The Devil's Hand (1961) Poster

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5/10
A still-relevant message
fjaye26 June 2012
"The Devil's Hand" is a slick little B-film that moves at an amazingly fast clip. Don't look for deep characterizations, or explorations of motives, or anything else that would make the story stumble.

This flick takes itself seriously. It's established at the outset that the Gamba cult is real, and several scenes indicate that it has actual power. And there's never a nudge or wink from any of the characters to indicate otherwise.

The acting may not be top-notch, but it's credible enough. The opening theme is quite cool, too, and would be a good addition to a surf rock collection; unfortunately, it's never identified.

And the overall theme is still relevant today—how easy it can be to get sucked into a cult (religious, political, philosophical—take your pick) because of one's hopes of improving his lot. Look at the worshipers; by and large they look just like you'n'me. No wild-eyed zealots, no borderline personalities, just…ordinary people.

My only real quibble is the casting of Neil Hamilton as the villain. He seems to have been rather a one-note talent; his demeanor throughout the movie, whether fronting the doll shop or presiding over potential human sacrifice, is rather bland. Or maybe I just can't accept Commissioner Gordon being on the wrong side of the law!
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5/10
Worshipping Gamba to a bongo beat.
BA_Harrison21 September 2018
An early effort from Crown International Pictures, The Devil's Hand stars Robert Alda (Alan's dad) as Rick Turner, who is visited nightly in his dreams by a beautiful blonde woman. After finding a doll in a shop window that is the exact likeness of the mysterious woman, Rick is able to track down his nocturnal visitor, Miss Bianca Milan (Linda Christian), but, hypnotised by her beauty, finds himself lured away from his longtime girlfriend Donna (Ariadne Welter) and into a devil worshipping cult run by sinister doll-maker Francis Lamont (played by Neil Hamilton, TV Batman's Commissioner Gordon).

A cheap and cheerful piece of '60s Satanic horror, The Devil's Hand is undemanding drive-in fodder that benefits from a brisk pace (and a not-too-long running time), reasonable performances, and a fun plot that includes voodoo, bongo drums, a traitor in the cult's midst, ritualistic gyrating, Russian roulette with swords, and a fiery demise for the baddies at the end. All this and a cool twangy surf guitar number during the opening credits make for a reasonably fun, if not all that memorable, time.

Favourite moment: when Rick sneaks into the doll shop, a front for the cult, and proceeds to make a total racket whilst bumbling around their place of worship. Way to go, twinkletoes!
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6/10
Crown International produces their Citizen Kane
cwhaskell6 January 2012
I've seen 10-12 Crown International Pictures now and this is by far their most polished work. It plays like an episode of the Twilight Zone, and I would not be surprised if the writers pulled this story from a similar source as Mr Serling himself. It's very short, at just an hour and 10 minutes, and is definitely worth a watch for anyone looking into campy horror stories from the 50s (even though this was made in the 60s it doesn't have the free-love feel and was shot in black and white). Appropriate music, good acting, and surprisingly good cinematography all work in concert to make an enjoyable film.

As a side note, the DVD that Mill Creek put out has a cool feature where you can watch this in 'Drive Thru' mode and has everything from an animated short to a few commercials. Nice little bit of nostalgia!

Rating: 24/40
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Endearing ragtag 60s relic.
EyeAskance14 August 2011
A happily engaged man becomes plagued by vivid dreams of a beautiful woman. He ultimately meets her face-to-face, finding that she is a member of a secretive, near-lost religion which enables its loyal followers to obtain their heart's desires. Bewitched by this seductress, he quickly casts aside his fiancée to become her lover and converts to said religion. Predictable but amusing turmoil ensues in this poverty row potboiler, one which some viewers may find surprisingly watchable despite its very evident financial privation.

Briskly paced cheap thrills with a deliciously tacky veneer distinct to early-60s low-budget cinema...this much-forgotten curiosity should please most undemanding genre fans and enthusiasts of vintage lower-berth film oddities.

