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The Soul of a Monster

  • 1944
  • Approved
  • 1h 1m
IMDb RATING
5.0/10
400
YOUR RATING
Rose Hobart and George Macready in The Soul of a Monster (1944)
DramaHorrorRomanceThriller

As famous surgeon, George Winson, lies on his deathbed, his wife Ann calls on unknown powers to save him. A strange woman (Lilyan) appears from nowhere and takes control. George recovers, bu... Read allAs famous surgeon, George Winson, lies on his deathbed, his wife Ann calls on unknown powers to save him. A strange woman (Lilyan) appears from nowhere and takes control. George recovers, but he's mysteriously dominated by Lilyan, and leaves his wife. When the evil woman tempts h... Read allAs famous surgeon, George Winson, lies on his deathbed, his wife Ann calls on unknown powers to save him. A strange woman (Lilyan) appears from nowhere and takes control. George recovers, but he's mysteriously dominated by Lilyan, and leaves his wife. When the evil woman tempts him into letting his best friend (Roger) die Wilson realizes that Lilyan wants his soul in ... Read all

  • Director
    • Will Jason
  • Writer
    • Edward Dein
  • Stars
    • Rose Hobart
    • George Macready
    • Jim Bannon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.0/10
    400
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Will Jason
    • Writer
      • Edward Dein
    • Stars
      • Rose Hobart
      • George Macready
      • Jim Bannon
    • 18User reviews
    • 23Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos50

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    Top cast25

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    Rose Hobart
    Rose Hobart
    • Lilyan Gregg
    George Macready
    George Macready
    • Dr. George Winson
    Jim Bannon
    Jim Bannon
    • Dr. Roger Vance
    Jeanne Bates
    Jeanne Bates
    • Ann Winson
    Erik Rolf
    Erik Rolf
    • Fred Stevens
    Ernest Hilliard
    Ernest Hilliard
    • Wayne
    Edith Evanson
    Edith Evanson
    • Mrs. Jameson, Housekeeper
    • (uncredited)
    Al Hill
    Al Hill
    • Waiter
    • (uncredited)
    Milton Kibbee
    Milton Kibbee
    • Driver in Sedan
    • (uncredited)
    Ruth Lee
    Ruth Lee
    • Woman in Sedan
    • (uncredited)
    Grace Lenard
    • Woman in Bar
    • (uncredited)
    Anne Loos
    Anne Loos
    • Nurse
    • (uncredited)
    Cy Malis
    • Workman
    • (uncredited)
    Ida Moore
    Ida Moore
    • Mrs. Kirby
    • (uncredited)
    Clarence Muse
    Clarence Muse
    • Entertainer
    • (uncredited)
    Ervin Nyiregyhazi
    • Ervin, Piano Player
    • (uncredited)
    Brian O'Hara
    • Police Driver
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Perry
    • Workman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Will Jason
    • Writer
      • Edward Dein
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    5.0400
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    Featured reviews

    1tauraq

    I cannot give high ratings

    To films where the casting director is on crack and is a flaming Misogynist. There is a 19 year age gap between the husband and wife characters in this bloviated farce of a flick.

    So I will not torture myself with another zero chemistry debacle made by old white men who view women and pieces of property.

    Sorry, but not sorry as I grew up on these movies not realizing how unfairly women and minorities are portrayed in them. So as an African American Veteran who grew up during segregation, I have learned much over the years. As well as seen a lot of these old movies in the truthful ignorance and degradation that spews from them.

    Nope, a hard pass for me.
    3DanielW-907

    Less Than Monstrous

    Of all the major studios from Hollywood's Golden Age, Columbia turned out the best "B" pictures. Cheaply made, featuring second tier actors, these flicks were often as entertaining, if not more so, than the quality films they supported.

    The Soul of a Monster (1944) may not be the snazziest thing to come off Tinseltown's assembly line but with sinister George Macready starring, it's worth perusing.

    He plays altruistic George Winson, a dying surgeon. About to depart for that big operating room in the sky, his wife pleads for help, unmindful of whence it comes. "If there is another power... good or evil... save him". Uh, oh... Enter Rose Hobart as the unholy Lilyan who does just that. But his miraculous recovery comes with a price. Once saintly and self sacrificing, George is now cruel and uncaring. He even kills his faithful German shepherd. Now that's wicked!

    The creepy Macready and the diabolical Hobart keep things interesting, and Burnett Guffey (In a Lonely Place) delivers wonderful Val Lewton like B&W cinematography (shadows upon shadows!).

    Unfortunately, cursed by a half-baked screenplay and cop-out finish, The Soul of a Monster never reaches the heights of the macabre promised by its spooky opening and demonic duo.

