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IMDbPro

Le diabolique docteur Mabuse

Original title: Die 1000 Augen des Dr. Mabuse
  • 1960
  • 1h 43m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
4.1K
YOUR RATING
Le diabolique docteur Mabuse (1960)
Trailer for The 1000 Eyes of Dr. Mabuse
Play trailer2:03
2 Videos
99+ Photos
CrimeMysteryThriller

In 1960s Germany, criminal mastermind Dr. Mabuse uses hypnotized victims and the surveillance equipment of a Nazi-era bugged hotel to steal nuclear technology from a visiting American indust... Read allIn 1960s Germany, criminal mastermind Dr. Mabuse uses hypnotized victims and the surveillance equipment of a Nazi-era bugged hotel to steal nuclear technology from a visiting American industrialist.In 1960s Germany, criminal mastermind Dr. Mabuse uses hypnotized victims and the surveillance equipment of a Nazi-era bugged hotel to steal nuclear technology from a visiting American industrialist.

  • Director
    • Fritz Lang
  • Writers
    • Fritz Lang
    • Heinz Oskar Wuttig
    • Jan Fethke
  • Stars
    • Dawn Addams
    • Peter van Eyck
    • Gert Fröbe
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    4.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Fritz Lang
    • Writers
      • Fritz Lang
      • Heinz Oskar Wuttig
      • Jan Fethke
    • Stars
      • Dawn Addams
      • Peter van Eyck
      • Gert Fröbe
    • 30User reviews
    • 63Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos2

    The 1000 Eyes of Dr. Mabuse
    Trailer 2:03
    The 1000 Eyes of Dr. Mabuse
    The 1000 Eyes of Dr. Mabuse
    Trailer 2:41
    The 1000 Eyes of Dr. Mabuse
    The 1000 Eyes of Dr. Mabuse
    Trailer 2:41
    The 1000 Eyes of Dr. Mabuse

    Photos181

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    Top cast28

    Edit
    Dawn Addams
    Dawn Addams
    • Marion Menil
    Peter van Eyck
    Peter van Eyck
    • Henry B. Travers
    Gert Fröbe
    Gert Fröbe
    • Kriminalkommissar Kras
    Wolfgang Preiss
    Wolfgang Preiss
    • Prof. Dr. S. Jordan…
    Werner Peters
    Werner Peters
    • Hieronymus B. Mistelzweig
    Andrea Checchi
    Andrea Checchi
    • Hoteldetektiv Berg
    • (as Andrea Checci)
    Marielouise Nagel
    • The Blonde Luck
    • (as Marie Luise Nagel)
    Reinhard Kolldehoff
    Reinhard Kolldehoff
    • Roberto Menil alias 'Klumpfuß'
    Howard Vernon
    Howard Vernon
    • No. 12
    Nico Pepe
    • Hotel-Manager
    Jean-Jacques Delbo
    • Cornelius' Butler
    • (as Jean-Jaques Delbo)
    David Cameron
    David Cameron
    • Michael Parker
    • (as David Camerone)
    Linda Sini
    Linda Sini
    • Corinna
    Renate Küster
    Renate Küster
    • TV-Ansagerin
    Rolf Weih
    Rolf Weih
    • Interpol-Chef
    Rolf Möbius
    Rolf Möbius
    • Police-Officer
    Lotti Alberti
    • Schwester Agnes
    • (as Lotte Alberti)
    Manfred Grote
    • Kriminalassistent Keyser
    • Director
      • Fritz Lang
    • Writers
      • Fritz Lang
      • Heinz Oskar Wuttig
      • Jan Fethke
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews30

    6.94.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8Boba_Fett1138

    Good last, old fashioned styled, thriller from Fritz Lang.

    Of course this isn't the most classic or best Fritz Lang movie but it nevertheless is a more than worthy last one by him. It's not that he died shortly afterward (he lived till 1976) but he lost his eye sight and by 1964 he was already nearly blind. It feels right that he ended his directing career with a Dr. Mabuse movie. His previous 2 directed Dr. Mabuse movies, "Dr. Mabuse, der Spieler - Ein Bild der Zeit" and "Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse" are among his best and also best known works. He obviously had some real passion and respect for the character of Dr. Mabuse. Why else would he had made 3 movies involving the character, over the course of 4 decades. The character is of course also a real intriguing ones. He was one of the first real movie villain in the 1922 movie "Dr. Mabuse, der Spieler - Ein Bild der Zeit". A character that manipulates, influences peoples will, all for his own benefits, with the help of hypnotic and supernatural powers.

    Just like 7 of the 8 Dr. Mabuse movies made, this movie is shot in atmospheric black & white. Fritz Lang made a few color movies late in his career but for this movie he went back to his beloved black & white. No doubt he did this on intentions to let this movie connect more and better to the previous 2 Dr. Mabuse movie, made before this one. After all, the last Dr. Mabuse made before this one dates back from 1933.

