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The Devil Poster

The Devil

1921 | 58m | English

(86 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

Dr. Muller, a friend to all, finds pleasure in turning the goodness in people to evil ends. He meets Marie Matin and her fiancée, Georges Roben, while viewing a new painting, "The Martyr--Truth Crucified by Evil." Marie declares that the picture was wrong--evil could never triumph over truth--and though Muller says he agrees with her, he plots to prove otherwise.
Release Date: Jan 17, 1921
Director: James Young
Writer: Edmund Goulding, Ferenc Molnár
Genres: Drama
Keywords influence, satire, based on play or musical, devil, evil
Production Companies Associated Exhibitors
Box Office Revenue: $0
Budget: $0
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 29, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
George Arliss Dr. Müller
Sylvia Breamer Mimi
Lucy Cotton Marie Matin
Florence Arliss Marie's Aunt
Edmund Lowe Paul de Veaux
Roland Bottomley Georges Roben
Fredric March Bal Masque Participant (uncredited)
Name Job
Edmund Goulding Screenplay
Ferenc Molnár Author
James Young Director
Harry Fischbeck Director of Photography
Charles O. Seessel Art Direction
Name Title
Andrew J. Callaghan Producer
Harry Leonhardt Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
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2025 10 2 3 1

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Reviews

CyrusPK
6.0

It may be difficult to countenance now but there was a time when George Arliss was close to being the biggest film star in the world. This slightly stooped, perhaps not conventionally handsome, mature gentleman had spent years on the stage to tremendous acclaim and achieved the same in the early so ... und era of film. His great skill was a tremendous personal charisma that defied his actual appearance. When he is on screen there is little else that the viewer remembers – his precise diction and sheer presence dominate. The Devil (1921) was Arliss’ first film and though denied his superb voice, that presence so evident in his sound films of a decade later is ever present. As Dr. Mueller he puts a loving couple to a test of fidelity, slowly drawing them through deception and innuendo into compromising circumstances. It is this sly approach that gives Arliss the opportunity to show, through expression and mouthed dialogue his skills as a seducer. I had assumed the title of the film was a metaphorical one, highlighting the devilish nature of the Arliss character, but in a final reckoning he is revealed to indeed be more than a lecherous fiend but at the very least a servant of the Dark One. The heroine is protected from his advance by a glowing cross and he is eventually seen to be defeated by the powers of light. The very essence of deux ex machina in a story that at least follows a logical path.

Jun 23, 2021
Geronimo1967
7.0

George Arliss is superb in this short feature as the marvellously manipulative, rapscallion "Dr. Müller" who relishes in the misery he causes. He overhears a conversation at an art gallery were a two people are discussing a painting illustrating that truth will always overcome evil. Our devious "Mül ... ler" sets about disproving this theory by cleverly manoeuvring "Mimi" (Sylvia Beamer) who is keen on painter "Paul" (Edmund Lowe) who is keen on "Marie" (Lucy Cotton) who is married to "Georges" (Roland Bottomley) and soon nobody trusts anyone anymore... Based on his play - and the direction and styling of the performances is clear testament to that - it is a bit stilted at times, the settings are a little too claustrophobic but Arliss is really good and sinister. Maybe the ending is a little bit disappointing, but that may depend on your own views of good v evil.

Jun 06, 2022