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Le Dr. Mabuse

Titre original : Dr. Mabuse, der Spieler
  • 1922
  • Tous publics
  • 3h 15min
NOTE IMDb
7,8/10
9,7 k
MA NOTE
Theo Matejko in Le Dr. Mabuse (1922)
CriminalitéMystèreThriller

Le Dr Mabuse, un criminel redoutable, entreprend de faire fortune et de diriger Berlin. L'inspecteur Wenk décide de l'arrêter.Le Dr Mabuse, un criminel redoutable, entreprend de faire fortune et de diriger Berlin. L'inspecteur Wenk décide de l'arrêter.Le Dr Mabuse, un criminel redoutable, entreprend de faire fortune et de diriger Berlin. L'inspecteur Wenk décide de l'arrêter.

  • Réalisation
    • Fritz Lang
  • Scénario
    • Norbert Jacques
    • Thea von Harbou
    • Fritz Lang
  • Casting principal
    • Rudolf Klein-Rogge
    • Aud Egede-Nissen
    • Gertrude Welcker
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,8/10
    9,7 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Fritz Lang
    • Scénario
      • Norbert Jacques
      • Thea von Harbou
      • Fritz Lang
    • Casting principal
      • Rudolf Klein-Rogge
      • Aud Egede-Nissen
      • Gertrude Welcker
    • 62avis d'utilisateurs
    • 87avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 1 nomination au total

    Photos23

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    Rôles principaux36

    Modifier
    Rudolf Klein-Rogge
    Rudolf Klein-Rogge
    • Dr. Mabuse
    • (as Rudolf Klein Rogge)
    Aud Egede-Nissen
    Aud Egede-Nissen
    • Cara Carozza, the dancer
    Gertrude Welcker
    Gertrude Welcker
    • Countess Dusy Told
    • (as Gertrude Welker)
    Alfred Abel
    Alfred Abel
    • Count Told…
    Bernhard Goetzke
    Bernhard Goetzke
    • Prosecutor von Wenk…
    Paul Richter
    Paul Richter
    • Edgar Hull
    Robert Forster-Larrinaga
    • Spoerri
    Hans Adalbert Schlettow
    Hans Adalbert Schlettow
    • Georg, the Chauffeur
    • (as Hans Adalbert von Schlettow)
    Georg John
    Georg John
    • Pesch
    Károly Huszár
    Károly Huszár
    • Hawasch
    • (as Karl Huszar)
    Grete Berger
    Grete Berger
    • Fine, a servant
    Julius Falkenstein
    Julius Falkenstein
    • Karsten
    Lydia Potechina
    Lydia Potechina
    • The Russian
    Julius E. Herrmann
    • Emil Schramm
    • (as Julius Herrmann)
    Max Adalbert
    Max Adalbert
      Anita Berber
      • Taenzerin im Frack
      • (non crédité)
      Paul Biensfeldt
      • Mann, der die Pistole bekommt
      • (non crédité)
      • …
      Gustav Botz
        • Réalisation
          • Fritz Lang
        • Scénario
          • Norbert Jacques
          • Thea von Harbou
          • Fritz Lang
        • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
        • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

        Avis des utilisateurs62

        7,89.6K
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        10

        Avis à la une

        9maksquibs

        The police force are on the trail of Mabuse, a criminal mastermind wreaking havoc on Weimar Germany. But can they catch him before he strikes again or self-destructs?

        Fritz Lang's first masterpiece, a four & a half hour double-feature with hardly a moment wasted, has been restored to stunning effect. (WARNING: In the KINO DVD edition, you MUST lower the contrast & brightness levels to reveal the full grey scale.) On one level, this is simply a far-fetched, but smashingly entertaining detective drama about Mabuse, a criminal mastermind who shows up in more disguises than Alec Guinness in KIND HEARTS & CORONETS to counterfeit, manipulate the stock exchange, kill personal rivals, run the drug racket and generally lord it over the pursuing police force of the modern city. If Part One offers a more devastating look at the perilous world that was Weimar Germany, there's still plenty of action & schemes left for Part Two. In MABUSE, Lang manages, more than he would in METROPOLIS, to hold all the expressionist elements (design, acting, story construction) in perfect balance. The dynamism for an early '20s pic, (before the era of easy camera movement) is simply phenomenal. And where else will you find an inter-title as glorious as: 'Eat some cocaine, you weakling!'
        7gbill-74877

