IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,8/10
2156
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Nach der Hinrichtung von Fu Manchu taucht ein mysteriöses neues kriminelles Superhirn auf. Seltsamerweise verhält er sich genauso wie Fu Manchu. . .Nach der Hinrichtung von Fu Manchu taucht ein mysteriöses neues kriminelles Superhirn auf. Seltsamerweise verhält er sich genauso wie Fu Manchu. . .Nach der Hinrichtung von Fu Manchu taucht ein mysteriöses neues kriminelles Superhirn auf. Seltsamerweise verhält er sich genauso wie Fu Manchu. . .
- Regie
- Drehbuch
- Hauptbesetzung
Howard Marion-Crawford
- Dr. Petrie
- (as Howard Marion Crawford)
Francesca Tu
- Lotus
- (as Poulet Tu)
Peter Mosbacher
- Hanumon
- (as Peter Mossbacher)
Ric Young
- Grand Lama
- (as Eric Young)
Deborah DeLacey
- Slave Girl
- (as Deborah De Lacey)
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Undoubtedly the best of the series of Fu Manchu films produced in the late 60s, well cast and well directed by Don Sharp, who commendably eschewed camp 'Boys Own' heroics to produce a gripping adventure-thriller. Christopher Lee (as one would expect) is suitably menacing and inscrutable as Fu Manchu, even though the emphasis on his hypnotic eyes is an obvious reference to his role as Dracula. The ever-reliable Nigel Green (Zulu)turns in a solid 'Holmes-ian' performance as Fu Manchu's nemesis Nayland Smith, while James Robertson Justice has a memorable cameo as an irascible museum curator.
The highpoint of the film is undoubtedly the chilling sequence set in a English village, where all the inhabitants have been killed by poisoned gas. It still sends a shiver up the spine. The first sequel, Brides of Fu Manchu, with Douglas Wilmer as Nayland Smith, is watchable, even though it is basically a retread of the first movie, but the films which followed (especially the two directed by the notorious Jess Franco)are absolutely dire.
The highpoint of the film is undoubtedly the chilling sequence set in a English village, where all the inhabitants have been killed by poisoned gas. It still sends a shiver up the spine. The first sequel, Brides of Fu Manchu, with Douglas Wilmer as Nayland Smith, is watchable, even though it is basically a retread of the first movie, but the films which followed (especially the two directed by the notorious Jess Franco)are absolutely dire.
In the light of its considerable reputation, this is a big disappointment. It's the old tale of Fu Manchu, the Yellow Peril, trying to take over the world. The racism of this is so self-evident it's probably not worth mentioning, although the blazing red whenever the Chinese are around, and the worker-like garb of Manchu's henchmen, suggest some sort of allegory of Communism - or is this story of a megalomaniacal, world-domination-lusting, Chinaman a parody of such portentousness?
I really wanted to like this film, but there's so much wrong with it. It's been called a spoof, but if so, the joke's on me. The 1920s setting is somewhat rudimentary - a few contemporary cars and hats in what looks like a very 1960s London (although the reviewer below suggests it is in fact Dublin). Far from camp, the plot is played so straight as to be unenjoyable. Every absurdity and implausibility, rather than hurtling us into the giddy realms of fantasy, rather lumbers us in a plot of cliched hackery.
The acting is abysmal - I've never gotten the point of Christopher Lee (he never had Peter Cushing's middle-aged anguish), although his plummy English tones in the supposed role of a fiendish Chinaman, offers some amusement, as does his daft moustache; worst of all is Nigel Green as the oaklike hero, Nayland Smith - a man so unexpressive and graceless should be funny, but here is dull, slowing down the film at every turn. Only FU Manchu's very sexy daughter, Tsai Chin, enthralls, her subservience to her father suggesting perverse depths of sado-masochism.
