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Dolph Sweet
★ Acting

Dolph Sweet

1920 – 1985 · Active 1951–1981

Dolph Sweet, born in 1920, carved a niche in cult cinema with his performances in films like Sisters (1973) and Fear Is the Key (1972). Sweet's ability to navigate both drama and dark comedy is evident in Which Way Is Up? (1977), where he showcases his versatility. His roles often reflect the gritty undertones of the era, making his contributions to films like Below the Belt (1980) significant in the context of exploitation cinema. With a career that spanned decades, Sweet remains a notable figure in the world of cult film.

▶ Watch on SassyFlix 6 films available
Sisters

Sisters

1973 ★ 6.7
as Detective Kelly

Advertising salesman Philip Woode is the victim of a prank on a Candid Camera-style television show and wins dinner for two at a Manhattan restaurant. When Danielle Breton, a young French Canadian model and aspiring actress who was part of the prank, approaches him and suggests he take her along, he agrees. At dinner, they are interrupted by Danielle's ex-husband, Emil, who also follows them to Danielle's Staten Island apartment. After tricking Emil into leaving, Philip and Danielle make love on the sofa, during which a huge scar on her side is revealed. After they spend the night together on the fold-out sofa bed, Danielle wakes up in pain and goes to the bathroom, where she takes two pills, leaving two more on the sink. She hears her sister Dominique call from the bedroom in French, and they argue offscreen, mentioning that after they were "separated," Dominique was put in a hospital "full of lunatics." The argument wakes Philip, who dresses in the bathroom, where he unwittingly knocks the pills down the drain. Danielle explains to Philip that Dominique, her twin sister, has come to visit to celebrate their birthday. At her request, he goes to the drug store to refill her prescription, also picking up a birthday cake on which he has "Happy Birthday Dominique and Danielle" written. Danielle, in agony, calls Emil for help. When Philip returns, Emil is watching from his car. Seeing who he believes to be Danielle asleep on the sofa bed, Philip brings the cake and a large knife to her, but is repeatedly stabbed by the woman - the crazed Dominique. He drags himself to a window, where he tries to alert a neighbor whose window faces Danielle's by writing "help" in his own blood, but eventually dies. The neighbor, a reporter named Grace Collier, sees Philip and calls the police. In split screen, she is seen waiting for the police and trying to convince them of the murder she witnessed while Emil helps Danielle clean up and hide Philip's body by folding it inside the sofa. Grace accompanies the skeptical Detective Kelly and his partner on a search of Danielle's apartment, but Danielle insists that she has been alone since last night, and they find no evidence. Grace finds the cake in the refrigerator, but trips and drops it as she brings it to show the detectives, destroying the message. Undeterred, she goes to the bakery and talks to Louise Wilanski (Olympia Dukakis) and Elaine D'Anna (Justine Johnson), who remember Philip and the cake and the message in the decoration. Certain that Danielle is hiding the murderer, Grace persuades her editor to let her investigate the story on the basis that the police are ignoring her because Philip was black. Her editor convinces her to work with Larch, a private investigator. He gains access to the apartment and figures out from how unusually heavy it is that the couch contains the body. He also finds a thick file from the Loisel Institute on the Blanchion Twins, Canada's first conjoined twins, which leads Grace to Life magazine reporter Arthur McLennen. He tells her that the twins were separated only recently, and that Dominique apparently died during the operation. As Larch pursues the truck that Emil called to haul the couch away, Grace tails Emil and Danielle to a mental hospital. When she is caught, Emil convinces the staff that she is a new patient. He sedates and hypnotizes her, conditioning her to say "There was no body, because there was no murder." He promises to reveal everything, placing Danielle on the bed beside her, and Grace has a bizarre dream about the twins' past and their separation, in which she herself is Dominique. Emil tells Danielle that the separation was necessary because Dominique stabbed the pregnant Danielle with garden shears. Emil claims he then had to separate the twins to save Danielle, but Dominique died during the surgery. Grace wakes up screaming, but Emil coaxes her back to sleep. As Danielle calls for her sister, Emil tells her that she now dissociates to a violent "Dominique" personality whenever she makes love to anyone. Emil kisses her passionately, bringing "Dominique" out so he can question her about the murder. She slashes him in the groin with a scalpel, and he bleeds to death, controlling her. Their bodies pin Grace to the bed. Grace awakens to find the sorrowful Danielle tenderly embracing Emil's bloody body and screams in horror. Detective Kelly arrests Danielle, who denies knowledge of the murders and says that her sister is dead. Kelly interviews Grace, who is still under Emil's hypnotic spell, repeating the lines he fed her and denying there was a murder. However, Larch has tracked the sofa to a remote train station in Canada.