        Lots to like, but far too long for its pace

        Highlights:

        • Dr. Mabuse. He's a prototype for so many villains in film history, and as master manipulator who preys on people's fears and exercises mind control over them, is evil in an insidious way. He also bullies his minions and disposes of people after they're no longer useful to him, a true loner with no empathy for humanity. Rudolf Klein-Rogge's look and performance are mesmerizing, no pun intended.


        • Fantastic sets with lots of Expressionist touches and art, particularly at the Count's house. Director Fritz Lang combines these with big architectural spaces and excellent mise en scène.


        • The sequence at the beginning, with a highly coordinated robbery of a trade agreement from a train, looks straight out of a modern action movie. This transitions to Mabuse manipulating the stock market as he stands over agitated traders, both of which are memorable scenes.


        • Lots of other little touches. The noxious gas in the taxi, released at the pull of a lever. The "Chinese glasses", whose reflections are used to confuse and befuddle. The eerie group of blind men helping to count counterfeit money. The tunnel escape. All cool stuff.


        • The countess (Gertrude Welcker). Looking for something more out of life, and in her languid eyes you can just see the sentiment behind lines like "I need in life a strong breath of extraordinary thrills and adventures; but, I fear such things have become extinct."


        • "Take some cocaine, you wimp!" I chuckled over this line, and coming as it did late in the movie (see below lowlight), imagined it being a directive aimed at flagging audience members.


        • Captures the zeitgeist of the times - the chaos of the early Weimar Republic, its economic hardships, and those who antagonized and inflamed people to control them. Mabuse references Nietzsche's will to power, and clearly sees himself as an Übermensch, ideas that also appealed to the emerging Nazi party. "I feel like a state within a state with which I have always been at war!" he bellows, seeming to channel the frustrations of the nationalists.


        Lowlights:

        • Far, far too long. Probably about two hours too long for the story. The average film length in 1922 was roughly 70 minutes, and at 270 minutes - four and a half hours - this film is nearly four times that. When you combine that with a pace that is often slow and methodical - about average for the period - whew, you're in for a haul, regardless of whether you break your viewing up or damn the consequences and strap yourself in (preferably with a lot of strong black coffee).


        • Verbose intertitles. Perhaps a microcosm of the film's bigger issue, the younger Lang didn't seem to understand the value of concision.


        I love Lang and what he was going for here, but would recommend the second film in the trilogy, The Testament of Dr. Mabuse (1933) over this one. Tellingly, that one clocks in at just over two hours. It also has a more engaging detective and love story. I feel bad dinging the review score a bit given how pioneering the film was and all of its positives, but I have to be true to my enjoyment level too.
        8conn24h

        Not only for students of German Cinema!

