The Devil-Doll | |
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Directed by | Tod Browning |
Produced by | Edward J. Mannix |
Written by | Tod Browning Guy Endore Garrett Fort Erich von Stroheim |
Starring | Lionel Barrymore Maureen O'Sullivan |
Music by | Franz Waxman |
Cinematography | Leonard Smith |
Editing by | Frederick Y. Smith |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release date(s) | July 10, 1936 |
Running time | 79 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Devil-Doll (1936) is a horror film directed by Tod Browning and starring a cross-dressing Lionel Barrymore and Maureen O'Sullivan as his daughter, Lorraine Levond. The movie was adapted from the novel Burn Witch Burn! (1936) by Abraham Merritt.[1]
Contents |
Paul Lavond (Barrymore), who was wrongly convicted of robbing his own Paris bank and killing a night watchman more than seventeen years ago, escapes Devil's Island with Marcel (Henry B. Walthall) a scientist who is trying to create a formula to reduce people to one-sixth of their original size. The intended purpose of the formula is to make the Earth's limited resources—clean water, food, energy, etc.—last longer for an ever-growing population. The scientist dies after their escape.
Lavond joins the scientist's widow, Malita (Rafaela Ottiano), and uses the shrinking technique to obtain revenge on the three former business associates who had framed him and to vindicate himself. Lavond clears his name and secures the future happiness of his estranged daughter, Lorraine (O'Sullivan), in the process. Malita isn't satisfied, and wants to continue to use the formula for personal gain. She tries to kill Paul when he announces that he is finished with their partnership, having accomplished all he intended, but she ends up blowing up their lab and killing herself.
To save his daughter from scandal, Paul tells Toto, Lorraine's fiancee, about what happened. He meets his daughter, pretending to be the deceased Marcel. He tells Lorraine that Paul Lavond died during their escape from prison, but that he loved her very much. Lavond then departs, planning to leave France forever.