6/10
Would have been rated higher if writing hadn't been so diffuse...the definition of potboiler, and a decent one in some respects...
4 June 2021
"The Devil's Playground" (1937) is the definition of potboiler. It's a romance/drama/adventure/sailor/submarine/two-timing/buddy movie starring Richard Dix, Delores Del Rio, Chester Morris, and many others, from Lionel Hampton to Ward Bond. Pierre Watkin (listed in the credits as Watkins) plays the submarine captain, and it's a riot seeing Si Jenks playing the telephone installation man in his old-timer mining hat and beard and pipe that he wore in countless Westerns and other films. This is basically a re-make of 1928's "Submarine", a film that was re-made again in 1931 as "Fifty Fathoms Deep", both of which starred Jack Holt. The devil in this version is probably Del Rio as she proudly and ferociously devours men, even marrying Dix, then carrying on with his pal Morris when Dix is away, then...well, I'll leave it at that. The submarine scenes are intense and extremely well-played. The first twenty minutes or so move slowly and don't really get anywhere, or so it seems. A quicker editing, or cutting(s) would have helped immensely. Once the action really begins where Dix, the navy's best deep sea diver, is needed to rescue stranded submarine personnel, including his buddy, Morris, then the show moves like greased lightning. The end nearly seems tacked on. Generally a-jumble, this is edited poorly. Del Rio is super as a bad girl! Morris steals all acting honors. Dix seems very laid back, even bored. I've got him in a few '37 movies, and he's the same in all of them. Don't quite understand (?).

It was a fun movie, but believe it or not, at 74 minutes was 10 minutes too long! Del Rio was worth the watch, if only the writing had been more integrated and less diffuse...
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