I've been reviewing the 1960s Dr. Mabuse films here recently. You should go to Wikipedia or IMDb for the full background of the character, but I will note that this is the fourth in the rebooted German series from CCC Studios from the 1960s, and a remake of Fritz Lang's 1933 film of the same title. At the end of the previous film, the criminal mastermind Mabuse has gone insane and been committed to an asylum, filling his hours by constantly scribbling indecipherable notes and sketches. This film begins with a couple of daring and clever robberies: gold is stolen from an armored car, a diamond exchange is robbed, and paper used for printing money is taken from a train (this for a smaller gang of blind men who work as counterfeiters). Inspector Lohmann thinks that the crimes betray the touch of Mabuse, but asylum director Pohland takes Lohmann to see Mabuse, safely locked away and single-mindedly scribbling in his cell. Jonny, a boxer, is recruited to join the criminal gang whose orders are given to them in a secret passage room by a shadowy figure, though Jonny hides his new job from his girlfriend Nelly (who I really only mention because she is played by future star Senta Berger). Halfway through, we discover that Mabuse has Pohland under his hypnotic power, and it's Pohland who passes his criminal plans along to the gang. The gang members try not to kill or harm the innocents who get involved in their crimes, but one gang member who turns out to be spying for the cops is, in the movie's best scene, killed by a backward-shooting gun. The last fifteen minutes are a wild and wooly climax involving the electrical torture of Lohmann and by the end, both Mabuse and Pohland are dead, though based on the evidence of the previous films, they're probably not.
This is my favorite of the 60s Mabuse movies so far. Lang fans may not love it as it generally eschews the mystical feel and expressionist look of the 1933 original, though the possibility of telepathic communication is presented, but it's fast moving, coherent, and presents the gang members as competent crooks rather than evil geniuses. With the Mabuse mystique as a fairly minor element—unlike in some of the other movies, Mabuse doesn't come across here as a threat to humanity—it may be best viewed as a traditional crime melodrama, lacking (for better or worse) the almost spy-movie feel of the previous Mabuse entries as there is no handsome studly agent here, just the somewhat schlubby Lohmann, played superbly by Gert Frobe in his third appearance in the series. Wolfgang Preiss, again, plays Mabuse though with limited screen time, and Walter Rilla is very effective as Pohland. At one point, he delivers the great line, "We are not a humanitarian organization—dead bodies are part of our business." Some genuinely amusing comic relief is provided by Harald Juhnke as Lohmann's assistant who keeps positing crime solutions based on movies and novels. Also with Helmut Schmid as Jonny and Charles Regnier as Mortimer, the nominal gang leader. Though the 1933 original is a better movie (and a darker one), this is exciting and fairly fun. Released in the United States in 1965 as The Terror of Dr. Mabuse. Pictured are Frobe and Juhnke. [Blu-ray]


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