5.5/10
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3/10
The Satanic Cult of Hypnotizing Dolls and Blond Spinsters!
Coventry4 August 2006
"The Devil's Hand" is a truly bizarre little horror movie. It's very short and to the point… But what a point! Supernatural themes, romantic love triangles and voodoo! That's all pretty courageous and ambitious for a low-budget horror effort from that time. Too bad it eventually didn't turn out to be a very good movie… Rick Turner is an ordinary man, with loads of appeal to the ladies, whose dreams are disturbed by the reoccurring image of a beautiful blond girl. The odd thing is that his soon-to-be wife supports him without the slightest bit of jealousy. I wonder how my girlfriend would react when telling her I repeatedly dream of a hot blond calling out to me from the skies? Rick's uncomfortable situation grows even weirder when he's led to a toy store where they sell a doll with a face identical to the woman of his dreams. It all turns out to be a conspiracy of a satanic cult, ruled by the shop owner, and the blond uses voodoo and hypnosis to conquer Rick's heart. How's that for seduction techniques? Despite the silly and utterly implausible storyline, "The Devil's Hand" is occasionally atmospheric and several sequences are quite suspenseful, notably the ones set in the cult's headquarters where the members' loyalty to Gamba (the evil God) is tested. Still, there's way too much talking and confusion going on and only the climax contains horrific action. William Hole's directing is very neutral and the only real good performance is given by Neil "Commissioner Gordon" Hamilton. Linda Christian is a beauty, but her acting skills are rather forgettable. Worth a look if you run out of other options.
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3/10
Commissioner Gordon - evil henchman
Zeegrade4 March 2010
At least "The Devil's Hand" is short and to the point. Rick is having visions of a beautiful blond woman seducing him at night (I know, what's the problem?) when he tells his far too understanding fiancé Donna about it to which she merely shrugs it off. Yeah, lemme try that one on the wife and see how she reacts. The next day the couple come upon a doll store with one of the figures bearing a remarkable resemblance to the woman in Rick's dream. Turns out the place is run by Francis Lamont (Batman's Neil Hamilton) who tells Rick that he was the one who ordered the doll in the first place and that it's already been paid for him in advance. A confused Rick pleads to Donna that he has no recollection of ever ordering the doll when Donna spies another figure that resembles her perfectly. Turns out this was all planed in advance as the dolls are used for voodoo rituals with Francis the leader of a cult that worships an evil god named Gamba. The couple's fate is sealed as Donna gets bedridden in a hospital with a needle to the heart while Rick gets seduced by his nightly vision who turns out to be gorgeous Bianca Milan who had her sights set on Rick and gets what she wants thanks to her voodoo magick. Soon Rick ditches Donna, joins the cult, and falls head over heels in love with Bianca. Kinda hard to swallow that a looker like Bianca would need to resort to these tactics to get a man, but whatever! Rick becomes torn between his former lover Donna and his allegiance to the cult. It falls apart rather quickly.

I'll readily admit that I'm not exactly Rhodes Scholar material but "Devil's Hand" sent a lot of mixed signals that messed with the overall ending. It's been established that Francis clearly has some sort of supernatural power over his members when he maims Donna and kills an undercover reporter yet he has to use some lame wheel-of-swords type thing that he controls with pedals to dispatch others with. This makes no sense. Why not just use the doll? Another problem I had is trying to read Rick's true intentions. Was he there merely to infiltrate the cult or did he really become ensnared in Bianca's magick? And if so why did he care about Donna when it shows him crumbling up a note from her and tossing it? The conclusion is also perplexing as Rick doesn't want anything bad to happen to Donna but he clearly preaches his innocence to the cult. What would be the point if his intentions in the first place was to save Donna? Why explain anything? When the building went up in flames presumably burning the dolls wouldn't everyone die? Ughh, my head hurts! Linda Christian is quite the head turner as Bianca and Rick is Alan Alda's dad Robert. The film quality is awful as scenes jump quite frequently but then again what do you expect from these multi-movie packs. Now if you'll excuse me I'm going to dress my Malibu Palin doll into her wolfskin bikini.
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4/10
The Effect of Gamba's Rage...
mark.waltz28 July 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Don't ring the bell, don't read the book and don't light the candles. This ultra cheap precursor to "Rosemary's Baby" has a few genuine scares, but mainly contains unintentional laughs. After playing George Gershwin on "Rhapsody in Blue" and the original Sky Masrerson in the original Broadway production of "Guys and Dolls"' Robert Alda was reduced to this low grade supernatural horror film where he is haunted in dreams by the presence of a beautiful woman he's never met. Destiny takes him and his sweet girlfriend into a strange doll shop where he meets the strange Neil Hamilton as well as the gorgeous dream doll. This doll house is the front for a group of satanists who seem somewhat normal. Hamilton chews the scenery more than any "Batman" villain, eventually turning into a cartoon character. Among the chilling moments are a sequence where Hamilton reveals that a traitor amongst them will die and the truly violent follow up. Yet, the structure is presented with such silliness that the film ends up becoming melodramatic and totally over the top. When you look at the more well made supernatural films yet to follow, the result here is a midnight movie where you have to wonder just how much popcorn ended up being thrown at the screen.
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5/10
Decent Enough Film, Just Maybe Not Worthy of a Feature
gavin694218 October 2010
Rick Turner (Robert Alda), an ordinary man, becomes bewitched by Bianca Milan (Linda Christian), the beautiful high priestess of a voodoo cult; but when the cult kidnaps his fiancé, Donna Trent (Ariadna Welter), and prepares to offer her as human sacrifice, he engages in a battle with the all-powerful supernatural forces in a horrifying life-or-death struggle.