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Career Highlights Top 6 by popularity · TMDB

Filmography

57 credits
1980s 10 credits
1981
Reds as Big Bill Haywood
Movie ★ 6.9
1981
The Acorn People as Donald Bradshaw
Movie ★ 3.7
1981
Movie ★ 9.0
1981
Movie ★ 7.6
1981
TV ★ 7.6
1981
Gimme a Break! as Carl Kanisky
TV ★ 6.7
1980
Movie ★ 6.4
1980
Movie ★ 6.7
1980
TV ★ 7.2
1980
TV ★ 5.0
1970s 33 credits
1979
The Wanderers as Chubby Galasso
Movie ★ 6.9
1979
Aunt Mary as Amos Jones
Movie ★ 7.3
1979
Act of Violence as Detective O'Brien
Movie ★ 6.8
1979
Rendezvous Hotel as Harvey Greenwood
Movie ★ 7.0
1979
Flesh & Blood as Thompson
Movie ★ 5.9
1979
Marciano as Si Menchlemann
Movie ★ 7.0
1979
TV ★ 7.5
1979
TV ★ 6.9
1979
TV ★ 6.5
1979
Flesh & Blood as Thompson
TV
1978
Heaven Can Wait as Head Coach
Movie ★ 6.6
1978
Go Tell the Spartans as Gen. Harnitz
Movie ★ 6.2
1978
Deathmoon as Lt. Russ Cort
Movie ★ 6.2
1978
TV ★ 7.0
1978
The Amazing Spider-Man as Ben Sorgenson
TV ★ 6.4
1978
Taxi as Mr. Caruthers
TV ★ 7.3
1978
King as J. Edgar Hoover
TV ★ 6.6
1977
Movie ★ 6.1
1977
Movie ★ 5.8
1977
Movie ★ 8.0
1977
A Killing Affair as Scotty Neilson
Movie ★ 4.8
1974
Amazing Grace as Mayer Scott
Movie ★ 6.8
1974
The Lords of Flatbush as Mr. Rosiello
Movie ★ 5.8
1974
The Migrants as Sheriff
Movie ★ 6.1
1974
TV ★ 7.9
1973
Sisters as Detective Kelly
Movie ★ 6.7
1973
Movie ★ 6.3
1972
Movie ★ 5.9
1972
The New Centurions as Sergeant Runyon
Movie ★ 6.6
1971
The Telephone Book as Obscene Caller
Movie ★ 5.8
1970
The Out-of-Towners as Police Sgt Kavalefski
Movie ★ 6.8
1970
Colossus: The Forbin Project as Missile Commander
Movie ★ 7.0
1960s 11 credits
1969
The Lost Man as Police Captain
Movie ★ 4.2
1968
The Movie Orgy as Self (archive footage)
Movie ★ 6.6
1968
A Lovely Way to Die as Captain Haver
Movie ★ 4.8
1968
Movie ★ 5.9
1968
The Swimmer as Henry Biswanger
Movie ★ 7.3
1967
The Desperate Hours as Jesse Bard
Movie ★ 4.0
1966
You're a Big Boy Now as Patrolman Francis Graf
Movie ★ 6.1
1966
TV ★ 7.3
1965
The Trials of O'Brien as Sgt. Garrison
TV ★ 7.0
1964
TV ★ 5.5
1961
The Young Doctors as Police Car Driver
Movie ★ 5.8
1950s 3 credits
1956
TV ★ 6.6
1951
TV ★ 8.8
1951
TV ★ 8.8