The Return of Dr. Mabuse

The Return of Dr. Mabuse

196185 min
β˜…6.1/10
CrimeThrillerScience FictionMystery

Plot Summary

The supposedly dead and buried Mabuse returns to his criminal activities, as his longtime foe Police Inspector Lohmann, a dauntless girl reporter, and an American - who may be an FBI agent, or maybe a Chicago mobster - investigate a series of gruesome murders connected to a maximum security prison and involving a minister who has written a book called "The Anatomy Of The Devil".

▢️Watch Now

Official trailer from TMDB

πŸ‘₯Cast (19)

Gert FrΓΆbe

Gert FrΓΆbe

Lohmann

Lex Barker

Lex Barker

Joe Como

Daliah Lavi

Daliah Lavi

Maria Sabrehm

Werner Peters

Werner Peters

BΓΆhmler

Fausto Tozzi

Fausto Tozzi

Warden Wolf

No Image

Joachim Mock

Detective Voss

Rudolf Forster

Rudolf Forster

Julius Sabrehm

Rudolf Fernau

Rudolf Fernau

Reverend Brietenstein

Albert Bessler

Albert Bessler

Black Cloaked Peddler

Ady Berber

Ady Berber

Alberto Sandro

Zeev Berlinsky

Zeev Berlinsky

Man With Prosthetic Leg

No Image

Henri Coubet

The Blind Beggar

🎬Crew

Director

Harald Reinl

Writers

Marc Behm, Ladislas Fodor

Producers

Artur Brauner, Wolf Brauner

πŸ–ΌοΈGallery (4 images)

The Return of Dr. Mabuse backdrop 1
The Return of Dr. Mabuse backdrop 2
The Return of Dr. Mabuse backdrop 3
The Return of Dr. Mabuse backdrop 4

🏷️Keywords

prisonmind controllibrarylaboratory

πŸ’¬Reviews (1)

T

talisencrw

4/9/2016

As I generally greatly detest sequels, reboots and the like, especially of great filmic franchises created and led by outstanding filmmakers (ie., the Mabuse character and Fritz Lang) I initially had quite guarded reservations about seeing Reinl's version here. But it had significant strengths that made me quickly realize my fears were undeserved and that I, in fact, was in for a treat. The pace is whipcrack, the plot is intense and in Commissioner Lohmann, the villainous 'Goldfinger' (an excellent Gert FrΓΆbe) pulls off a gritty cross between an Ed Asner and a Popeye Doyle-era Gene Hackman. I love how one of the ways Mabuse resorts to do away with pests pays homage to Lang's 'The Testament of Dr. Mabuse' from three decades prior. It certainly made me wary of churches, one-legged men and even laundry workers, for crying out loud, and part of the fear the film brings across is because in the back of our minds, we know this is precisely how the Nazis operated, studying fluoride as a mind-control agent. If there is any negative I got from the film, the Berlin police department (good ol' Lohmann notwithstanding) seemed the most unintelligent and incompetent sleuthing force this side of Inspector Clouseau. Definitely recommended for fans of thrillers and spy films.

Read full review β†’

Production Companies

CCC Filmkunst