This is all the more frustrating in that the film has merit in abundance. The colour schemes, costumes, set-designs and compositions are frequently gorgeous, if sometimes let down by leaden direction; the afoementioned incestuous undertones in the relationship between Fu and daughter; a splendid ironising, despite the racism, of the noble West - Nayland Smith is quite clearly insane, and with his Chinese ladyservant, and death mask ornaments, seems more of a mirror image than a foil for Fu Manchu (there is also something wrong with chemists that research into a concoction that can wipe out whole peoples - there is a RIVER KWAI-like frisson in the plight of the Professor who ironically, and enthusiastically, aids his captor); there is a splendidly directed and designed car chase, reminiscent, as Tom Milne notes, of silent serials.
Best of all is the setting of this grotesque potboiler in placid England. This discrepancy gives the film an AVENGERS-like chill on occasion, especially the amazing scene where Fu Manchu first exercises his power, and wipes out an entire village - spinetingling, chilling, and much more frightening than a similar scene in GOLDFINGER.
I really wanted to like this film, but there's so much wrong with it. It's been called a spoof, but if so, the joke's on me. The 1920s setting is somewhat rudimentary - a few contemporary cars and hats in what looks like a very 1960s London (although the reviewer below suggests it is in fact Dublin). Far from camp, the plot is played so straight as to be unenjoyable. Every absurdity and implausibility, rather than hurtling us into the giddy realms of fantasy, rather lumbers us in a plot of cliched hackery.
The acting is abysmal - I've never gotten the point of Christopher Lee (he never had Peter Cushing's middle-aged anguish), although his plummy English tones in the supposed role of a fiendish Chinaman, offers some amusement, as does his daft moustache; worst of all is Nigel Green as the oaklike hero, Nayland Smith - a man so unexpressive and graceless should be funny, but here is dull, slowing down the film at every turn. Only FU Manchu's very sexy daughter, Tsai Chin, enthralls, her subservience to her father suggesting perverse depths of sado-masochism.
This is all the more frustrating in that the film has merit in abundance. The colour schemes, costumes, set-designs and compositions are frequently gorgeous, if sometimes let down by leaden direction; the afoementioned incestuous undertones in the relationship between Fu and daughter; a splendid ironising, despite the racism, of the noble West - Nayland Smith is quite clearly insane, and with his Chinese ladyservant, and death mask ornaments, seems more of a mirror image than a foil for Fu Manchu (there is also something wrong with chemists that research into a concoction that can wipe out whole peoples - there is a RIVER KWAI-like frisson in the plight of the Professor who ironically, and enthusiastically, aids his captor); there is a splendidly directed and designed car chase, reminiscent, as Tom Milne notes, of silent serials.
Best of all is the setting of this grotesque potboiler in placid England. This discrepancy gives the film an AVENGERS-like chill on occasion, especially the amazing scene where Fu Manchu first exercises his power, and wipes out an entire village - spinetingling, chilling, and much more frightening than a similar scene in GOLDFINGER.
Actually, This One Plays Better Today than it did in 1965. James Bond was Firmly in the Film-Goer's Mind and Hammer Horror had been Around for a Decade. So Although this was in Color, Starred Christopher Lee, and Featured an Iconic Pulp Character, the Movie Seemed Drab by Comparison.
Despite Numerous Fight Scenes, Location Changes, and an Attempted Period Setting for Flavor, it Just Didn't' Deliver the Thrills and Chills Expected. Competent, and Professionally Done with a Decent Budget and Good Lead Actors, Viewed Today with Less Expectation, and a Throwback Attitude it Can be Enjoyed in Saturday Matinée Template from a Bygone Era.
But Without a Matinée or Drive-In Flashback Attitude it Comes Across as Stiff and Plodding. Considered the Best of the Five Mid-Sixties Fu's Featuring Chris Lee, Although the Follow Up The Brides of Fu Man Chu (1966) is a Contender.
