-MONTHLY VHS & DVD REVIEW-
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The Testament Of Dr Mabuse
cast: Rudolf Klein-Rogge, Otto Wernicke, Oscar Beregi, and Gustav Diessl
director: Fritz Lang
105 minutes (12) 1933 aspect ratio 1.19:1
Eureka DVD Region 2 retail
[released 15 March]
RATING:
8/10
reviewed by Richard Bowden
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Lang's last film in Germany before he hurriedly left the country (the director claimed
that he had lately been offered a key position in the Nazi-controlled film industry),
The Testament Of Dr Mabuse (aka: Das Testament des Dr Mabuse) is best seen
as a warning by a departing talent, as well as a continuation of many of the themes of
the director's previous work. Dr Mabuse, The Gambler (1922) had been a great success,
and his new film, his second made in sound, capitalises on the reputation both of the earlier
film and the grand social malevolence of its central character. Mabuse is another of Lang's
evil, all-controlling masterminds - he was to reappear again in the director's last film,
The 1,000 Eyes Of Dr Mabuse (1960) - the representation of whose hypnotic presence
and malign influence was to find disfavour with the followers of Hitler. The Nazis gained
power during the post-production period of the film and, while recognising the great director's
talent; Testament was promptly banned by Goebbels who found the political portrait
implicit in Mabuse too close to home. In later years Lang was to suggest that the film was
intended as a political parable, although this might have been exaggerated.
As the present film opens, Inspector Lohmann (a splendidly grouchy Otto
Wernicke) receives a message from a former criminal associate who has stumbled onto a
massive criminal conspiracy. Before the details can be spelt out, the crook is hunted
down and killed. Investigating his disappearance Lohmann discovers the name Mabuse scratched
on a windowpane (a clue echoed in
Lang's
M, in which Lohmann also appears.) Mabuse is discovered in an asylum in the charge
of Dr Baum (Oscar Beregi). The criminal genius, insane but with his remaining magnetic
attraction intact, is feverishly writing detailed notes on prospective crimes. When Mabuse
dies, a visiting Dr Kramm finds the brilliant criminal notes of Dr Mabuse on the floor,
compares a news report of a jewellery robbery to what he is now reading and tells Baum
that he is going to report it to the police. He is promptly killed by Mabuse's elite
Section 2B hitmen on orders from the unseen leader - a scene that found an echo over 30
years later, in The Ipcress File (1965). Meanwhile a romance develops between Kent
(Gustav Diessel), one of the henchmen of Mabuse's gang, still apparently controlled by
remote control instructions, and the woman Lilly (Vera Liessem) who helped him when he
was down and out. Mabuse's 'testament' thus lies in both the meticulously planned crimes,
which make up his posthumous papers as well as his hypnotic and malign influence on those
who are controlled by him.
Critics have compared the visual style of this film with those of others
from the same period, notably Spione (aka: Spies, 1928), Lang's most recent
comparable social thriller. Testament is far more cluttered, its visual confusion
suggesting moral complexity as well as the closing in of threatening events - both as far
as the characters are concerned and, as it unfortunately turned out, for German society in
general. In M, evil was detected in the presence of a murderous outsider, one
eventually brought to book by a benign conspiracy of the underworld. Here there is a web
of criminal activity and corruption from which no one is entirely immune, and in which
many are driven by a murderous compulsion to obey an evil power. At the same time, Lang
is happy enough to introduce into this world of social corruption elements of thrills and
suspense, which spring from a much simpler world of serials and adventure stories. The near
documentary feel of a lot of the film is interspersed with explosions, floods, chases and
close escapes. In this way the sombre, far reaching criminalities of Mabuse's schemes, rooted
in current socio-political unrest are counter-pointed with time honoured pleasures brought
by crime melodrama. Lang had a weakness for this sort of drama: The Spiders Part II: The
Diamond Ship (1920) contains a somewhat similar but much shorter, scene, where the hero
is also trapped in a water filling room from which he escapes.
It has been noted just how much of the action of Testament plays
out like a dream, and in this sense it anticipates the disorientating mood which would
characterise much of noir cinema of a few years later - of which the newly Americanised
Lang would be a major exponent. Certainly the arch criminal mastermind of Mabuse has
something in common with such later characters as, say Mike Lagana in The Big Heat
(1953) although such figures in Lang's American period are far less omniscient. Once Hitler
was out of the way, Lang increasingly saw the manipulation of human life as the province of
fate rather than men, a view that had made its first ongoing appearance as far back as
Der Müde Tod (Destiny, 1923). In Testament, some indeed appear
pre-doomed by a nemesis stalking them, although this is largely placed in the human realm.
Events play out like an unstoppable nightmare - a feeling reinforced by Mabuse's somnambulistic
appearance as he constructs evil from his bed, the presence of ghosts, the unreality of the
mysterious drama which unfolds and such scenes as the weird opening, its surreal use of
factory sound anticipating the dark sound-scapes of Eraserhead (1978). By the end
of Lang's film there is a sense that all have been involved in some grand combine of evil,
and that the disorder and social chaos it presages has only just been forestalled - not by
justice, but madness.
Modern viewers coming to Lang's film will find much to enjoy, even if
some of the incidental elements have necessarily become a little dated. The editing and
camerawork are excellent, and Rudolf Klein-Rogge's piercingly intense Mabuse is a memorable
creation. Lohmann and the supporting cast are memorable characters, although the romantic
interest between Kent and Lilly looks a little faded after all these years. It's a film in
which special effects go hand in hand with suspense and the staging is still impressive.
Amongst the most memorable scenes are those are the end with the destruction of the chemical
factory and the expressionistic car chase back to the asylum. Most importantly, while the
morally debilitating effects of the post-war German depression as well as the impending
rise of adulatory Nazism have now passed into history, Lang's dramatisation of cause and
effect remains as electric as ever in one of the finest films of his early sound career.
DVD extras include a photo gallery and a 15-minute essay on the genesis
of Testament, Lang's intentions with the film and the involvement of Goebbels with
the project. The DVD utilities the longest cut available of the film with a well-restored
print.
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