not really that, but it's more of a timeless film. People don't change in the way Carey's character did in just one period. Carey's strive for power and attention is a trait humans have had and probably will have until we expire as a species.

    I had no clue who Timothy Carey was prior to watching TWS. I heard he was a regular as a supporting character in a few Kubrick films. So, heading into this film, I didn't know what the dude even looked like. And boy oye oye, after seeing this film, I'll never forget. Timothy Carey is a tall, foreboding and masculine figure that delivers a style of acting which is just 100% unique. His tedious and realistic approach at acting is kinda bizarre to watch. But like I just said, it's unique. At times, with those sullen looking eyes and his relaxed way of talking, I almost thought he played his character drunk the entire film. But, when he has a scene where he needs to show emotion and energy, he's all over it. Simply put, if Carey didn't cast himself as the lead in his film (wrote, directed, acted etc.) this movie would have been in no way on Earth as entertaining.

    The World's Greatest Sinner is only a fantastic movie, because at that time, The World's Greatest Under-appreciated Actor was in it. It's a film that's different, realistic and true to the bone. Definitely a flick I'll be recommending to my more accomplished movie-going friends.
    10Pete-135

    A Stunning Wild Masterpiece Rarely Seen

    Recently I had the privilege of viewing a poor quality bootleg videotape of this film. Boy, was I in for a surprise.

    For starters, I'm not one to typically enjoy cult classics or films that are in the "so-bad-they-are-good category." My initial attraction to this film was based on one thing - Timothy Carey.

    I first learned of Timothy Carey when I purchased a Stanley Kubrick DVD of "The Killing". Carey has a small but important role in this film, and the minute he first appeared on screen I knew there was something special about this guy. There was a magnetic bizarreness to him that simply transcended the role. The character he played didn't have to be creepy, but Carey _was_ creepy. The weird way he looked with his eyes almost always at half mast, the way he spoke with his peculiar voice and heavy New York accent, and his unconventional looks (like a bizarro version of John Turturro) all worked together to really pique my curiosity about him.

    Well, onto the Internet I went. I found out more about him. He made a living generally playing seedy characters in supporting roles in all movies he appeared in, except for one. "The World's Greatest Sinner" would be not only his sole staring role, but also the only movie he wrote, produced, and directed. And never released.

    Once I got a chance to watch the bootleg, I could see why it never received a proper release in its day.

    Carey plays an insurance salesman that is seemingly depressed and bored with his job and life and decides to change. He gets inspired by rock-n-roll, becomes a rock star of sorts, a preacher, a politician, and finally sells himself as God to his cult of followers.

    This movie has some pretty dark humor, at least one shocking scene (even by today's standards, never mind 1962), and takes some potshots at organized religion.

    Maybe the thing that struck my the most about this movie is it's vitality. It feels fresh, which is so different than how many older movies hold up. This is because this film was and continues to be so far ahead of its time.

    If you are a fan of cult movies, I urge you to track this film down. If you are a fan of offbeat actors, ala Dennis Hopper, Crispin Glover, etc., I urge you to track this film down.

    It certainly is a sin that this wonderful movie is not available through normal channels.
    EyeAskance

    A legendary jerry-built "épater les bourgeois" spectacle

    Regarded by some as a masterstroke of underground cinema, and for good reason...TWGS is a gritty and highly recalcitrant walk on the wild side, gently flouting just about every vested American institution of respectability and reverence...that may not sound like a such a big deal in present times(when even TV cartoons have an insolent streak), but the America of 1962 was a very different world.

    Timothy Carey, a legendary and enigmatic Hollywood outsider, performs vibrantly in his nihilistic vanity project. He portrays a disenchanted American family man whose eccentric ideologies galvanize a small following, leading to his gradual ascention as a gold-digging lothario, frenetic rockabilly performer, and, lastly, dissentious political hegemon. The fall comes faster than the climb, however...delusional grandiosity takes hold, and he soon finds himself abandoned and detached in a sad ivory tower of deified ipseity.

