THE THOUSAND EYES OF DR. MABUSE by legendary director Fritz Lang (M, METROPOLIS, THE BIG HEAT) commences with a reporter being murdered in his car by a mysterious assassin. Simultaneously, Cornelious, a blind seer, predicts a murder at the police station just as an anonymous caller is phoning in a tip to the police. So begins the third installment in Lang's Dr. Mabuse trilogy. Invoking crime serials of the early days of cinema, the film takes place in post-war Berlin, where the swanky hotel Luxor is the locus of a disturbing ten-year crime spree. Every room is closely watched from a surveillance headquarters in the basement of the hotel, and a gang of criminals taking their orders from a mysterious leader's recorded voice plan a vast range of crimes, including the theft of military secrets and the explosion of a nuclear weapons plant. Police commissioner Krause and his men relentlessly search for clues, while hotel guests Marion, a suicidal young woman, and Travers, a millionaire planning to buy the nuclear weapons plant, spark up a romance. Undercover spies, two way mirrors, double agents, club-footed assassins and pre-modern surveillance technology create a frenetic and breakneck atmosphere as the plot escalates into a series of stylized twists that only Fritz Lang could dream up.
Fritz Lang said of making a final version of Dr. Mabuse in 1960 that it would be "a way of saying certain things about our time."
The Hotel Luxor in the film is based on the Hotel Adlon in Berlin, which the Nazis had planned to set aside for foreign visitors and businessmen after the war and equip it with modern surveillance equipment.
The art directors were former collaborators of Langs from his golden age in Germany.
Gert Frobe who plays the police commisioner would later go on to play Gold Finger in the famed James bond film of the same name.
THE THOUSAND EYES OF DR. MABUSE was never released nationwide in th United States.
Other titles for this same film include THE SECRET OF DR. MABUSE and THE DIABOLICAL DR. MABUSE.
1,000 Eyes Of Dr. Mabuse Reviews:
"...Seen today in a post-Cold War climate, it seems in many ways ahead of its time and almost James Bond-like..."-- Mike Clark, USA Today
Thousand Eyes of Dr. Mabuse; 1000 Eyes of Dr. Mabuse; DIE TAUSEND AUGEN DES DR. MABUSE
Running Time
99 Minutes
Additional Info
Black & White; Widescreen
Movie Details
B&W; Mono Sound; Dolby Noise Reduction; Letter Boxed; Black & White; Widescreen
1,000 Eyes Of Dr. Mabuse Movie Review
Customer 1,000 Eyes Of Dr. Mabuse Reviews Customer 1,000 Eyes Of Dr. Mabuse DVD Reviews
Average Rating: (4 out of 5 stars)
excellent edition Film is not the best among Lang's works (although this is, after all, really good thriller) but this edition is excellent. You have the possibility to choose between original German soundtrack, with or without subtitles, English dubbing or really interesting commentary by David Kalat. Trailers of other Mabuse series films are added as bonus - this is really exciting and very rare stuff. I recommend this disc strongly to all admirers of Lang or Mabuse series. Submitted by augpatom (Lodz, Poland) Was This Review Helpful? YesNo 1 of 2 found this helpful.
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1,000 Eyes Of Dr. Mabuse DVD
1,000 Eyes Of Dr. Mabuse DVD Features
The last film ever made by the great Fritz Lang (Metropolis, M, The Big Heat), this fascinating thriller combines elements of film noir, horror, and science fiction. Gert Frobe (Goldfinger) stars as police commissioner Kras, trying to uncover the sinister secret of the mysterious Hotel Luxor, ground zero for a massive crime wave. The crimes show all the hallmarks of evil genius Dr. Mabuse--but he died 30 years ago! Digitally restored from original studio negatives.
Source: Image Entertainment, Inc.
Region 0 Snap Case Single Side - Single Layer Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.66 Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.85 Letterbox - 1.85 Audio: Dolby Digital Mono 1.0 - English Dolby Digital Mono 1.0 - German Interactive Features: Interactive Menus Scene Access Text/Photo Galleries: Stills/Photos
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