Despite Numerous Fight Scenes, Location Changes, and an Attempted Period Setting for Flavor, it Just Didn't' Deliver the Thrills and Chills Expected. Competent, and Professionally Done with a Decent Budget and Good Lead Actors, Viewed Today with Less Expectation, and a Throwback Attitude it Can be Enjoyed in Saturday Matinée Template from a Bygone Era.
But Without a Matinée or Drive-In Flashback Attitude it Comes Across as Stiff and Plodding. Considered the Best of the Five Mid-Sixties Fu's Featuring Chris Lee, Although the Follow Up The Brides of Fu Man Chu (1966) is a Contender.
There's a long winded list of Fu Manchu films going back to the 1920s up until 1980, but director Don Sharp and producer/writer Harry Alan Towers' 1965 matinée crime mystery adventure "The Face of Fu Manchu" starring Nigel Green and Christopher Lee in the title role happened to be my first encounter of the callous mastermind Fu Manchu. Quite a low-budget fare, but what makes it a fun outing is Sharp's precisely lean direction makes good use of the detailed location work and moves at a cracking pace (since the chase between nemesis's is a race against the clock) blending together the unpredictable nature of the unfolding narrative/tough action rather well, while upfront actor Nigel Green gives a stellar performance as the persistent detective Nayland Smith of Scotland Yard. Green breathes confidence, and the hearty script ably compels and allows for the strong performances. Lee fits in the calculative role of Manchu and the likes of Tsai Chin and Howard Marion Crawford are durable in their roles. The venturesome tone is bathed in a comic book frame, but I found the music score to be intrusively cued and the conclusion to be somewhat anticlimactic to the actual build-up.
First outing about the terrifying exploits of the mystic Fu Manchu. Sax Rohmer's fiendish 'Yellow Peril' revived and performed straight in a beautifully designed, competently paced and genuinely exciting thriller. At the film there are adventures, action, thrills, sadism and atmospheric outdoors filmed in London and country exteriors. Produced , as usual, in medium budget by Harry Allan Towers and also written under pseudonym of Peter Breck . Christopher Lee excels in this first chapter as the evil powerful Fu Manchu , the ominous genius who doesn't give up easily, and is out to destroy world or bent on conquering it. This time has designed a fantastic scheme , he returns with a plot to contaminate the River Thames with a powerful toxin extracted from Tibetan poppies. Along the way, abducted people and beautiful girls are tortured by Fumanchu and his nasty daughter (T Sai Chin) . Inspector Nayland Smith (an excelently imperturbable Nigel Green) of Scotland Yard is his perennial adversary and arch-nemesis , he takes the center of attention when undergoes the dangerous mission. Nayland Smith is assigned the case along with his assistant Dr. Petrie (Howard Marion Crawford) and helped by Carl Jannsen (Joachim Fuchsberger), all of them go into the action . The most evil man the world has ever known! Fiendish! Fantastic! Frightening! The sinister minister of fear is here! Who dares look into The Face of Fu Manchu?. Obey Fu Manchu... or every living thing will die!
This is a bizarre blending of thriller, suspense, action , intrigue and fantastic adventure . This exciting, diverting picture is full of Chinese killers, British adventurers , abducted scientist and megalomaniac villains . Christopher Lee with his usual stoic acting as Fu displays efficiently his abilities and killing mercilessly people. Fine 1920s atmosphere with good sets and old vehicles. Chinoiserie sets are notable, even better are the locations, so carefully chosen for their twenties' period, like the great chase with rattletrap cars speeding along cobbled alleys while the pilot of a pursuing aeroplane leans, entrancingly, over the side to drop his squat, fin-tailed bombs by hand. Good performance by Nigel Green as Nyland Smith who in subsequent episodes was interpreted by Douglas Wilmer, and, Richard Greene, as always supported by Dr. Petri from ministry of Interior played by Howard Marion Crawford. The villain T Sai Chin stands out as Fu Manchu's daughter. International and cosmopolitan support cast formed by European actors from diverse countries, such as: Joachim Fuchsberger, James Robertson Justice, Tsai Chin , Ric Young, Walter Rilla and gorgeous Karin Dor who was the wife of producer Harry Allan Towers.