Ariadna Welter (best known for starring in Luis Buñuel's 1955 film "The Criminal Life of Archibaldo de la Cruz") delivers her lines in a terrible monotone and with some unidentifiable accent (though she was a Mexican national, so that should narrow the oddness down). Interestingly, she was Linda Christian's real life sister.

This would make a good episode of "Twilight Zone" or "Outer Limits", sort of weak as its own film, though short enough that the movie held my attention surprisingly well. That is the film's downfall, though: it is a good film, but not enough meat to warrant ninety minutes, thus turning what could be memorable into something forgettable.

Milan is a witch for Gamba, "the devil god of evil" (which, as others have pointed out, is sort of redundant). It is interesting to see how easily good-natured people devote themselves to Gamba, who openly claims to be evil.

I enjoyed this film, and of the "gorehouse greats" that I have watched so far from Mill Creek, this is one of the better ones. For those who are curious, it is available for free download at the Internet Archive.
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3/10
Voodoo hokum
chaypher9 August 2013
Warning: Spoilers
An overly sleek socialite is haunted by visions of a beautiful scantily clad vixen, which becomes an intriguing mystery when he finds a doll with her likeness. The colluding shop-owner reveals the girl from his dreams actually exists and encourages him to deliver it in person to her, which he does. When he arrives, she admits to being a voodoo witch. Obviously he has been under her voodoo spell all along, but joins her voodoo cult without question anyway. It turns out the shopkeeper is the voodoo priest and the basement of the shop is their temple. Later the hapless cad has growing doubts which lead him to be tested. Rather than comply, he rejects the religion and the witch-girl and in trying to escape, destroys the temple.

This rather nonsensical fair thankfully drives on at a decent pace and is a bearable length. Robert Alda does not give an amazing performance, but plays his character much as his own personality. The witch-girl is a smouldering beauty even if her performance is wooden. Neil Hamilton is unconvincing and gives a rather dry delivery rather than the campy style his role deserved. Somehow this movie manages to be charming enough to not completely suck, but very nearly does!
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7/10
a would be chiller....
grubstaker5814 May 2006
I saw this by chance as one of those DVD package deals(reasonably priced with cinema nuggets). This particular film grabbed from the outset with it's "graveyard twangy" credits theme. The story is part"I Walked with a Zombie", "Eraser Head",and a dab of "Rosemary's Baby". A sporty dressed Robert Alda goes through the film as if on tranquilizers adding to the black&white "dreamlike' quality of the movie.The actors should be credited for doing their best to sell this very kooky story with equally kooky dialog. There's a sexy " Siren Witch" and a sinister Warlock, who looks like a bank president.Considering the apparent woeful budget of this endeavor , I say kudos for trying and take a look- you've seen worse.
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4/10
Fun Nonsense
NickStricharchuk13 April 2014
The Devil's Hand: Rick is your average guy with a nice, average fiancé except for one thing: he's having wildly lucid dreams about a sexy blonde. The dreams inexplicably bring him to a doll shop in the middle of the night, where he spots a doll resembling his dream woman in the window. Disturbed, he returns the next day during normal business hours with his fiancé and things get weirder as they stumble into a world of voodoo, devil worship, and more dolls! This film could have been subtitled "Deus ex machina," but it's mostly entertaining, and scores an extra point or two for having a totally retro-cool surf guitar opening credits tune.
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8/10
Repeated watching adds a creepy ambiance to this little known genre flick.
warnerdenver24 July 2007
I was introduced to this film when I stumbled across a VHS copy at a well known video retail store. At the time I was buying up and devouring as many B-movies as I could find. I think that in the same trip I purchased The Wasp Women, and Catwomen of the Moon in 3D.