    It's a conceptually alluring exercise in ideographic rabble-rousing, without question...frustratingly, however, the overt bearings of an impossibly vagabond production peg this project as an edgy, inordinate, and admittedly very ambitious home movie. Accepted on these terms, it's a chimerical wonderwork, and some will find its dodgy appeal enhanced by the unvarnished minimalism of a breadline budget.

    Mainstream viewers are unlikely to surrender gently to this earnestly hand-hammered anomaly, though it's certainly worthy of investigation(as is evident by its sizable legion of fans...a number of whom, I suspect, might not like the film quite as much as they like the *IDEA* of liking it).

    5.5/10.
    9robertguttman

    This film is what "independent cinema" is all about.

    One hears a lot about "independent cinema" these days, films made outside the mainstream studio system that reflect the individual voices of their creators. Film festivals are devoted entirely to "independent films", such as "The Sundance Film Festival". There is even an "Independent Film Channel" on cable television. Well, "The World's Greatest Sinner" really IS an "Independent Film". Timothy Carey wrote, produced, directed and starred in "The World's Greatest Sinner". Filmed on location with whatever actors and equipment he could get, int took three years to complete because he had no budget and made the movie whenever time permitted between professional acting jobs. In fact, the story of the making of "The World's Greatest Sinner" would make a pretty compelling subject for a movie in itself, much as was done some years ago to "Plan 9 From Outer Space".

    This movie is about unrestrained ego. The main character is an insurance salesman who wants to become something more. By turns he transforms himself into a rock & roll star, an evangelist and a presidential candidate. During that process his ego enlarges exponentially until it becomes clear that his ultimate goal is nothing less than to become God. Oh, and as if all that were not bizarre enough, the sound track was written and performed by Frank Zappa, early in his career, years before he became famous as the leader of "The Mothers of Invention".

    Nobody is ever going to say that this movie has the best production values. Apart from everything else, the three-year production time inevitably created some continuity issues. Nevertheless, this is a film that has something to say which no other would dare to say, and says it emphatically. Furthermore, despite the fact that matters frequently go over-the-top, the story is frighteningly plausible and believable. Yes, one cannot escape the conviction that the events depicted really could happen.

    Although "The World's Greatest Sinner" is never going to be everyone's cup of tea, or indeed was ever intended to be, it definitely deserves a place on the list of movies everyone should see at least once before they die.
    7Merely

    Weird & Good

    Well, I FINALLY saw this last night. So weird. So bizarre. So timely. Yes, completely camp. The acting, old-timey film with it's technical gaps, music. The script still fits in today. Politics and religion in the spotlight. So ahead of it's time. Really keeps ones attention though. Tim Carey was born to play this role.

    I watched mostly for the Frank Zappa soundtrack, but was a memorable film experience that I'm glad I had.

    I also really miss the days when this website let you write a review that didn't have to be ten lines long. Yes, I've been here that long, but one could also argue long enough to actually do the correct thing here and just write a longer review. I feel ornery. Today.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The soundtrack was created by Frank Zappa, later of The Mothers of Invention. It was recorded at Chaffey College in Alta Loma, CA. He was 22 at the time and it was his first film score. He later said he hated the film and called it "the world's worst movie". He said that his score was an intentional parody of the music and style of Elvis Presley, whom he detested.
    • Goofs
      (at around 13 mins) When Clarence tries to learn to play the guitar.
    • Quotes

      Clarence Hilliard: Let's be different. Let's not hate anyone.

    • Crazy credits
      Instead of listing the crew's jobs, the names are preceded by or are accompanied by, an image. For example, scissors cutting a piece of film (editor) and a Dollar sign (producer).
    • Connections
      Featured in TCM Underground: The World's Greatest Sinner (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      World's Greatest Sinner
      (uncredited)

      Written by Frank Zappa

      Performed by Baby Ray & The Ferns

      (opening credits music)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • June 14, 1962 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Величайший грешник мира
    • Filming locations
      • El Monte, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Frenzy Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $250,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 22 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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