Fu Manchu-Christopher Lee series usually set in London and loosely based on Sax Rohmer's characters were the following: The best installments were ¨Face of Fu Manchu (1965, Don Sharp)¨, and ¨Brides of Fu Manchu ( 1966, Don Sharp)¨, the latter not as nice as ¨Face of Fumanchu¨-also by Don Sharp- but is still amusing and entertaining. And followed by the very inferior sequels: ¨Vengeance of Fu Manchu (1967 by Jeremy Summers ) and most critics felt the outing ¨Blood of Fumanchu¨ was one of the weakest entries along with ¨The castle of Fu Manchu¨, both of them directed by Jess Frank with similar casting , plenty of stock-shots and a Z-series style. Rating The Face of Fu Manchu (1965) : 6/10, acceptable. A witty, fun, stylish, and a treat to watch first installment.
This is a bizarre blending of thriller, suspense, action , intrigue and fantastic adventure . This exciting, diverting picture is full of Chinese killers, British adventurers , abducted scientist and megalomaniac villains . Christopher Lee with his usual stoic acting as Fu displays efficiently his abilities and killing mercilessly people. Fine 1920s atmosphere with good sets and old vehicles. Chinoiserie sets are notable, even better are the locations, so carefully chosen for their twenties' period, like the great chase with rattletrap cars speeding along cobbled alleys while the pilot of a pursuing aeroplane leans, entrancingly, over the side to drop his squat, fin-tailed bombs by hand. Good performance by Nigel Green as Nyland Smith who in subsequent episodes was interpreted by Douglas Wilmer, and, Richard Greene, as always supported by Dr. Petri from ministry of Interior played by Howard Marion Crawford. The villain T Sai Chin stands out as Fu Manchu's daughter. International and cosmopolitan support cast formed by European actors from diverse countries, such as: Joachim Fuchsberger, James Robertson Justice, Tsai Chin , Ric Young, Walter Rilla and gorgeous Karin Dor who was the wife of producer Harry Allan Towers.
Fu Manchu-Christopher Lee series usually set in London and loosely based on Sax Rohmer's characters were the following: The best installments were ¨Face of Fu Manchu (1965, Don Sharp)¨, and ¨Brides of Fu Manchu ( 1966, Don Sharp)¨, the latter not as nice as ¨Face of Fumanchu¨-also by Don Sharp- but is still amusing and entertaining. And followed by the very inferior sequels: ¨Vengeance of Fu Manchu (1967 by Jeremy Summers ) and most critics felt the outing ¨Blood of Fumanchu¨ was one of the weakest entries along with ¨The castle of Fu Manchu¨, both of them directed by Jess Frank with similar casting , plenty of stock-shots and a Z-series style. Rating The Face of Fu Manchu (1965) : 6/10, acceptable. A witty, fun, stylish, and a treat to watch first installment.
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- WissenswertesChristopher Lee wrote in his memoirs, how his leading lady Tsai Chin assisted him with memorizing the Cantonese dialogue.
- PatzerAs the two soldiers stop for a cup of tea, one leans his rifle against the table behind them. It then slowly falls over, totally ignored by the two men as they discuss the weather.
- Alternative VersionenWhen originally released theatrically in the UK, the BBFC made cuts to secure a 'U' rating. All cuts were waived in 1991 when the film was granted a 'PG' certificate for home video.
- VerbindungenFeatured in London Labyrinth (1993)
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- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsländer
- Sprachen
- Auch bekannt als
- The Face of Fu Manchu
- Drehorte
- Skerries, Fingal, County Dublin, Irland(Fleetwick)
- Produktionsfirmen
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Box Office
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 2.834.000 $
- Laufzeit1 Stunde 23 Minuten
- Seitenverhältnis
- 2.35 : 1
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By what name was Ich, Dr. Fu Man Chu (1965) officially released in India in English?
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