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THE TESTAMENT OF DR. MABUSE
"Magic Fire Music," old man.
HOMICIDE SQUAD
You know that one, Müller?
That's from Die Walküre.
Those are the girls who carry dead police inspectors
directly up to heaven from the Alexanderplatz with a fanfare.
On horseback. -Horseback?
Certainly.
Expenses don't allow for a car.
Well, Inspector, when it comes to corpses,
the state sometimes has...
a fit of generosity.
That's what you think.
Believe it or not, Müller,
tonight will be the first time
I make it to the theater in time for the first act.
Knock on wood, Inspector.
There. What did I tell you?
Tell 'em I'm dead.
Police headquarters. Inspector Lohmann's office.
What is it?
Hofmeister would like to speak with you, Inspector.
Our former colleague who got into trouble with foreign currency?
That scoundrel?
Tell him his call is the most shameless affront
I've ever experienced!
And tell him to go to hell!
I'm sorry, but Inspector Lohmann
has already left, and he says you -
And he says you can go to hell!
Let me tell you something, Müller.
I once had high hopes for that fellow Hofmeister.
c'était mon plus grand espoir.
I gave him his first chance.
And what does the scoundrel do?
He takes a bribe from
a black-market currency trader.
The man I would have staked my life for
disgraces me by getting fired from the service
by getting fired from the service
like a bad egg.
For God's sake!
He has to hear me out !
Tell him it's a matter of life and death!
Inspector, I think you really ought to -
Of course I'll miss the first act again!
I want to redeem myself in his eyes!
I finally figured out their scheme. It's a monstrous business!
They've nearly done me in three times! I hardly dare cross the street!
Lohmann speaking. What is it?
Thank you.
Cut out the nonsense
and tell me what's wrong.
I've finally discovered -
Just in case, Inspector,
please have a record made of my report.
Headphones. Take this down.
I was actually tracing counterfeit money.
I wanted to redeem myself in your eyes, Inspector.
For four days -
96 hours -
I lay up there at the air vent,
and now I know who's behind it all.
But you'll probably think I'm crazy.
Who is it?
I swear I'm telling the truth.
I know who's behind it all! I heard his name with my own ears!
And now they know I know the name.
My God! The lights have gone out!
Lohmann, help me, for God's sake!
Can you trace that call?
What was the number ?
What street?
Number 23? Thanks.
Dear God. He must have gone out of his mind from terror.
A pathological condition that is not as rare as one might suspect.
Exposure to catastrophes
such as explosions, earthquakes and railway accidents -
in short, exposure to fright and horror
often triggers insanity.
Perhaps the most interesting case of such pathological conditions
is the case of Dr. Mabuse.
Here he goes again.
I shall briefly recount the history of this case.
The patient lived a decidedly double life. He was a renowned doctor with a large private practice.
Aided by an almost superhuman logic,
he used his profound knowledge of hypnosis
to commit crimes of a magnitude
previously deemed impossible.
For months the police sought the mastermind behind those crimes,
the man behind the curtain.
At last they discovered his whereabouts.
But Mabuse decided not to flee
but rather to mount armed resistance,
and he barricaded himself in his house with four loyal henchmen.
He refused demands to surrender to state authorities, saying,
"I am the state!"
A barrage of bullets forced the police to retreat.
Finally, soldiers stormed the house with hand grenades.
Two of the defenders were killed. Two were captured.
Mabuse, however, had disappeared.
One prisoner revealed his hiding place:
a counterfeiting lab
from which he planned to launch a massive attack on the German currency system.
The police force their way in to seize him
only to find he had gone
hopelessly insane.
Judging by his incoherent remarks,
he had seen, during the previous night, the ghosts of all those he had slain.
Apparently it was the horror of that experience
that overpowered this phenomenal mind,
which for so long had straddled the fine line between genius and madness,
and literally deranged it.
Mabuse was committed to an insane asylum
and to this day has not spoken a word to anyone.
Silent and motionless, he remains in the position you see here.
The patient withdrew into his own ego,
depriving us of any glimpse into his inner life.
But suddenly the clinical profile changed.
We observed that Mabuse's hand
continuously made writing motions
in the air, on the wall and on the bedspread.
We gave him pencil and paper.
At first, he covered the paper with senseless scribbling.
Two years ago, however,
certain words began to appear on the paper.
Then, sentences began to form,
still meaningless and confused.
Gradually they grew more coherent and logical,
and at last we began to get glimpses
into the extraordinary phenomenon that was his mind.
His thoughts still move
in the samecriminal channels as before.
Whatever Mabuse writes
is based upon incontrovertible logic
and serves as a perfect guide for the commission of crimes
worked out to the minutest detail.
No. Nothing can happen to us if we follow the doctor's methods.
