Satan enlists the help of a suicide victim in Hell to lure unsuspecting earthly victims to their eternal doom. Contains three somewhat unrelated Twilight Zone-esque stories.Satan enlists the help of a suicide victim in Hell to lure unsuspecting earthly victims to their eternal doom. Contains three somewhat unrelated Twilight Zone-esque stories.Satan enlists the help of a suicide victim in Hell to lure unsuspecting earthly victims to their eternal doom. Contains three somewhat unrelated Twilight Zone-esque stories.
Lon Chaney Jr.
- Satan
- (as Lon Chaney)
Ralph Brown
- Charlie
- (archive footage)
John Crawford
- Donald Powell
- (archive footage)
Frank Taylor
- Dr. Ben Seastrom
- (archive footage)
- (as Bert Johnson)
Chalmers Goodlin
- Dr. Hume
- (archive footage)
Gunnel Broström
- Madame Germaine
- (archive footage)
- (as Gunnel Brostrom)
Sara Harts
- Angelica - Frozen Girl
- (archive footage)
- (as Tammy Newmara)
Inga Edwards
- Dixie
- (archive footage)
- (as Ingrid Bedoya)
Eve Hossner
- Girl in Photograph
- (archive footage)
Gordon Adler
- Policeman
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Birgitta Alm
- Lady on the Street
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Len Cooper
- Ticket Seller
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Torsten Lilliecrona
- Police Inspector Braun
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Jason Lindsay
- Dr. Holt - Museum Chief
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaEdited out of three distinctive episodes, The Photograph (1959), The Girl in the Glacier (1959) and Condemned in the Crystal (1959), all of which were directed by Curt Siodmak, for the Swedish/US TV series 13 Demon Street (1959), shot in English but originally aired with Swedish subtitles. Lon Chaney Jr. was brought to Sweden to film a framing story for the sake of continuity.
- GoofsPhotographer Don tells Charlie that "somebody" is coming out of the house in the photograph. When Charlie suggests that he's imagining it and they should look at the photograph, he says "If I can't see her, you'll believe me."
- Alternate versionsEdited from episodes of the TV series "13 Demon Street" (1959). New footage of Lon Chaney as Satan was filmed to replace the original footage of him as host of the TV show.
- ConnectionsEdited from 13 Demon Street (1959)
Featured review
"The Devil's Messenger" is an obscure and low-budgeted horror omnibus that recycles three short stories from an even more obscure 50s TV-series named "13, Demon Street". The series was rapidly produced to cash in on the tremendous success of Rod Serling's "The Twilight Zone", but already got canceled after one season. In an ultimate attempt to gain profit out of the investment, the three best (?) stories were bundled into an anthology movie.
Undoubtedly the best thing about this curious little film is the presence of Lon Chaney Jr., as the Devil himself, in the wraparound story. He sends a recent suicide victim - aptly named Satanya - back to the earthly surface to collect new souls for Hell. You guessed it; - the people whom Satanya are sent after are also the protagonists of the individual segments. Fallen horror icon Chaney ("The Wolf Man") was appearing in all sorts of inferior Z-grade movies and TV-series at the time. In this role, he at least visibly enjoys himself.
The first story is more than adequate, while numbers two and three are utterly weak and forgettable. The influence of "The Twilight Zone" is clearly noticeable in all three segments, but only the "The Photograph" comes somewhat close to copying the uncanny atmosphere and surreal mystery of Serling's landmark series. In this story, an arrogant photographer, who committed rape and murder whilst on an assignment in snowy Maine, sees his nameless victim inexplicably appear in the photos that he makes and slowly loses his mind. The other two are hardly even worth summarizing.
Undoubtedly the best thing about this curious little film is the presence of Lon Chaney Jr., as the Devil himself, in the wraparound story. He sends a recent suicide victim - aptly named Satanya - back to the earthly surface to collect new souls for Hell. You guessed it; - the people whom Satanya are sent after are also the protagonists of the individual segments. Fallen horror icon Chaney ("The Wolf Man") was appearing in all sorts of inferior Z-grade movies and TV-series at the time. In this role, he at least visibly enjoys himself.
The first story is more than adequate, while numbers two and three are utterly weak and forgettable. The influence of "The Twilight Zone" is clearly noticeable in all three segments, but only the "The Photograph" comes somewhat close to copying the uncanny atmosphere and surreal mystery of Serling's landmark series. In this story, an arrogant photographer, who committed rape and murder whilst on an assignment in snowy Maine, sees his nameless victim inexplicably appear in the photos that he makes and slowly loses his mind. The other two are hardly even worth summarizing.
Details
- Runtime1 hour 12 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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Top Gap
By what name was The Devil's Messenger (1962) officially released in Canada in English?
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