    Even though this movie is made 27 years later, it's still a direct sequel to to "Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse". It makes lots of references to the events which occurred in that movie. However if you haven't seen the previous 2 movies, I think you'll also still have a good time watching this movie and understand the events in it.

    The visual style and style of film-making is also mostly the same when compared to the 1933 movie. A style Fritz Lang was of course very experienced in, being one of the best directors of the '20's and '30's. Nevertheless the movie is still set in its 'present' day 1960. It makes this a '60's movie in '30's style, which also provides the movie with a few clumsiness's and at times makes this movie feel, sound and look way more outdated. It therefor can be argued if this was the right approach. No doubt it is also part of the reason why this movie isn't as well known and appreciated as the previous two Dr. Mabuse movies from 1933 and 1922.

    The cinematography within this movie is especially great and helps to give the movie its own unique atmosphere and old fashioned feeling style.

    Gert Fröbe was really excellent in this movie. He proofs himself once more to be one of the best German actors that ever lived. Ir's fun that many actor appearing in this movie also appeared in the later Dr. Mabuse sequels, often in completely different roles, including Gert Fröbe.

    It's sort of too bad that the whole movie doesn't have the pace and excitement of the movie its first halve. There is more talking than real thriller or suspense moments in the second part. Still the whole mysterious atmosphere and question; 'Who is Dr. Mabuse?', remains present throughout the entire movie. The movie also ends with a real blast and gets surprisingly action filled toward its ending.

    Yet another real recommendable Dr. Mabuse movie!

    8/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/
    9evilskip

    Fritz Lang's swan song

    What a swan song this is! Wild and wooly fun from Fritz Lang. Dr Mabuse is running his criminal empire from the Hotel Luxor. His henchmen never see his face as they receive their orders via radio.Without giving too much away his plans involve the takeover of a rich man's empire and general blackmail and murder.Gert Frobe plays the inspector out to nab Mabuse before Mabuse kills him.Funniest scene takes place in the Inspector's office when everybody starts to fall before a bomb goes off! After watching 5 Mabuse movies in a row this is easily the best.It is available from Sinister Cinema.
    7Vigilante-407

    Do yourself a favor...don't read the credits.

    This is a great little whodunit and an excellent start to the revival of Fritz Lang's great Dr. Mabuse series. It is very reminiscent of the earlier films in the twenties and thirties, particularly Le Testament Du Dr. Mabuse, from which Lang lifts and modernizes many situations.

    I said don't read the credits in the title to this review because guessing who is actually the mastermind Mabuse is half of the fun...there are a lot of red herrings that don't play out until the last fifteen minutes of the movie.

    This was the first movie in the new Mabuse series and I would recommend anyone delving into the world of Dr. Mabuse use this as a starting point (especially if none of the silents or early talkies are available in your area).
    7funkyfry

    Good late Lang thriller

    Eccentric characters are drawn to the Luxor Hotel where a panicked and paranoid pretty lady (Addams) is attempting to kill herself to be rid of her fears forever. Van Eyck saves her, falls in love, but also under the influence of the nefarious "Dr. Mabuse". He's the old "prophet" who the police go to -- or is he? No, he's the guy pretending to be Dr. Mabuse, using secret cameras hidden around to Luxor to spy on its guests and set up a master plan! -- or is he?

    This one may sound cheezy, but it's all in good fun and with tongue in cheeck, and a good final film for Lang.
    7davidmvining

    Mabuse can never really die

    In terms of how directors go out with their final movie, this reminds me of Family Plot, Alfred Hitchcock's final film. There isn't any comparison between the two in terms of tone or genre, but both The Thousand Eyes of Dr. Mabuse and Family Plot are solidly good works that firmly fit within the bodies of work of both men that may not reach the heights of their best, but do demonstrate many of their best qualities nonetheless. Lang's final film is also the third film he made about the eponymous evil German doctor who has morphed over the decades from representing Weimar Germany's failings to the dangers of a rising Nazi power to something else and possibly more interesting more than a decade after the fall of the Third Reich.

    I was actually thrown off in the opening minutes of this third adventure about Dr. Mabuse. It opens with a repeat of a scene that occurred in The Testament of Dr. Mabuse. In both the second and third film, a man gets shot in a car from a nearby car, leaving the car alone in the middle of the road as traffic goes around it. For a minute, I wondered if this was going to end up being some kind of remake instead of a continuing adventure, but instead we get a decidedly modern take on a film series' history. What's happening is not some sort of retconning of the previous films where Dr. Mabuse either never existed pre-Nazi or never died, but that everything in the previously released films did happen. What's going on is that some force is recreating famous crimes done by Dr. Mabuse, and we learn very early that the criminals doing it think they're working for Dr. Mabuse himself (though they don't know the history).