The first couple of times I watched this movie, I didn't feel it was that spectacular, but I did particularly like the opening sequence theme music, a definite nod to Dave Allen and the Arrows. I was however, not able to quite pin down the plot at first because, admittedly, I fell asleep the first few times I saw it.

After several more viewings though, the film began to take on a strange, almost psychedelic feel and I realized that all of the confusion really lends itself to the themes of hypnotism and mind control in cults, which is I think the heart of the film. Whether or not this effect was obtained on purpose by the director, I can't say. It doesn't really matter. I still enjoy watching this one years later.
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7/10
definitely a cult type of movie
spockoda23 July 2006
I discovered this movie on a cheap horror movie box set and this is one of those movies that surprised me. It is definitely a cult type of movie and could become a "gulity pleasure". It is obviously dated and perhaps a little "goofy" in parts,being over 40 years old,but it is better than it has a right to be. The movie is aided immeasurably by the performance of Neil Hamilton as the leader of a cult of devil worshipers. He would later go on to be Commissioner Gordon on the Batman television series. It also has one of the catchiest instrumental theme songs I have heard from a movie of this type and era. If you are a fan of older movies and this genre,it is worth seeking out in my opinion. It can certainly be had cheaply enough.
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5/10
"I've been given the power to control my destiny"
hwg1957-102-26570421 April 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Found it hard to believe that two women, one his fiancée Donna and the other an alluring witch Bianca would ever become attracted to the leading character Rick Turner because apart from his natty leisurewear he is such a tediously dull person. The main story is that Rick falls into the fleshly embraces of Bianca and subsequently the spiritual clutches of the cult of Gamba. Will he be able to get his soul back? Probably not, despite killing the whole cult in a burning building, the beauteous Bianca escaped and still puzzlingly wants him. Neil Hamilton as the smooth cult leader (or "executioner") manages to keep his dignity and is the best thing in the film. The music score is a mishmash that is occasionally suitable. With a better male lead I would have liked it better.
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3/10
The Rise and Fall of the Cult of Gamba
VIOlencEandpAIN6 July 2008
Warning: Spoilers
THE DEVIL'S HAND, a very cheap movie from the early sixties, represents an early phase of trash cinema, part of a series of "Satansploitation" or "Cultsploitation" movies. I managed to watch this movie as part of a Mill Creek 50 movie boxed set ("Chilling Classics"), so I can only assume that it is probably available online for free. Anyone wanting to just check this out should google it.

In this rendition of devil-worship themed movies, we meet Rick Turner (Robert Alda) and his steady sweetie, Donna Trent (Ariadna Welter). Things are going well for the couple in their almost sexless relationship until Rick starts having visions of a blonde woman who dances around and beckons him. Soon after, Rick discovers a doll that looks exactly like the blonde woman sitting in the front window of a doll shop. It turns out that the doll shop is actually a front for the evil cult of the devil-god Gamba, and in back, there's a ceremony room complete with a mechanical chandelier loaded with both fake and real knives. The blonde woman is Bianca Milan (Linda Christian), a bona-fide witch who can project herself into dreams and hypnotize people from a distance.

The Gamba Cult is adept at voodoo doll use and hypnotism, both of which they are reasonably good at using to control others. Unfortunately, they have a major weakness in the security area, because a news reporter and his chum, both of whom don't even bother dressing like proper Satanists, are able to attend regular ceremonies. Only the clumsiness of the news reporter, a man who takes many notes and drops them accidentally, keeps the cult from total media exposure.

Anyway, the plot is pretty predictable, Rick gets to have some fun with bad girl Bianca, and eventually the cult is punished via incineration (ooo...the irony...) and Rick escapes with Donna. It's a drive-in movie with a feel-good ending, and that's all there is to it.

THE DEVIL'S HAND isn't too bad a movie if you're into this sort of thing, but the casual movie-goer probably won't get much out of it. At least it can be seen very, very cheaply.
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3/10
Can Be Defined in One Word: Awful
claudio_carvalho21 February 2006
Rick Turner (Robert Alda) is engaged of Donna Trent (Ariadna Welter) and is having nightmares with a beautiful blonde woman dancing in the sky. One night, he is mysteriously driven to a doll shop, and in the next morning he returns to the place with Donna. He finds a doll that resembles his fiancé, but the owner Francis Lamont (Neil Hamilton) delivers another doll to him, with the face of the woman of his dreams, Bianca Milan (Linda Christian). Rick looks for Bianca and is seduced and convinced by her to join a sect that worships the diabolic Camba.

