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The Testament Of Dr. Mabuse - Criterion Collection | 
enlarge | Director: Fritz Lang Actors: Rudolf Klein-rogge, Otto Wernicke, Oscar Beregi Sr., Paul Bernd, Henry Pleß Studio: Criterion Category: DVD
List Price: $39.95 Buy New: $23.47 You Save: $16.48 (41%)
New (32) Used (9) from $18.50
Rating: 13 reviews Sales Rank: 38075
Format: Black & White, Color, Dvd-video, Special Edition, Subtitled, Widescreen, Ntsc Languages: German (Original Language), English (Subtitled) Rating: Unrated Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Number Of Discs: 2 Running Time: 122 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: TES040 ISBN: 0780027981 UPC: 037429187227 EAN: 9780780027985 ASIN: B0001UZZS6
Theatrical Release Date: 1933 Release Date: May 18, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: BRAND NEW AND FACTORY SEALED
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com The Testament of Dr. Mabuse is Fritz Lang's sequel to his flamboyant Dr. Mabuse two-part epic of the 1920s, this time adding subtle use of sound to the creepy effects developed for the earlier film. Once a Moriarty-like mastermind, the haggard Dr M (Rudolf Klein-Rogge) has become an autistic asylum inmate who scrawls plans for daring crimes in his cell and exerts an unhealthy influence on his psychiatrist. Inspector Lohmann (Otto Wernicke), the jolly policeman from Lang's M, is puzzled by a series of daring crimes that bear the Mabuse signature, and a gang of thugs take instructions from a shadowy figure who claims after the doctor's death to be Mabuse reborn and is staging a reign of crime apparently designed to bring about the ruin of all law-abiding society. Though it works best as a textbook thriller, some commentators, including Lang, suggested that the pulp plot was intended to allegorize the evil influence of the Nazi party, with a crime boss who rants like Hitler. The many impressive set-pieces still work, too: the pursuit of a spy through a grinding print-works, an assassination at a traffic light, hero and heroine trapped in a room with a bomb cutting a water main to flood their way to freedom, the persecution of the asylum head by a phantom of his patient, and a last-reel night-time chase. --Kim Newman
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| Customer Reviews: Read 8 more reviews...
Creepy, Engrossing Fritz Lang Classic February 19, 2008 Todd and In Charge (Miami, FL) This, the last film by Lang before departing Germany, bears Lang's obsessive attention to precisely calibrated scene composition, and to groundbreaking use of black and white shading and lighting. The plot, detailed elsewhere, is crime thriller 101 with an added element of veiled criticism of creeping fascism within Germany at the time (1931). A must-see, little-known classic by a film master, this one will leave you gasping for a return to such professionalism and artistry.
Testament of Dr. Mabuse June 21, 2007 John Farr Completed shortly before Lang fled Nazi Germany, "Dr. Mabuse" is a creepy sequel to his earlier silent thriller "Dr. Mabuse, the Gambler." With all its talk of master plans and a cast of shadowy henchmen taking orders from an authoritarian voice who issues orders from behind a curtain, it isn't that hard to see the parallels to Hitler. A subplot involving a reluctant member of the Mabuse syndicate (Gustav Diesel) who hopes to flee with his lover Lilli (Wera Lieseem) adds another suspenseful dimension and further suggests that Lang put an imaginative twist on his own predicament. (The Nazis, of course, promptly banned the film.) See "Dr. Mabuse" for the mystery, knotty intrigue, and Lang's thrilling, impeccably directed escape sequences.
Just for one short scene... January 14, 2007 Roberto Frangie (Leon, Gto. Mexico) 1 out of 4 found this review helpful
For all its excitement, action, fantasy, this film would for me live in the history of the cinema just for one short scene... It deals with a killing at traffic lights as a driver is shot from a car that has pulled alongside his, the sound of the shot obliterated by the sound of the horns of the other impatient drivers... But Lang never takes us right 'into' the incident... At the payoff we look down from an overhead angle on the cars packed together at the signals: then they all pull away - all but one, which remains motionless and alone in the middle of the road after the lights have changed... No violence, no blood, is needed for us to be eerily aware that a man who was alive when the lights were at red is dead now they are at green...
