Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaSatan enlists the help of a suicide victim in Hell to lure unsuspecting earthly victims to their eternal doom. Contains three somewhat unrelated Twilight Zone-esque stories.Satan enlists the help of a suicide victim in Hell to lure unsuspecting earthly victims to their eternal doom. Contains three somewhat unrelated Twilight Zone-esque stories.Satan enlists the help of a suicide victim in Hell to lure unsuspecting earthly victims to their eternal doom. Contains three somewhat unrelated Twilight Zone-esque stories.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
Lon Chaney Jr.
- Satan
- (as Lon Chaney)
Ralph Brown
- Charlie
- (cenas de arquivo)
John Crawford
- Donald Powell
- (cenas de arquivo)
Frank Taylor
- Dr. Ben Seastrom
- (cenas de arquivo)
- (as Bert Johnson)
Chalmers Goodlin
- Dr. Hume
- (cenas de arquivo)
Gunnel Broström
- Madame Germaine
- (cenas de arquivo)
- (as Gunnel Brostrom)
Sara Harts
- Angelica - Frozen Girl
- (cenas de arquivo)
- (as Tammy Newmara)
Inga Edwards
- Dixie
- (cenas de arquivo)
- (as Ingrid Bedoya)
Eve Hossner
- Girl in Photograph
- (cenas de arquivo)
Gordon Adler
- Policeman
- (cenas de arquivo)
- (não creditado)
Birgitta Alm
- Lady on the Street
- (cenas de arquivo)
- (não creditado)
Len Cooper
- Ticket Seller
- (cenas de arquivo)
- (não creditado)
Torsten Lilliecrona
- Police Inspector Braun
- (cenas de arquivo)
- (não creditado)
Jason Lindsay
- Dr. Holt - Museum Chief
- (cenas de arquivo)
- (não creditado)
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
Lon Chaney Jr plays Satan - the devil himself - in this fun, often funny, little film. There are 3 segments and in-between them you will see Satan (Chaney) giving Satanya (Kadler) her next assignment which leads to the next segment.
The first segment is about a photographer who is a sex pervert. He commits murder and a woman that helped him regrets helping him. There is a photograph that will "haunt" the photographer... he becomes literally scared to death.
The seconded segment is of some miners that discovers a whole and well preserved prehistoric woman frozen in ice. They get her out with ice still surrounding her. One man falls in love with frozen woman, he believes he was with her in a past life... he becomes crazy. (An excellent segment).
The third segment is of a man who keeps having a reoccurring dream, tells his psychiatrist and the doctor has the man to sorta play out the dream. The man ends up at a fortuneteller who sees his fate in her crystal ball - he will die at midnight by her.
The film is not scary but it is fun to watch in it's way.
8/10
The first segment is about a photographer who is a sex pervert. He commits murder and a woman that helped him regrets helping him. There is a photograph that will "haunt" the photographer... he becomes literally scared to death.
The seconded segment is of some miners that discovers a whole and well preserved prehistoric woman frozen in ice. They get her out with ice still surrounding her. One man falls in love with frozen woman, he believes he was with her in a past life... he becomes crazy. (An excellent segment).
The third segment is of a man who keeps having a reoccurring dream, tells his psychiatrist and the doctor has the man to sorta play out the dream. The man ends up at a fortuneteller who sees his fate in her crystal ball - he will die at midnight by her.
The film is not scary but it is fun to watch in it's way.
8/10
I once asked John Carradine on the set of one of his last pictures if he or Chaney felt like they wasted their talents on flicks like this and in saltier language he Said "Screw it,I like to play the ponies and it beats watching TV." Aptly put. Early in 1960 Curt SIodmak( The WOlf Man ) and Herbert Strock ( I Was A Teeenage Frankenstein ) went to Sweden and filmed in English with Swedish Subtitles about a dozen half hour playlets for a TV series called 13 Demon Street.It was pretty awful from what I've seen and didn't get picked up for U.S. syndication. Each week Chaney would would spin a weird tale from his old curiosity shop and three of these are included here and made into a ersatz feature with a cheezy wrap around with Chaney as a very happy Satan.If you are a Chaney completist you have to have it and it's certainly not as bad as some low budget flicks of the early sixties but Little SHop Of Horrors it's not. Because Of Chaney's status The Devil's Messenger received top billing on a drive-in double bill with the far superior Carnival Of Souls.