I believe that "The Devil's Hand" does not deserve a review, and the word awful would be enough to define this movie. Unfortunately, IMDb requires a minimum number of lines, so I need to write something about this crap. The story is ridiculous, with one of the worst direction I have ever seen. I felt sorrow for the acting, especially of the ham lead actor Rick Turner. Linda Christian is really beautiful and sexy and she is the best this film can offer. The quality of the DVD released in Brazil by Brazilian distributor London Films is suitable for such a bad movie, with completely damaged images. My vote is three.

Title (Brazil): "O Círculo do Diabo" ("The Circle of the Devil")
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3/10
Help me, I'm a devil worshipper...
grybop14 February 2002
Another amusingly simple thriller that won't thrill you at all. It's cheap, the story is ridiculous and can only bring a smile to your face. It's not totally unbearable; it's fun to spot all the mistakes and plot holes and laugh over them with your friends...
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5/10
Voodoo horror story that is okay but doesn't amount to much
dbborroughs23 July 2006
Robert Alda plays a man haunted the vision of a beautiful blonde he sees in his dreams. He is restless and quits his job which put him in a bad way with his girlfriend. One night while out walking he finds a doll that is the image of the girl in his dreams. When he returns the next day with his girlfriend not only does the shop keeper (Neil "Commissioner Gordon" Hamilton) tell him he commissioned the doll, but he shows the couple one that looks like the girlfriend. It soon transpires that the dolls are voodoo dolls and Alda is in the clutches of a voodoo cult run by Hamilton.

Its weird seeing Commissioner Gordon from TV's Batman as an evil villain but here it is. The movie itself is an okay little film thriller. Clearly done on the cheap the film is fine on its own terms but isn't anything really special. Its not really scary but more creepy. Unfortunately it never adds up to much. Its like watching an extended episode of a horror anthology TV series. Actually the film reminded me of the erotic thrillers that populate some of the late night cable stations since its clear that the Alda and the blonde are sleeping together and she is always two steps from being undressed, it probably would have been better if there had been some sex.

Worth seeing if you run across it but not something to search out.
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4/10
Neat idea that's indifferently executed
planktonrules5 August 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Robert Alda (Alan's dad) is engaged. However, despite this, he keeps dreaming of another woman--a woman he's never met. Later, when he wanders into a strange doll shop run by Neil Hamilton ("Commissioner Gordon" from the BATMAN television show), he sees a doll that looks just like the lady in his dreams. Later, when he finally meets her, she turns out to be a witch who worships with a strange devil cult! Alda, being under he spell, is pulled into this small group of freaks--freaks who believe in blood sacrifice for anyone who betrays them!

The basic plot outline for this film is actually very good despite this being a super-low budget picture. Because of this, I found myself hooked and interested in what happened in the film. Unfortunately, despite the good story idea and an excellent mood, the film failed to capitalize on this and ended on a bit of a fizzle. This is a film I'd love to see remade, as hashing out the script, providing better acting as well as an ending that isn't clichéd would result in an excellent film. The people who made this film had the basis for a good film but the film was just undone by ineptness. Worth seeing as a time-passer if you are rather patient with this style film.

By the way, this film came with the "Chilling Classics 50 Movie Pack"--a huge set of public domain films. Like most in the set, the print is pretty poor, though watchable.
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6/10
Likable early 60's occult horror
Red-Barracuda16 July 2015
A man has strange visions of a mystery woman. One day he notices a doll in a shop window which exactly resembles the enigmatic lady who inhabits his dreams. He ventures in and is soon entwined in an underground voodoo cult.

The Devil's Hand in another low budget offering from Crown International Pictures, who were one of the main B-movie producers of their time. This one is on the whole fairly standard stuff with not a huge amount to differentiate it from the crowd. It focuses on occult practices, yet, aside from the dastardly leader, we never really see the cultists do much in the way of evil. We see their ceremonies in action though, which consisted of a revolving sword device that members of the cult spun like they were trying to win money on a game-show. Not only that but there was also a seemingly ever-present bongo player who ensured that a voodoo vibe was maintained at all times. The dolls themselves were quite a cute idea and certainly were the most memorable part of the cult's practices. The film itself has an early 60's charm about it that buys it some credit, while it is short and fast-paced enough to never outstay its welcome. It should please those with a taste for old school horror flicks, at least some extent.
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4/10
Worth seeing for its value as a cultural artifact from another time
lemon_magic12 November 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Whilte I wasn't actually very impressed (or entertained) by "The Devil's Hand", I tend to give it the benefit of the doubt. The voodoo and witchcraft plot elements were probably fresh and new to the audiences at the time, there are at least three pretty good actors giving their roles their best professional effort, and the black and white photography is clear and easy on the eyes.