Another Lang masterwork! November 9, 2006 Anyechka (Rensselaer, NY United States) 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
The more I see of Fritz Lang's films, the more and more he grows in esteem for me. This film is no exception. While a sequel to the two-part 1922 film 'Dr. Mabuse: Der Spieler,' it could also be fully enjoyed and understood by one who has never seen the prior film (of quite massive length!), since apart from the recurring title character, it's entirely its own story, with an entirely new set of characters and an entirely new plot. It's not one of those sequels that's a continuation of the events and characters established in the first enstallment, even though it is nice to see the 1922 two-parter first, to have some background information on just who Mabuse is and the kind of trouble he's about to start unleashing again, not to mention just why he's ended up in a mental institution. This is one of those films that just gets better and better with each repeated viewing, particularly since it seems to start in media res. One comes to have more and more of a full and complete understanding of who all of these characters are, why they're behaving this way, and just what is going on in the opening scenes, as well as some of the ensuing scenes that make more sense after having already seen the film a few times. And the film just gets better and better and faster-paced as it goes on. The basic plot, which has already been outlined by other reviewers, is that Dr. Mabuse, after having spent the past decade in a mental institution, has recently begun unleashing his dangerous plans for world domination, sabotage, and an empire of crime, but no one can figure out just what's going on, particularly since Mabuse dies rather early in the film. Even the criminals he's gotten to do his bidding don't really know just who the man behind the curtain is. And the one man who does know his name and what's going on, the disgraced former up-and-coming cop Hofmeister, is sent away to the same asylum himself and driven insane so that he won't be able to tell anyone, least of all his friend Lohmann, the police inspector. This is a classic crime thriller all of the way through, leaving the viewer constantly wondering what's going to happen next, just who is behind all of this criminal mayhem if Mabuse is dead, and if Lohmann can put an end to this reign of terror before it's too late. The extras include a gallery of stills and memorabilia, production drawings, a 1964 interview with Fritz Lang (in which he's perpetuating some famous urban legends about himself, such as leaving Germany in the middle of the night with barely any money and never returning until just recently!), a short documentary on the life of Norbert Jacques, the novelist who created the Mabuse character, a 1984 interview with Rudolf Schündler (who plays Hardy), a comparison of key scenes in the original 1933 German version of the film, the somewhat altered French version released that same year, and the dubbed and rather edited American version released in 1952, an audio commentary, and the French-language version. Both the audio commentary and the comparison of the three versions are done by David Kalat, who did the *amazing* audio commentary for 'Dr. Mabuse: Der Spieler,' which was hands-down one of the best audio commentaries I've heard to date. His insights and information were just as wonderful in these two commentaries. The French-language version comes from a print in less than pristine condition, although given how few copies of this cut are known to survive and that none of them are in great condition, it's just petty and oblivioius to be criticising it for that. This version in particular actually has 3 languages on it--the spoken French, the original Dutch subtitles, and the modern English subtitles in black boxes over the Dutch subtitles (which a number of times are clearly visible anyway). Although the editing on this one isn't as severe as on the 1952 American release, it does change some of the dialogue and axes away the Kent-Lilli subplot to almost nothing, so that the viewer who hasn't already seen the German original wouldn't really understand just what's going on between these two or what Kent's backstory is, just why he's trying to get away from Mabuse's clutches and doesn't want to be involved in crime anymore. The actors used in this version are also inferior to the ones in the original; the only repeat actors are Karl Meixner as Hofmeister (since he was bilingual and therefore able to act in French as well as in German) and of course Rudolf Klein-Rogge as Mabuse. Klein-Rogge's scant lines had to be dubbed, since he didn't speak French. The only actor who didn't seem like a pale imitation of the original was Thomy Bourdelle as Dr. Baum (he even looked like the original Dr. Baum). They were just fleshed-out so much better in the original, with more depth and personality, as opposed to the kind of buffoonish one-dimensional characters they're presented as here. I also thought the original Kent and Lilli were a much more handsome couple than the French Kent and Lilli. It's hard to believe that this was common practice in the early sound era and less expensive than dubbing or subtitling, actually reshooting the entire film with an entirely new cast or, sometimes, making the original cast memorise their lines phoenetically in another language like French or Spanish, in order to have a bigger market. Lang did so much incredible work, both in the silent and sound era, and both in German and American cinema, that it's hard to narrow down his greatest and most-recommendable films apart from his masterpiece 'Metropolis.' This film, however, easily belongs in a Top 10 list of his best films, one that might inspire a casual viewer to become a big fan or to want to see much more.
very impressive and well done February 3, 2005 Ted M. (Pennsylvania, USA) This review is for the Criterion Colelction DVD edition of the film. "Testament of Dr. Mabuse" know in Germany as "Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse" was Fritz Lang's last movie before leaving Germany to escape the Nazis. It was promptly banned in Germany after it's completion until the end of World War 2. I think it is one of his best films and is very well done. It follows the case of a policeman invesigating a case and clues lead to Dr. Mabuse who has been in a sanitatium for many years. it is discovered that he was writing a manifesto in his cell and it appears to predict future events The film has some impressive acting and some very good special effects the best of which is of a fire at a factory with and the footage the smokestacks collapsing is very realisitc. This is a film that should not be missed.
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