    The man who died was a journalist, and it gets Inspector Kras (Gert Frobe) looking into the Luxor Hotel, especially after it's noted the long line of curious incidents leading to death are connected to it, the death of the journalist just being the most recent. At the hotel is currently staying a wealthy American, Henry Travers (Peter van Eyck) who is in the country to help secure rights materials necessary to build nuclear power plants in America. When a woman, Marion (Dawn Addams), tries to jump from the building just outside his window, he and her become intertwined with Henry trying to find a way to save her from the despair of her abusive husband.

    Meanwhile, Kras goes to the enigmatic psychic, Cornelius (Lupo Prezzo), to find any kind of help he can, and Cornelius knows a lot that he shouldn't know. Things that happen in other places, in the future, and he seems to be a real psychic, though completely blind.

    Now, the way that this film feels so firmly in Lang's body of work is the secret behind it all. The plot synopsis on the IMDB actually gives it away, so I'll just dig in right now. As I've previously said, the two preceding Dr. Mabuse films used the eponymous villain as a vision into Germany at the time. There's a great moment where the insurance salesman Hieronymus B. Mistelzweig (Werner Peters) tells of the history of the Luxor Hotel, how it was "born" in 1944, under Nazi rule, and never freed from it. It's borderline haunted house stuff. It also points to the subtext of the film: the idea of Nazism haunting contemporary Western Germany. The things that the Nazis built still stand. The men who worked in the party were still around (largely, there were war crime trials). The ideology still existed at least on paper. Can Germany ever truly be free of it?

    Also, the Luxor was built as a diplomatic hotel, so it was actually built with a host of spy equipment throughout. The way this is introduced is the sort of thing that Brian DePalma would later do, with a single shot of a television screen that pulls back to reveal the equipment controlling it. It's creepy.

    The actual story of the film plays out in a way that almost feels directionless for a time, and that's purely because we don't know what the whole plot is. We do get it straightened out in the final fifteen minutes or so, though. I think this will play better on rewatches because of that. Also, the twist about who is Dr. Mabuse is not that hard to guess. I also don't think that the love story that develops between Travers and Marion is all that involving. It feels a bit tacked on, like the sort of subplot inserted to increase interest in the female quadrant of the movie going public in Germany at the time.

    So, what is this movie? First and foremost, it's a thriller about a series of crimes and a police investigator trying to navigate the morass of information available to find the culprit, having to push through current evidence and ancient history in the form of tales of a dead genius along the way. It's also contemporary Germany dealing with the legacy of its own history that ended a decade and a half before. Those two parts are rather expertly intertwined in a dramatic procedural package that reminds me of a mixture of Dr. Mabuse and M. And then there's some love story stuff that fits but doesn't work as well. Like the rest of the Dr. Mabuse films that Lang made, I feel like it's a couple of choices away from greatness. As it stands, those choices remain, and it's still solidly good.

    As Fritz Lang's final film, it feels very appropriate as a reflection of what he was trying to do with his work as a whole.

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    Related interests

    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Les Soprano (1999)
    Crime
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Fritz Lang's final directorial project.
    • Goofs
      Dr. Mabuse rips a telephone from its cord and throws it on the ground, in a later shot the telephone is still on the table and intact.
    • Quotes

      Henry B. Travers: Try to relax. You know what you're doing just doesn't make sense. There's no way back. You're young and quite beautiful. Yes, you should know that. Please, give life another chance. If you jump you might not die instantly. You might linger on for months. Wake up and find that you're a cripple. Think about it.

      Marion Menil: It's hopeless. Too scared.

      Henry B. Travers: Give me your hand. Come, reach out to me. You can do it.

      man in crowd: Thank God. Otherwise I couldn't eat any supper at all tonight.

    • Alternate versions
      Most versions end with Marion waking in what appears to be a hospital. Travers is at her bedside, and the two hold hands and exchange some unheard dialogue as the picture fades to black. In the French release this scene lasts a few seconds longer, and we see Marion's eyes close as she slumps back against the bed, presumably dying.
    • Connections
      Edited into Die 1000 Glotzböbbel vom Dr. Mabuse (2018)

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    FAQ14

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 20, 1961 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • West Germany
      • France
      • Italy
    • Language
      • German
    • Also known as
      • The Thousand Eyes of Dr. Mabuse
    • Filming locations
      • Eiswerderstraße, Spandau, Berlin, Germany(car falling off the bridge)
    • Production companies
      • Central Cinema Company Film (CCC)
      • CEI Incom
      • Critérion Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 43m(103 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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