On the other hand, the "hero" is an unlikeable cad whose character is barely redeemed by his reluctance to abandon his former girlfriend to her fate. Neil Harrison is certainly distinguished looking and he has a certain hammy, patrician bearing that serves him well on camera...but he doesn't have the firepower to make his role as the chief cult leader work. (All too often he comes across like a junior high principal threatening wayward students with detention.) Of course,no one short of Michael Gough or Vincent Price would.

The depiction of the "cult" also wasn't thought through very well.For a devil worshiping cult imported from Darkest Africa (or wherever), there seems to be a paucity of actual black people (the three black performers don't have any speaking lines) or, you know, pagan ritual. The costumes especially are embarrassingly ordinary - the only white people in costume are the "witch" and the leader. Everyone else shows up in sack suits and sensible dining wear. It's as if a bunch of JayCees and their wives all sat on the ground to watch a mildly entertaining floor show. And the ending is very unsatisfying - the cult is supposed to have all this dreadful occult supernatural power, but one guy tipping over a ceremonial torch wipes them out in a conflagration after punching out their leader.

It's as if they wanted to make a "shocking" film, but also wanted to make sure that no one got too upset by it. Of course, for all I know, that may have been the case.
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10/10
Atmospheric, creepy film
joekohlertrenton18 May 2012
From the movie industry's beginnings and up through 1977, it was okay--even SOP--to make and watch "little movies." Occasionally a big budget, all-star affair would be produced, such as the biblical spectacles of the '50s or disaster films of the '70s, but "little movies" were the norm.

Then "Star Wars" came along. Overnight, it wasn't okay for a picture to be anything less than a 50-million dollar, effects-filled extravaganza. I was in high school at the time and remember this phenomenon well. The mega-blockbuster-only culture in film making persists to the present day.

For audiences too young to remember the pre-1977 world, movies like "The Devil's Hand" are little more than a source of ridicule. No laser blasts? No propane explosions? No skyscrapers with thousands of windows blowing out simultaneously? Well, then it's garbage.

Happily, I do recall the pre-1977 film world and loved the intimacy and offbeat nature of its modest movies. "The Devil's Hand" is one of them.

The story is set among a modern-day, urban cult of devil worshipers and their interesting powers (making quick money, obtaining the lover of their choice, etc.). Unwitting Rick (Robert Alda) is drawn into their shady circle by an elite member of the cult (Linda Christian). Although his life with them becomes supremely comfortable, their merciless practices and lethal vindictiveness makes him realize no one in their realm is safe.

The film's strength is in its late-night atmosphere. It was produced in 1961, an attractive moment in US history. Everything looks great: the characters, their apartments, their cars and even the ceremonial back room. The music is befittingly mysterious and dreamy with the notable exception of the wonderful main-title theme by Baker Knight and the Knightmares. This rock 'n' roll number was recorded specifically for the film at the dawn of the twist craze and it charted at #37 on San Fransisco's hot 100 in August of 1961.

I remember how "The Devil's Hand" turned up regularly on Detroit's "Scream Theater" Friday nights at 11:30pm during the late '70s and early '80s. I loved it then and I love it now--it's a gem.
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6/10
Full of B-movie Cheeziness
JoeB13130 December 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Actually, this wasn't that bad of a film, given that it had such a low budget.

The plot is that a member of a whacky devil cult ensnares Robert Alda by making a voodoo doll of him and enticing him through his dreams. They then make a voodoo doll of his girlfriend and impale it with a pin to make her an invalid.

Apparently, this was good old 1960's medicine where you got a private nurse.

Anyway, they are led to a cult run by Commissioner Gordon from the Batman series. (And I thought THAT was the lowlight of his career!) The cult includes dancing black chicks and voodoo dolls.

A real sign this was done on the cheap- There is a subplot where a fat sweaty newspaper reporter is killed while driving. Except his car changes from a white 1950's model sedan to a black 1940's model Packard when it goes over the cliff.

