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She Devil

She Devil (1957)

April. 01,1957
|
5.6
| Horror Science Fiction

Biochemists give fruit-fly serum to a dying woman, with side effects.

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Lovesusti
1957/04/01

The Worst Film Ever

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Invaderbank
1957/04/02

The film creates a perfect balance between action and depth of basic needs, in the midst of an infertile atmosphere.

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Lucia Ayala
1957/04/03

It's simply great fun, a winsome film and an occasionally over-the-top luxury fantasy that never flags.

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Geraldine
1957/04/04

The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.

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JohnHowardReid
1957/04/05

Copyright 1957 by Regal Films, Inc. No New York opening. U.S. release: April 1957. U.K. release: July 1957. No record of any Australian release. 6,977 feet. 77 minutes.SYNOPSIS: A variant on "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" with Mari Blanchard making the transformation from sickly womanhood to beautiful, homicidal vamp.VIEWERS GUIDE: Adults.COMMENT: "B"players wrestle with a "B" script of unabashed banality. Neither the director (who co-authored the script) nor the special effects and make-up men are much help.OTHER VIEWS: A morbid and thoroughly disagreeable exercise in medical malpractice, murder and juvenilely pseudo-scientific mumbo- jumbo. Addicts of the artless may find compensation in the absurdly high-flying medical/ethical conversations ("She was destined to die anyway"). — Adapted from the "Monthly Film Bulletin".Neumann's film, "She Devil" was a step up, but not by much. Based on Stanley G. Weinbaum's story, "The Adaptive Ultimate", it postulates what might become of a person who has taken a serum derived from the fruit fly, "nature's most adaptive insect". Unfortunately, the answers that the film provides are unbelievably dull ones. Mari Blanchard plays the tubercular patient that is injected with the serum. It cures her but it has the Jekyll-Hyde effect of altering her physical appearance (her hair lightens and her skin color changes) and it gives her criminal tendencies... Under Neumann's plodding direction and script, the effect is dull rather than dramatic. The greatest visual asset of the film is the appearance of Albert "Dr Cyclops" Dekker as the elder scientist, but he and the rest of the dispirited cast are given little to do. — Dennis Fischer in an article published in Gary J. Svehla's marvelous fanzine "Midnight Marquee".

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MartinHafer
1957/04/06

Dr. Scott has created a miracle serum. When he's given it to animals with horrible injuries or on the verge of death, they quickly recover and are healthy. So, they want to try it out on a human...but ethically the only way they could do this is to give it to a terminal patient with no hope for recovery. Kyra (Mari Blanchard) is dying of advanced tuberculosis and she very willingly agrees to be the guinea pig. Amazingly, she soon completely recovers. However, there are unforeseen complications--she is now virtually indestructible AND she's evil!Soon, Kyra is off doing rotten things...and with seeming impunity. In a really, really neat scene for a 1950s film, she bashes some poor guy over the head while stealing something. When the police are searching for her, she hides out in a dressing room and wills her hair color to change...and it does on camera! Then, she just walks off...as they're looking for a brunette and she's now a platinum blonde! And, she seems to exude sex appeal that turn men into puppets in her hands! What's next for this budding sociopath with X-Men powers?!Overall, this is a highly entertaining film that doesn't always make sense. Why didn't the doctors go to the police? This never made complete sense.

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gopaco
1957/04/07

I too recall this picture when I saw it in a movie theater in Ashtabula, Ohio in the 50's. What I found fascinating about it was the Dr. who was in love with this patient and how difficult it was for him to finally make the decision to give her a shot of the anti-serum to stop the violence. I remember how she willed herself to change and become a blonde when she was in the changing room, how the Dr. stole some hair from her hair brush so he could have it analyzed and when she is given the final anti-serum and reverts back to the sweet brunette he loved. Even as a 8 year old,it touched me and made it quite memorable, even in these times. Would love to see it re-done as well. Also, does anyone know if there is any way to get a VHS of this picture?

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eastofeden87
1957/04/08

I remember seeing this movie when I was a kid on the Sunday afternoon TV matinee. In the film, a terminally-ill woman will die unless an experimental drug is administered by the scientist who developed the serum, if I remember correctly, from some type of insect or spider (or was it some deadly plant?). Her life is saved, but she has developed extraordinary methods of survival and becomes seemingly indestructible. What can the scientist do to solve this situation? In many ways, this film is typical of the 50's "horror" genre as seen in its low-budget, B-list tier of performers and the opinion that a man can save a woman, but who can save a woman from herself (especially one who's developed into some kind of monster)? As a kid, I remember being really impressed with a scene where, to avoid being caught, the woman (having developed those incredible survival techniques), mentally changes her hair color from brunette to platinum blonde (much like a chameleon). I remember thinking that would be really cool to be able to do that! So while this film is no awards-contender, it's a memorable quasi-horror title from the 50's!

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