"The Devil's Messenger" may have been issued in 1962, carrying a 1961 copyright, but served as a feature compilation of a 1959 TV series shot in Sweden by writer/director Curt Siodmak, titled 13 DEMON STREET. Lon Chaney was imported as host, his minimal footage seen at the opening and close of all 13 half hour episodes, none of which were picked up by US television, but did play in Sweden. Producer Kenneth Herts hired director Herbert L. Strock to do what he could in providing a way for Herts to recoup his losses, and thus this feature film was born, incorporating three episodes with new wraparound scenes promoting host Chaney to Satan himself. Karen Kadler (Mrs. Kenneth Herts) had already appeared as a model in the episode "Fever," but here plays an entirely new character, appropriately named Satanya, newest arrival in Hell after a wrist slashing suicide, called upon by Chaney's Devil to carry out a special mission as recruiter for three separate characters. A camera provides the link to the first tale, "The Photograph" (reduced to 19 minutes), with veteran John Crawford as a womanizing professional photographer with a habit of bedding his models, who rapes and murders an unresponsive woman whose house was his primary subject, its image reflecting his dead victim at closer and closer intervals, one that no one else but her killer can see. Satan offers Satanya a pick, leading into the second tale, "The Girl in the Glacier" (reduced to 16 minutes), in which a mining expedition uncovers the perfectly preserved body of a naked woman in an icy tomb, transported to a Swedish museum for closer examination. One anthropologist becomes obsessed with her enticing presence (he names her Angelica), resorting to murder to prevent a rival colleague from despoiling his beloved. A crystal ball is the natural connection for story three, "Condemned in the Crystal" (reduced to 21 minutes), as Chaney's Satan proclaims: "some people say they can see things in a crystal ball, others say they can foretell the future, others say they can reconstruct the past, but they only see what we down here let them see because the crystal ball is the toy of the Devil!" Michael Hinn's John Radian, the man responsible for Satanya's despondent suicide (no connection whatsoever to the episode in question), is consumed by fears for his uncertain future, until a psychiatrist advises him to confront them head on by returning to a childhood haunt with a room he had been too scared to enter as a boy. Inside is a fortune teller, Madame Germaine (Gunnel Brostrom), who claims to know nothing of Radian but predicts that she will be the instrument of his midnight death. The newly filmed conclusion features Hinn, the only actor who repeated his series role for the added footage, joining Satanya in Hell for one final task, to deliver the ultimate weapon that Satan could devise, one that man knows only too well how to use. Lon Chaney is relaxed and confident as a smiling Devil, bringing a great deal of energetic humor to his role of genial host for a Hell he compares to being an exclusive club, one that requires more room for new members. With 10 1/2 minutes screen time, Chaney probably gets more footage than he did in all 13 episodes combined of the little seen 13 DEMON STREET, more in line with Boris Karloff's unsold THE VEIL than any actual show broadcast at the time. Some, though not all, episodes have found their way to YouTube, the entire series available in certain gray market packages. As a feature film (the only way many viewers have experienced 13 DEMON STREET), it served its successful purpose at the box office, though Curt Siodmak's name was nowhere to be found on screen, Leo Guild sole credited writer, Herbert L. Strock sole credited director. When Satanya asks what his purpose is in ruining lives, Chaney's exuberant Devil sums it up nicely: "people ruin their own lives, all we do is help them a bit!"
"The Devil's Messenger" is an obscure and low-budgeted horror omnibus that recycles three short stories from an even more obscure 50s TV-series named "13, Demon Street". The series was rapidly produced to cash in on the tremendous success of Rod Serling's "The Twilight Zone", but already got canceled after one season. In an ultimate attempt to gain profit out of the investment, the three best (?) stories were bundled into an anthology movie.
Undoubtedly the best thing about this curious little film is the presence of Lon Chaney Jr., as the Devil himself, in the wraparound story. He sends a recent suicide victim - aptly named Satanya - back to the earthly surface to collect new souls for Hell. You guessed it; - the people whom Satanya are sent after are also the protagonists of the individual segments. Fallen horror icon Chaney ("The Wolf Man") was appearing in all sorts of inferior Z-grade movies and TV-series at the time. In this role, he at least visibly enjoys himself.