Also there is the whole scene at the end where the building where the cult hides out is burned down, but if their dolls burned up, wouldn't they have died, too? Oooooh, my brain hurts..
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5/10
Not really horror
dieseldemon8517 October 2022
This was an odd film I have in a 50 horror film pack. The opening credits has surf style music, the storyline seems decent enough, man of an engaged couple has dreams about another woman and sees her in doll form in a doll shop that the owner claims the man requested, the man's fiancee is on a shelf too. There is a blend of voodoo and satanic worship surrounding the doll shop, and a subplot between the Blonde woman and the doll shop owner. It really isn't scary, and is a bit slow at times. Decently acted very low budget effects, there is a scene with a worshipper driving a white 55-56 Dodge, in the crash scene it's black and doesn't even look like a Dodge model. May have been good in the day but tame by today horror. **
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4/10
The Hole Shebang
ferbs5428 September 2020
Warning: Spoilers
In the 1943 film "The Seventh Victim," just one of nine brilliant horror films produced by Val Lewton for RKO that decade, a character played by Kim Hunter comes to NYC to look for her missing sister, and discovers that that sister has joined a secretive, devil-worshipping cult in the heart of Greenwich Village. It is a superior horror outing, as are all the other Lewton horror outings, featuring wonderful acting, a sharp and compact script, and - typical for these Lewton affairs - a deliciously eerie atmosphere throughout. Flash forward 18 years, and we find still another film dealing with a secret devil cult hidden away in the heart of a great American metropolis, but with nowhere near the previous film's artful skill and enduring class. That later film is "The Devil's Hand," which was shot in 1959 but not distributed until two years later. Originally released as part of a double bill that included still another forgotten horror affair, "Bloodlust" (yet another remake of the great 1932 film "The Most Dangerous Game"), "The Devil's Hand" quickly sank into relative oblivion, and perhaps justly so. Despite the presence of no fewer than three top-notch Hollywood players in its cast, it ultimately reveals itself to be a rather shoddily scripted, slow-moving, lifeless, cheapjack affair with absolutely no scares, little if any suspense, some confusing plot points, and oftentimes laughable dialogue. I shall try to find something to praise in this shoddy little affair, although that might take some effort on my part.



The film introduces the viewer to a man named Rick Turner, played by the 45-year-old Robert Alda. Although Rick is engaged to be married to Donna Trent (pretty Mexican actress Ariadna Welter), he is disturbed every night by reoccurring dreams of a gorgeous blonde woman who dances before him and beckons to him from the clouds. One day, he feels compelled to walk past a doll shop in a side street of Los Angeles, and notices a doll that is the exact likeness of his dream girl. The owner of the shop, Frank Lamont, played by the great character actor Neil Hamilton, tells him that Rick had ordered this doll days before, and that yes, his order is ready. Rick is understandably confused, as he had never previously been inside this shop before. The following night, however, his dream girl tells him to pick up the doll and bring it to her, which he does, being given an address by the shopkeeper. This blonde, as it turns out, sports the exotic name of Bianca Milan (played by Ariadna's older sister, the ex-Mrs. Tyrone Power, Linda Christian), and is an adept at using the power of thought projection. Bianca, it is also revealed, has seen Rick from afar, has fallen in love with him, and now wants him to join the cult that she is a member of; a cult that worships Gamba, the Devil God of Evil! Rick almost immediately falls under her spell, goes that very night to a meeting of the group in the basement of the doll shop - with Lamont presiding as high priest - and forgets all about his fiancée. To ensure that Donna is put out of the way, Lamont sticks a long pin into a voodoo doll of her, putting Donna in the hospital with heart problems for most of the duration of this film. But when Rick discovers what his happened vis-à-vis his ex-fiancee, he rebels, surreptitiously removing the pin from that doll, and setting himself up for trial by the angered high priest and the jealous Bianca....



