Film Review
After his groundbreaking crime-thriller
M
, German director Fritz Lang went on to explore the possibilities offered by
this new genre more fully in
Das Testament des Dr Mabuse
. The film brings together the realism of
M
, with a close interest in police methods of investigation, and the expressionist
fantasy style of Lang's earlier films. This is an effective suspense thriller, very
reminiscent of Hitchcock's pre-war English films, but it also has the character of classic
horror films such as Robert Wiene's
Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari (1920).
The film is a sequel to Lang's 1922 silent classic
Dr.
Mabuse, der Spieler (aka
Dr. Mabuse, the
Gambler), with Rudolf Klein-Rogge once more playing the role of the sinister master
of crime, Dr Mabuse.
What is perhaps most striking about
Das Testament
des Dr Mabuse is its scale and sophistication. Not only does it qualify as
a masterpiece on artistic grounds (some of its imagery is the stuff of film legend), but
it is by far and away the most ambitious dramatic thriller of its time, thanks to some
extraordinary action sequences (which includes one of cinema's most imaginative car chases).
Lang uses sound almost as effectively as he uses image to tell his story and create an
unsettling mood of paranoia and anticipation. This is most evident in the spine-chilling
opening which reveals what resembles a workshop in Hell, a scene that leads into a harrowing
chase sequence.
The film then suddenly switches to something far more mundane as
Inspector Lohmann (last seen in
M) begins his
investigation and the plot is gradually developed. To hold our interest, Lang
puts in a subplot involving one of Mabuse's henchmen and his girlfriend - a simple yet
effective way of bringing some humanity into what would otherwise have been a pretty emotionally
arid affair. Just when we think it's all going to be standard thriller, things take
a darker, more sinister turn, and the supernatural elements which were suggested in the
earlier part of the film resurface. In true expressionist fashion, Lang subverts
normality and transforms a conventional thriller into a bizarre fantasy nightmare.
It's a world where anything can happen and the happy outcome is far from assured.
Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse is significant in
that it is the last occasion when Fritz Lang would use the expressionist style so overtly.
(His subsequent black and white films are far closer to American
film
noir than German expressionism, although the latter is clearly a progression of
the former.) Whilst his approach here is far less stylised than in earlier German
expressionist films, Lang's use of high contrast photography, confined shadowy interiors
and some spectacular uses of superposition is extraordinarily effective. Not only
do these emphasise the unnatural threat posed by the film's villain but they also highlight
the vulnerability and heroism of those who decide to take a stand against him.
This was the last film that Fritz Lang made in Germany before opting for voluntary exile
(first in France, then in the United States) to avoid having to work as an instrument
of the Nazi regime. It's possible to read into
Das
Testament des Dr. Mabuse various anti-Nazi messages - there are some very easily
parallels between Mabuse and Hitler, and Mabuse's ambitions for a world in which all men
are robbed of individual thought has an unmistakable Nietzschesque ring to it. It's
hardly surprising that the film was immediately banned in Germany and very nearly destroyed.
An inferior French version of the film was made by Lang at the same time as the
German version, with a cast of French actors. Another version of the film was distributed
in America in the 1950s, cut from the available German print and titled
The
Crimes of Dr. Mabuse. Having existed in many years in a shortened form, the
film was restored in 2000 to almost its original runtime by the German Film Institute,
allowing us to appreciate what is easily one of Fritz Lang's greatest films.
© James Travers 2006
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Next Fritz Lang film:
Liliom (1934)
Film Synopsis
Disgraced cop Hofmeister tries to redeem himself by uncovering a counterfeiting operation.
Before he can pass his findings on to Inspector Lohmann, he is cornered by his enemies
and driven mad. Lohmann's investigation leads him to a lunatic asylum which is housing
Dr Mabuse, a once notorious criminal mastermind. For the past ten years, Mabuse
has made no attempt to communicate but has recently started writing copious notes calling
for a criminal reign of terror. Then he dies, suddenly. But the spate of crimes
continues unabated. It is as if Mabuse's influence lives on. And indeed it
does, for his soul has entered the body of Professor Baum, the respectable head of the
asylum. It is Baum who now directs Mabuse's minions in their criminal exploits.
Can nothing stop the murderous schemes of the evil Mabuse...?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.