UNLIMITED STREAMING
WITH PRIME VIDEO
TRY 30-DAY TRIAL
Home > Drama >

The Devil's Party

The Devil's Party (1938)

June. 02,1938
|
5.7
| Drama Crime

Adults who grew up as slum kids meet later in life, but murder disrupts their reunion.

...

Watch Trailer

Cast

Similar titles

Reviews

GamerTab
1938/06/02

That was an excellent one.

More
AniInterview
1938/06/03

Sorry, this movie sucks

More
Kidskycom
1938/06/04

It's funny watching the elements come together in this complicated scam. On one hand, the set-up isn't quite as complex as it seems, but there's an easy sense of fun in every exchange.

More
Tobias Burrows
1938/06/05

It's easily one of the freshest, sharpest and most enjoyable films of this year.

More
DigitalRevenantX7
1938/06/06

During a private party with his old childhood gang in his nightclub, Marty Malone secretly sends his two henchmen Frank Diamond & Sam to collect on a gambling debt. The thugs accidentally kill the target but have the bright idea to make the scene look like an accident. But one of Marty's friends, a policeman named Joe O'Mara, walks in on the thugs staging the scene & is promptly killed. His brother Mike, also a cop, tries to find the killers. Marty is also on the warpath, giving Diamond & Sam a day to leave town. But the thugs decide to cover their tracks by informing Mike that Marty was responsible for his brother's death. Mike is stopped from killing Marty by their mutual friend Father Jerry Donovan, who believes that there is more to the story than meets the eye. As Diamond & Sam try to play both sides of the fence, secretly tipping off Mike about Marty's involvement, they blackmail Marty to 'assist' them with a robbery where they plan to kill him.This film noir from 1938 is a relatively obscure entry in the genre & can be found on old DVD multipacks as filler. The film has not aged too well since its plot is pretty mundane. But what nearly kills it is the mediocre double crosses angle that is initially interesting but is overblown by several degrees. It is pretty much a standard thriller that won't look out of place on the graveyard shift of a retro film cable channel.

More
bkoganbing
1938/06/07

Elements of Manhattan Melodrama and Angels With Dirty Faces are to be found in The Devil's Party. Though the two cited are better films The Devil's Party can certainly hold its own.Back in the day four boys and the tomboy girl that tagged along with them who grew up to be Victor McLaglen, Paul Kelly, John Gallaudet, William Gargan and Beatrice Roberts commit a robbery in which a fire is started. The boy grows up to be McLaglen takes the rap for the rest and goes to reform school.Fast forward several years and the grownups are now the owner of a swank gambling club and the girl singer attraction in same which would be McLaglen and Roberts. Paul Kelly has become a priest who runs a settlement house and Gargan and Gallaudet who are brothers are cops with ambitions to become detectives.It's that ambition and the fact that McLaglen sends a pair of enforcers played by Joe Downing and Frank Jenks to collect a gambling debt and they kill the debtor sets in motion a whole string of events that pits the former pals from Hell's Kitchen against each other and it results in tragedy.Some nice performances all around by the principal players make this B programmer from Universal something special. The Devil's Party is a real cinema diamond in the rough waiting to be discovered.

More
MartinHafer
1938/06/08

The film begins with a group of five kids playing around a warehouse. They accidentally light the place ablaze and run when the police arrive. However, one of the gang (Marty) is caught and he refuses to tell them who else was involved. So, he takes the rap for everyone and ends up growing into a guy who is a shady character--owning his own casino and consorting with disreputable types.The other four members of the gang grew into a not particularly talented lounge singer who works for Marty (Helen), a priest (Jerry) and two brothers who are firemen (Joe and Mike). Each year, they all meet for a reunion and are life-long friends.This friendship is tested when two thugs that work for Marty kill a man. Joe suspects it is not an accident and when he goes back to investigate, the thugs kill him as well! Now Mike takes up where Joe left off and he begins to suspect Marty's involvement. As for Marty, he did NOT want anyone killed and is stuck having to cover for the two thugs because this all began when he ordered the two to rough up a customer who refused to make good on his gambling debts. The problem is that the thugs have plans of their own and they refuse to leave town when Marty tells them to beat it.In the middle of this mess is Father Jerry. He cannot allow Mike to kill Marty but also cannot just ignore Marty's involvement. How all this is worked out is something you'll just have to see for yourself.Overall, this is a very interesting B-film with some nice twists and turns thanks to some excellent writing. As far as the acting goes, it's just fine, though Victor McLaglen in the lead is a real standout--in a tough but very sympathetic performance.

More
Hitchcoc
1938/06/09

A group of young kids growing up in Hell's Kitchen form a lifelong bond. Because one refused to rat the others out, he goes to the reformatory. As adults they find their way to conflicting positions in society. Two cops, a priest, and a nightclub owner. The latter is mixed up in some shady dealings, mostly related to gambling. He hires a couple guys to rough a "client" up but they don't heed his limitations and kill the guy. This sets of a series of events where he is now under suspicion and brings about the death of one of his lifelong buddies. The film looks pretty good and it has that cool black and white element. Of course, honor is at the center, but that honor is not respected by the "really" bad guys. Victor McLaglan's character must confront his own miscues and face the music for his actions. It's not a bad movie, but there are absolutely no surprises and the characters actions are frequently pretty hard to swallow.

More