        In this review I refer to the Transit Film DVD edition from the F W Murnau Foundation (or Stiftung, if you understand German!). This 2 DVD set is an excellent restoration of this(these?) movie(s). At three and a half hours, some may argue that it is a little daunting for the uninitiated silent film viewer, but in my humble opinion it is so well made (by Fritz Lang) that it still stands up today as a masterpiece of "gangster cinema". Shot between November 1921 and March 1922, the film was made only a couple of years after Lang's directorial debut (Halblutt - 1919), and five years before Metropolis - perhaps Lang's masterpiece. It can be argued that it represents the start of a 'series' of gangster/crime related movies by Lang, and parallels can be drawn to Spione (Spies) of 1927/28, and M (1931 - Lang's first talkie), and of course, The Testament of Dr Mabuse (1932/33). There was also a final addition from 1960, The Thousand Eyes of Dr Mabuse, but that is obviously of a different era. It is interesting to observe that Lang/von Harbou clearly were attempting to create a screen detective character something like Sherlock Holmes in the form of Commissioner Lohmann, (superbly played by Otto Wernicke) for it is he who is the detective in both M and Testament. However, I digress. Where both M and Testament concern themselves with the work of the police in an almost documentary fashion (especially M), Der Spieler is almost exclusively concerned with the working of the criminal mind. Mabuse is played by Rudolf Klein-Rogge, one of Lang's favourites - though one wonders what Klein-Rogge made of Lang - Thea von Harbou, the screen-writer, married Lang in 1921, after divorcing Klein-Rogge! He gives a masterful performance as Mabuse, and dominates the film. Even when not on the screen, his omnipotence pervades the entire proceedings. Whilst I wouldn't go so far as to describe the picture as 'gripping', it still has the power to hold the attention for most of its mighty three and a half hours. For me, at least, this is aided in no small measure by the magnificent new soundtrack by Aljocha Zimmermann, whose use of leitmotif (in true Teutonic style) adds immeasurably to the overall enjoyment of the film. I strongly recommend this picture, not only to serious students of German Silent Cinema (they'll have seen it anyway!) but to anybody who enjoys a good gangster/crime story. If you have a hang-up about silent movies, then in all honesty this isn't going to change your mind - but give it a try. I think its worth the effort in the end. Trivia: Although made in Berlin, and the numerous vehicles all drive on the right as one would expect, they are without exception, all right hand drive!
        J. Spurlin

        Dr. Mabuse begins his reign of cinematic crime in this innovative and highly influential silent movie, which retains much of its power for patient viewers.

        Dr. Mabuse is a name familiar to almost everyone in Germany, but most Americans would have to be told that he's a criminal mastermind, psychiatrist, gambler and hypnotist with supernatural powers. Mabuse is notable for his brilliant disguises and his gang of minions who conspire against people and institutions for the sole purpose of bringing power and wealth to himself. This evil genius is known only as The Great Unknown to those who wish to stop him. Mabuse was created by Norbert Jacques for a novel which has never been out of print in Germany. The director of this film, Fritz Lang, claimed him for his own; and now Mabuse is known not as a character in a novel but as a character in three Fritz Lang films, the first of which is this innovative and hugely influential silent movie.

        Lang's storytelling techniques are especially innovative, but later spy films, including Lang's own, have greatly improved on what's here and leave modern viewers alert to the slow pace, murky details and confusing plot twists. What hasn't been improved upon is the artistry behind the photographic effects. I don't mean the effects themselves: modern special effects are infinitely more sophisticated. This film's effects have a great impact even—or especially—on today's viewer who is accustomed to a rapid-fire series of elaborate, gaudy computer-generated pictures, like those in, say, Peter Jackson's "King Kong." Nothing in that film is as memorable to me as this movie's scene where the camera closes in on Mabuse and everything around him goes dark, leaving only one glowing, malevolent head floating in the blackness.

        The highly exaggerated style of acting from everyone in the cast would look idiotic if seen in isolated bits. Von Welk (Bernhard Goetzke), tilting back his head and crossing his eyes as Mabuse (Rudolf Klein-Rogge) hypnotizes him, would have been a perfect clip for Jay Ward's "Fractured Flickers." As part of this film, every melodramatic moment from the cast is effective in a way that a more naturalistic style can never be.

        Fans of the Mabuse films, which number many more than just Lang's three, are sometimes disappointed by this first incarnation. This Mabuse allows himself violent emotional outbursts, while the later version is marked by icy self-control. The more familiar Mabuse may be an improvement over this one, but they don't quite replace him, and those films don't quite replace this one. This is a treasure for film historians, and indirectly a treasure for fans of the countless movies influenced by it.

        For those who simply want a good movie, there's plenty here to reward them, provided they are very, very patient.
        9Boba_Fett1138

        The manipulative Dr. Mabuse.

        This is the movie that features one of fist arch-criminals, Dr. Mabuse. A manipulative character, who by hypnosis manipulates people and set them up against each other and steal their money, by letting him play card games against him, while he lets his opponents deliberately loose, even when they have the better cards. He manipulates for more money and the love from respectable woman but also most definitely purely for his own pleasure. It doesn't need to be explained why Dr. Mabuse is evil, he just simply IS. That is what makes a great and memorable movie villain.

