The Thousand Eyes of Dr. Mabuse [Die 1000 Augen des Dr. Mabuse] (Blu-ray)

Director: Fritz Lang

1960 Germany

Crime Mystery

#229

£14.99

TECHNICAL DETAILS

TECHNICAL DETAILS
  • Country: Germany
  • Language: German
  • Year: 1960
  • Runtime: 103
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.66:1
  • Colour: Black & White
  • Certificate: 12
  • Subtitles: Optional English subtitles
  • Genre: Crime
  • SKU: EKA70384
  • 1 Disc
  • Release Date: May 11, 2020
Format:
Region: B

SYNOPSIS

After enjoying fantastic success with Fritz Lang’s two-part “Indian Epic” in 1959, German producer Artur Brauner signed the great director to direct one more film. The result would be the picture that, in closing the saga he began nearly forty years earlier, brought Lang’s career full-circle, and would come to represent his final celluloid testament—by extension: his final film masterpiece.

Die 1000 Augen des Dr. Mabuse [The Thousand Eyes of Dr. Mabuse] finds that diabolical Weimar name resurfacing in the Cold War era, linked to a new methodology of murder and mayhem. Seances, assassinations, and Nazi-engineered surveillance tech—all abound in Lang’s paranoid, and ultimate, filmic labyrinth.

One of the great and cherished “last films” in the history of cinema, Die 1000 Augen des Dr. Mabuse provides a stylistic glimpse into the 1960s works on such subjects as sex-crime, youth-culture, and LSD that Lang would unfortunately never come to realise. Nonetheless, Lang’s final film remains an explosive, and definitive, closing statement. The Masters of Cinema Series is proud to present Fritz Lang’s final film on Blu-ray.

SPECIAL FEATURES

  • LIMITED EDITION O-CARD SLIPCASE [SOLD OUT]
  • 1080p presentation on Blu-ray
  • Original German soundtrack
  • Optional English audio track, approved by Fritz Lang
  • Optional English subtitles
  • Feature-length audio commentary by film-scholar and Lang expert David Kalat
  • 2002 interview with Wolfgang Preiss
  • Alternate ending
  • Reversible sleeve featuring newly commissioned and original poster artwork
  • A collector’s booklet featuring a new essay by Philip Kemp; vintage reprints of writing by Lang; an essay by David Cairns; notes by Lotte Eisner on Lang’s final, unrealised projects

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