Okay, as is my policy, I'm going to endeavor to find something nice to say about the film in question. "The Devil's Hand" does sport at least two interesting scenes to captivate the viewer. In the first, a female cult member is put to the Gamba test. She is placed on an altar beneath a wheel studded with swords, only one of which is real, the others being made of rubber. The wheel is spun and, Russian roulette style, dropped on the possible victim, whose worthiness for sacrifice only Gamba can decide. In the other scene, a spy in the cult, a newspaperman, is put to death while he is driving, a long pin stuck right into his doll face back at the cult temple causing him to drive his car over a cliff. But other than these two scenes, the film is a rather lackluster affair, to put it mildly. "The Devil's Hand" is lifeless and slow moving, and its 71-minute running time feels like much longer. Its script is a lazy one, and we never get to learn anything about our hero Rick: his background, what he does for a living, how he and his fiancée met, etc. Likewise, we are never given any information about the Gamba cult, how it originated, what country it hails from and so on. The viewer feels pretty much nothing but contempt for Rick, who callously dumps Donna in favor of his new paramour. We hope, as the film proceeds, that he is just playing along with Bianca, assuming the part of a vengeful agent of some kind as he attempts to infiltrate the evil cult, but those hopes are dashed when, midway through the picture, he tells his witchy woman, in one of the better-written bits of the script, "Every waking minute you're on my mind. Even when I sleep I can't shake you. You're all around me ... in the air, in the rain and the sunlight. You're as much me as I am. I know what you are. I know what you've made me but it doesn't matter. Nothing does. I can't kiss you without wanting more. I'll never have enough of you. If I thought I'd lose you I'd ... kill you...." And, sadly, we realize that Rick does indeed mean every word he says. Talk about being infatuated, huh? But all told, two decent scenes and one nice snatch of dialogue do not a good film make. Hardly. For the rest of it, "The Devil's Hand" is a rather tiresome affair, and sometimes a risible one. Toward the film's end, which should constitute the most suspenseful and frightening moments of any horror film, when the dozen or so cult members start chanting "Gamba, Gamba" in fear, this viewer could only burst out laughing; never a good sign for a movie whose intent is supposedly to frighten.



Still, don't blame the four lead actors for the end results here. Robert Alda had enjoyed a distinguished film and theater career previous to this film, and he does his yeoman best here, saddled as he is with a subpar script. Alda, of course, is perhaps best remembered for playing George Gershwin in the 1945 film "Rhapsody in Blue," and had performed in at least one horror outing previous to the one here: 1946's "The Beast With Five Fingers." (His son Alan, by the way, was 23 when "The Devil's Hand" was shot in 1959, and had already embarked on an acting career of his own.) Linda Christian looks very nice (although not quite as physically stunning as one would have preferred, given that her Bianca Milan character is supposed to be overwhelmingly beautiful) and her thesping is certainly adequate, if barely. Ariadna Welter, whose work I had previously enjoyed in the great Mexican horror picture "The Vampire" (1956), is unfortunately given little to do other than lay in bed and act listless. But fortunately, we also have Neil Hamilton here, a terrific character actor with an enormous filmography preceding this picture, and who, seven years later, would embark on the role for which he is probably best remembered today, playing Commissioner Gordon in the "Batman" TV series. Hamilton adds what little class is to be found in this piffle of a film, intoning his lines with great intensity, especially during those cult ceremonies. And sharp-eyed viewers will also notice the hulking Bruno VeSota, playing one of the cult members, and his is always a welcome presence. No, I suppose the bulk of the blame for the lameness of this picture must rest squarely on the shoulders of its director, William J. Hole, Jr., whose only other film that I had heard of before is 1959's "Ghost of Dragstrip Hollow." His direction here is flat, styleless and wholly uninteresting. Producer Alvin K. Bubis must also share some of the blame, for his cheapo sets and costumes (a product of Bubis & Hole ... that should have perhaps told me something!), as does the film's screenwriter, Jo Heims, for her lazy script that leaves so many questions unanswered. I must say that that last name surprised me, as Heims is also responsible for the screenplay for one of this viewer's favorite films of all time, 1971's "Play Misty for Me"; a film whose script is sharp, witty, exciting and suspenseful, all of which attributes are wholly lacking in her 1959 screenplay. Go figure. As for the cinematography of someone named Meredith M. Nicholson, let's just say that I could have been given a camera and done just as effective a job myself, and that's not saying much. And while I'm harping ... what's up with the rock & roll music that wholly inappropriately gets this film going, during the opening credits? Wouldn't some eerie or unsettling music have been a better choice, to set the mood and hopefully engender some tension? No such luck. The bottom line: Viewers who are looking for a quality film featuring devil worship in the big city are best advised to watch "The Seventh Victim" for the seventh time and leave this one alone. Unless, that is, they are in need of a good soporific. And may your dreams be better than poor Rick Turner's!
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