aka DR. MABUSE VS. SCOTLAND YARD
The fifth of the Dr. Mabuse German reboots from the 1960s begins with Mabuse dead, as he was at the end of the fourth film, THE TESTAMENT OF DR. MABUSE. The supernatural has usually been an element of the Mabuse films, often obliquely or ambiguously, but here we see the spirit of the crime lord Mabuse possess Prof. Pohland, an asylum director, and direct him to spread “panic and chaos.” After that, however, it’s mostly a straightforward crime melodrama. In fact, given that the plot is based on a story by Edgar Wallace’s son Bryan, it's very close in look and feel to the German krimi movies of the era, as the earlier THOUSAND EYES and RETURN were, with a sci-fi element. It begins in Hamburg. Inspector Vulpius is upset that Mabuse's infamous "testament," the scribbled documents that he wrote in the throes of madness and which contained plans for future criminal plans, has been destroyed. A train derailment frees a prisoner, Cockstone, whom Pohland uses to help refine a new and dastardly invention by Prof. Lawrence: something that looks like a camera but is actually a mind control device. When aimed at someone's head, that person will follow whatever instructions they are given (verbal orders transmitted to the person somehow), though the control fades when the subject sleeps. Cockstone kills Lawrence and Pohland moves his operations to England, where he sends his henchmen out with the devices, triggering a major crime wave of robbery and murder and suicide. Vulpius follows and teams up with Scotland Yard man Bill Tern to stop Pohland's reign of terror. Though this feels very little like a Mabuse movie, it’s fun as a crime movie, well paced and exciting.
Few cast members from the earlier Mabuse movies are present here. Peter van Eyck is a bit lightweight and even a bit too old for part of Tern, without the energy of Lex Barker, the lead in the last two films. Werner Peters, who played minor roles in previous films, is fine as Vulpius, though I do miss Gert Forbe from the previous movie. One of the oddest characters in a Mabuse movie (or, for that matter, in a krimi) is Tern's elderly mother, played by Agnes Windeck, who gives herself nightmares from reading crime novels but is very helpful to her son with her off-the-wall insights. Even odder is Klaus Kinski, a regular in the Edgar Wallace krimi films, playing Joe, a fellow Scotland Yard detective. His stock-in-trade is playing tense neurotics, and here, though he's a good guy (except briefly when he is put under mind control), he still looks like he might just snap any minute. Walter Rilla reprises his role from TESTAMENT as Pohland, the Mabuse stand-in, and is very good. Sabine Bethmann plays a half-hearted romantic interest for Tern. The best scene is one in which a hangman, about to execute a prisoner, is forced through mind control to hang himself. Even though the reboot movies move further and further from the mood of the Fritz Lang Mabuse movies, they are still worth seeing. I’ve got one more to go. Pictured are van Eyck and Kinski. [Blu-ray]