    Directed by Will Jason.
    Michael_Elliott

    Poor Movie

    Soul of a Monster, The (1944)

    * (out of 4)

    Forgotten horror film from Columbia about a doctor on his deathbed whose wife prays, to good or evil, that he lives. He gets better thanks to a mysterious woman but what they don't know is that this woman put the soul of a monster into the doctor's body. There's a very good reason Columbia hasn't released this sucker on any home video format and that's because it's pretty damn bad. I took me three viewings before I could watch the entire film without falling asleep. The film tries very hard to recapture the mood and feel of a Val Lewton film but it fails on all levels.
    5Bunuel1976

    THE SOUL OF A MONSTER (Will Jason, 1944) **

    What little reputation this film has is very mixed, so it is no surprise my own reaction proved likewise. Revolving around an intriguing concept, yet the script (by genre regular Edward Dein) is seemingly at a loss about what to do with it: an eminent and much beloved physician (George Macready) lies dying and, in desperation at the unfairness of it all, his wife (lovely Jeanne Bates – who, late in life, somehow got to appear in two David Lynch movies!) renounces God and asks the Devil for help; immediately afterwards, a mysterious woman (Rose Hobart – from the 1931 DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE) turns up, restores Macready to health and basically starts running his life. While happy to see her husband get better, Bates soon notices that his personality has changed – becoming distant, aggressive and even loses interest in his work: in short, alienating everyone around him – so that she actually wishes he had died back then! All of this sends her running into the arms of Macready's best friend, Erik Rolf (looking like a cross between Glenn Ford and the young Orson Welles...or, for that matter a local film-buff friend of mine, Robert!!): his character and relationship to the couple is pretty ambiguous – he acts almost as their spiritual adviser (thus being instantly and openly averse to Hobart's machinations), yet is a constant presence even at social engagements, hardly deigning to keep the 'love triangle' situation in check! Anyway, Macready's negligence costs a colleague's life and the once-respected doctor is put on trial…only this takes us back to the very beginning, so that all that went on in the interim turns out to have been nothing more than a death-bed hallucination – the moral being that one must face up to death with dignity and resignation, apparently after having done one's bit for the good of mankind (which should have especially resonated with wartime audiences)! The film offers more than adequate atmosphere (courtesy of future double Oscar-winning cinematographer Burnett Guffey) and Hobart (with an icy demeanor and a devilish coiffure to boot) is quite good – the combination of which leads to its eeriest moment, the very first appearance of the Devil's envoy in which she is unperturbed by a car running her over and then, after following her in a tilted camera angle shot, no less, she is seen literally electrifying her surroundings! However, as I said at the start, the plot is insufficient as Macready is not seen doing much of anything after he is revived (what was the point, then?) and Hobart actually has to prod him towards committing murder (naturally because it constitutes the extremity of an evil deed)! That said, the choice of target (the 'pastor'/rival) would benefit each of them – only he flubs it and, so does the film, since this clearly Lewtonesque sequence is kept on going much longer than necessary!; consequently, the inherent suspense in having the 'sleepwalking' Macready (armed with an ice pick long before BASIC INSTINCT [1992]!!) stalk Rolf by night out on the streets is gradually diffused…particularly with the unintentionally comic off-screen effect of the sudden opening of a rising street elevator's hatch sounding like Macready had bumped into some dustbin or a mailbox around the corner! Mind you, I am glad I acquired the film also because, as it happens, this viewing actually urged me to get back to work on my unfinished review of the slightly similar but far superior ALIAS NICK BEAL (1949; which I had originally watched on my birthday back in August) – in which Macready now actually (and atypically) takes on the role of the Minister Of God who strikes fear into (and eventually brings down) the Agent Of Hell.
    7utgard14

    "The most innocent thing can be treacherous."

    This one's a hidden gem. Not perfect by any means but very different and interesting. It's a great B movie from Columbia starring the always reliable George Macready as a respected doctor saved from death's door by a mysterious possibly supernatural woman (Rose Hobart). The rest of the story involves an attempt by his wife and friends to save his soul as he descends into darkness. Five years later in Alias Nick Beal, Macready would play the friend out to save the soul of Thomas Mitchell in a similar situation. This is unlike anything else out in 1944 or before. It's easy to dismiss it as talky and yes the ending is a cheat but I was entertained the whole time. It's got nice atmosphere, a good cast, and cinematography from future Oscar winner Burnett Guffey.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the St. Petersburg Florida Evening Independent newspaper on August 10, 1944, the following was noted: "There will be no more shattered eardrums for movie sound men. Movie ammunition has at last gone on the subdued side. After exhausting its pre-war supply of blank cartridges, Columbia Studio laid in a supply of the new wartime restricted type for scenes in which gunplay is needed. First person to fire the new ammunition was Rose Hobart in a scene for 'The Soul of a Monster,' in which she is supposed to empty six chambers of a revolver into George Macready. The smaller explosive charge in the shells proved easier on the actors and crew, who used to get mild shock occasionally from the heavier calibre weapons. But it is the sound men -- the guys with the amplifiers and earphones -- who have offered up the biggest prayer of thanks."
    • Goofs
      Several minutes into the film, after the main character has had a miraculous recovery, he has an encounter with a German shepherd that has a mostly black muzzle. The dog growls at him, so he throws a pair of hedge clippers at the dog and chases it away. In the next shot, the dog runs to a woman in his yard and the dog has a much lighter colored muzzle with very little black on it.
    • Connections
      Featured in Shock Theatre: The Soul of a Monster (1959)
    • Soundtracks
      Boogie Woogie Special
      (uncredited)

      by Saul Chaplin and Walter G. Samuels

      Performed by Clarence Muse

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 17, 1944 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Poder Satánico
    • Production company
      • Columbia Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 1m(61 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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