The first story is more than adequate, while numbers two and three are utterly weak and forgettable. The influence of "The Twilight Zone" is clearly noticeable in all three segments, but only the "The Photograph" comes somewhat close to copying the uncanny atmosphere and surreal mystery of Serling's landmark series. In this story, an arrogant photographer, who committed rape and murder whilst on an assignment in snowy Maine, sees his nameless victim inexplicably appear in the photos that he makes and slowly loses his mind. The other two are hardly even worth summarizing.
Undoubtedly the best thing about this curious little film is the presence of Lon Chaney Jr., as the Devil himself, in the wraparound story. He sends a recent suicide victim - aptly named Satanya - back to the earthly surface to collect new souls for Hell. You guessed it; - the people whom Satanya are sent after are also the protagonists of the individual segments. Fallen horror icon Chaney ("The Wolf Man") was appearing in all sorts of inferior Z-grade movies and TV-series at the time. In this role, he at least visibly enjoys himself.
The first story is more than adequate, while numbers two and three are utterly weak and forgettable. The influence of "The Twilight Zone" is clearly noticeable in all three segments, but only the "The Photograph" comes somewhat close to copying the uncanny atmosphere and surreal mystery of Serling's landmark series. In this story, an arrogant photographer, who committed rape and murder whilst on an assignment in snowy Maine, sees his nameless victim inexplicably appear in the photos that he makes and slowly loses his mind. The other two are hardly even worth summarizing.
"Three macabre tales of terror are featured in this frightful thriller hosted by the incomparable 'Mr. D' (Lon Chaney Jr.). A psychotic photographer is faced with a beauty that haunts his pictures and dreams in one tale. A scientist becomes obsessed with a frozen 'Ice Princess' that leads to an unfortunate ending in another tale. Finally, a man fears his own death after a visit with a fortuneteller in the last of these horrifying stories," according to the DVD sleeve's synopsis.
Although possessing three individual stories, "The Devil's Messenger" does have a unifying plot strand, featuring the character portrayed by Karen Kadler ("Satanya"). She has committed suicide, and is sent back to Earth, by Lon Chaney Jr. (as Satan), on various missions. Other than that, the stories don't have much to do with each other. Unfortunately, Mr. Chaney is an uninteresting devil. The first story, featuring John Crawford (as Donald Powell) is the best, with good photography and "A Most Unusual Camera" (Twilight Zone) worthy plot.
*** The Devil's Messenger (1961) Herbert L. Strock ~ Karen Kadler, John Crawford, Lon Chaney Jr.
Although possessing three individual stories, "The Devil's Messenger" does have a unifying plot strand, featuring the character portrayed by Karen Kadler ("Satanya"). She has committed suicide, and is sent back to Earth, by Lon Chaney Jr. (as Satan), on various missions. Other than that, the stories don't have much to do with each other. Unfortunately, Mr. Chaney is an uninteresting devil. The first story, featuring John Crawford (as Donald Powell) is the best, with good photography and "A Most Unusual Camera" (Twilight Zone) worthy plot.
*** The Devil's Messenger (1961) Herbert L. Strock ~ Karen Kadler, John Crawford, Lon Chaney Jr.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesEdited out of three distinctive episodes, The Photograph (1959), The Girl in the Glacier (1959) and Condemned in the Crystal (1959), all of which were directed by Curt Siodmak, for the Swedish/US TV series 13 Demon Street (1959), shot in English but originally aired with Swedish subtitles. Lon Chaney Jr. was brought to Sweden to film a framing story for the sake of continuity.
- Erros de gravaçãoPhotographer Don tells Charlie that "somebody" is coming out of the house in the photograph. When Charlie suggests that he's imagining it and they should look at the photograph, he says "If I can't see her, you'll believe me."
- Versões alternativasEdited from episodes of the TV series "13 Demon Street" (1959). New footage of Lon Chaney as Satan was filmed to replace the original footage of him as host of the TV show.
- ConexõesEdited from 13 Demon Street (1959)
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- Tempo de duração1 hora 12 minutos
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- Proporção
- 1.33 : 1
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By what name was The Devil's Messenger (1962) officially released in Canada in English?
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