        Definitely true that the second halve of the movie is better than the first. In the second halve the movie really starts to take pace and form. Does it make the first part obsolete? I think not. It perfectly shows how manipulative Dr. Mabuse and the characters also get strongly developed in it. But yes, it's definitely true that the movie is a long sit. Almost 4 hours is of course a long time (and there even is a longer version). It does not ever make the movie bad or boring but it does make it a bit tiresome at times. The movie also isn't easy to follow but that often is the curse of early narrative full-length movies from the '10's and '20's of the previous century.

        For 60% of the movie, the movie concentrates on card games. Some of the sequence involving the games are made to look more exciting and and tense than in any James Bond movie ever had been the case.

        The movie uses some good early cinematic ticks and also some interesting storytelling techniques such as some interesting fast flashbacks, to help to remind to the viewer of what happened earlier in the story.

        The movie also shows some early film-noir tendencies and other thriller and mystery elements. Not just with its story, psychological thriller elements or style of film-making but also with its characters. The main villain Dr. Mabuse is of course the best example of this. He plays an early full-blooded big movie villain, who is also being accompanied by a couple of typical crook-like looking henchmen. All elements that later would become defining for the genre. The movie is about good versus evil, in good early cinematic form.

        Some of the tricks make sure that the movie is filled with a couple of memorable and effective sequences, mainly regarding the manipulative hypnosis sequences, by Dr. Mabuse. It makes the movie highly imaginative and original, though it all obviously is not as revolutionary as the other Fritz Lang classics; "Metropolis" and "M".

        Of course by todays standards the acting in the movie is definitely over-the-top. Fritz Lang never casted actors just because of their acting skills but also because of their powerful looks. It all helps to make the early acting in Lang movies still fascinating and powerful to watch. Bernhard Goetzke as the state attorney von Welk is a great 'main-hero' for the movie. Of course Rudolf Klein-Rogge is also great as Dr. Mabuse and so is Alfred Abel, though I liked him in "Metropolis" even better.

        Definitely worth seeing, if you can handle its long running time.

        9/10

        http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/

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        Histoire

        Modifier

        Le saviez-vous

        Modifier
        • Anecdotes
          Soviet editors re-cut the Dr. Mabuse films into one shorter film (see Alternate Versions). The lead editor was Sergei Eisenstein.
        • Gaffes
          The sign at the Excelsior about languages spoken declares "Her talces svenska" ("Her" and "talces" are pure nonsense). It should read "Här talas svenska" ("Swedish spoken here").
        • Citations

          Cara Carozza, the dancer: You gamble with money, with people and with fate and most horrifying of all, with your own self.

        • Versions alternatives
          In 1995 it was released in Spain on a silent films collection on video. There was a reduced version of 88 minutes retitled "The Fatal Passion". Originally distributed by "The Interstellar Film Company".
        • Connexions
          Edited into Histoire(s) du cinéma: Fatale beauté (1994)

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        FAQ15

        • How long is Dr. Mabuse, the Gambler?Alimenté par Alexa
        • Who wrote the score / what is the source of the music for Dr. Mabuse, der Spieler(1922) and how can I add it to my music collection? It is an interesting combination of classical and early jazz and I am interested in learning more. Thank you.

        Détails

        Modifier
        • Date de sortie
          • 30 septembre 1922 (Hongrie)
        • Pays d’origine
          • Allemagne
        • Langues
          • Allemand
          • Anglais
          • Français
        • Aussi connu sous le nom de
          • Docteur Mabuse, le joueur
        • Lieux de tournage
          • Berliner Union-Film, Oberlandstraße 26-35, Tempelhof, Berlin, Allemagne
        • Société de production
          • Uco-Film GmbH
        • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

        Spécifications techniques

        Modifier
        • Durée
          • 3h 15min(195 min)
        • Mixage
          • Silent
        • Rapport de forme
          • 1.33 : 1

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