emiliano

Just another DAZET weblog

Download Dr. Mabuse, The Gambler Online!

September 9th, 2008 · No Comments
Uncategorized

Download Dr. Mabuse, The Gambler Online!

It was positively engaging watching Dr. Mabuse, The Gambler. Dr. Mabuse, The Gambler was unquestionably the most shocking movie I have seen in a while. Rudolf Klein-Rogge and Aud Egede Nissen are among my favorite actors. Rudolf Klein-Rogge and Aud Egede Nissen were unquestionably mighty in Dr. Mabuse, The Gambler!

Click Here To Watch Dr. Mabuse, The Gambler Online Now!

Dr. Mabuse, The Gambler also has some extraordinarily superfine photography! The plot line is just definitely stunning. The easily mind-blowing cast includes Rudolf Klein-Rogge, Aud Egede Nissen, Gertrude Welcker, Alfred Abel, Bernhard Goetzke.

Watch Dr. Mabuse, The Gambler Online By Clicking Here!

I have left more information about Dr. Mabuse, The Gambler.It’s hard to imagine that the razor-sharp Kino DVD of Fritz Lang’s first magnum opus fails to capture any of the visual electricity and heady atmosphere experienced by Berlin filmgoers in 1922. The film’s historical importance to the crime-film genre and its thematic relevance to the director’s later work have never been in dispute, but with only murky, choppy editions to go by, the movie has largely been paid lip service for its legacy rather than appreciated for itself. Now, thanks to this definitive restoration by the Murnau Institute, we can properly see it and experience it.

Dr. Mabuse the Gambler is actually two films in one–or, more precisely, one film in two feature-length parts totaling four-and-a-half hours and conceived to be watched on consecutive evenings. Its title character is a criminal mastermind with the power and the will to orchestrate complex capers, counterfeit national currencies, manipulate the stock market, and hypnotically bend anyone to play a role in his diabolical designs. The hand of Mabuse seems to reach everywhere–for the excellent reason that the Doctor himself, a master of disguise, turns out to be just about anywhere at just the moment his intervention will wreak havoc and wreck lives. (He’s played by Rudolf Klein-Rogge, who would repeat the part ten years later in The Testament of Dr. Mabuse and also, in spirit if not in name, in Lang’s dazzling 1928 film Spies; he was also the inventor Rotwang in Metropolis–as well as, offscreen, the former husband of Lang’s screenwriter wife Thea von Harbou!)

The film’s title in German is Doktor Mabuse der Spieler, and our supervillain is really less a gambler (all his games of chance are rigged) than a player: playing multiple roles, but even more importantly, playing with others’ lives, playing with the very fabric of modern reality. The subtitles of the two parts are “A Picture of the Time” and “People of the Time”; the film is an artifact of the Weimar era when, as one character remarks, “We are bored and tired … we need sensations of a very special kind to remain alive.” Lang and his art directors, Otto Hunte and Karl Stahl-Urach, create a hallucinatory mise-en-sc



0 responses so far ↓

  • There are no comments yet...Kick things off by filling out the form below.

Leave a Comment