The first attacks on the snitch failed. -So what? Tough luck.
So we called in Division 2-B to handle the matter.
If they take care of matters, fine.
And if they don't -
if it looks like that snitch might rat on us -
one single phone call and this whole place gets blown sky-high.
Stop scratching, Fritzi. It won't come to that.
Before that guy can open his mouth, he'll be done for.
I'd feel better if they didn't resort to ***.
What do you mean, ***?
A guy can have something fall on his head, can't he?
A nice, clean little accident.
I don't care how you make it look.
I just don't want anything to do with ***.
Scared?
Can't bear the sight of blood?
Let me tell you something,
though it's really none of your damn business.
I've killed two people.
I know what it means to kill.
And that's precisely why
I want nothing to do with ***.
Leave him alone, Fritzi. What do you know about Kent?
It's been taken care of? Bravo!
Really?
Just 20 minutes later?
Lohmann himself?
Continue writing.
Hofmeister himself has disappeared.
The rug has been moved toward the window.
He was on the phone when the lights went out.
Where's the light switch? - Here by the door.
So it came from over there,
the unknown horror,
the thing that caused his mind to snap.
And he backed away from it step by step,
right up to the window.
I wonder if he -
No, he couldn't get out this way. Certainly not downward.
Well, I'll be damned!
Actual letters
scratched into the glass with a ring.
So he was trying to tell me something.
Could it be a name?
It may take us a while to figure that one out.
Take this pane of glass to my office at headquarters.
And see that you don't break it, or I'll bite your head off.
That's odd.
I wonder what's behind that.
Thirty pages today, Professor. -Thank you.
Keep a careful eye on him tonight. I don't like his pulse.
In any case, give him a shot later so he can get some rest.
Their famous chocolate shake?
And a double mocha for you, sir?
- With hot cream. - As usual. Very well.
And now tell me, Tom.
Why did you ask to see me
so urgently today?
Don't you know
what today is, Lilli?
Too bad.
Won't you tell me?
Certainly.
You ask what day this is?
aujourd'hui,
Exactly one year ago today,
at the employment office -
Good heavens, my friend, are you back again?
I've told you a hundred times there's no point in coming every day.
When we have work for you, we'll certainly notify you.
I've been waiting for three months!
Be reasonable.
Reasonable?
What does reasonable mean when a man is going under?
I want to work!
But they keep pushing me closer to the edge!
It's enough to drive a man to crime!
He's forced to become a criminal!
Don't get so worked up. We have others to attend to.
- Come now. - Leave him alone. He's sick.
- Don't touch me! I'll go on my own!
You'll never see me again here! - Next, please.
You've seen the last of me!
Just a moment, please.
I can't bear to see you leave like this.
Here are 20 marks.
It's all I have right now, but I'd like you to have it.
It may help you out.
I don't want charity.
I want work, not a handout.
It's not a handout.
It's just a loan.
I'm sure you'll be able to pay me back.
And six months later, you found work
and promptly paid back my 20 marks.
Tell me, Lilli... have you ever been in love?
It's high time I was going.
Here comes my bus.
- Please stay. - I can't. I've got to run.
Good-bye, Tom. Call me.
If you'll be seated, Doctor,the professor is due back any moment.
Thanks, Winkler. I'm sure I'll find what I need.
Ah, I see it's on his desk.
What order does all this go in?
This junk isn't even numbered.
What is this anyway?
NOTES BY DR. MABUSE SEPTEMBER 1 ST - OCTOBER 31 ST
How does this go together now? No, the other way around.
What's the next part? "Jewel-" No.
Jewelry store...
specializing in high-quality...
"The least conspicuous and therefore most effective precaution
to prevent interruption by police, pedestrians and clients
is to pull the shades
and hang a sign on the door:
'Closed from 10:00 to 2:00 for inventory."'
'Closed from 10:00 to 2:00 for inventory."'
That's incredible!
lmmobilize the staff by using gas in bulbs of thin glass,
which will burst almost inaudibly when tossed."
Gas! Amazing!
Identical, almost to the word!
"The criminals appear to have tossed bulbs of thin glass filled with gas."
If that isn't odd!
It's as if they were following a blueprint!
What are you doing there?
Baum ! This is the most incredible thing you could imagine.
Where did you get these papers?
Never mind that! You know what they are?
Yes, of course.
Now read this.
"Ingenious jewelry heist..."
That's right. Read it.
"Jewelry stolen valued at 250,000 marks.
Gas was used on the employees."
Yes, just as if they were following
your Dr. Mabuse's instructions.
A curious coincidence.
Now wait just a minute. You call that a coincidence?
- What else?
Baum, old man, coincidences like that just don't happen.
There's some connection in all this or I'll eat my hat.
Say, I've got a crazy idea.
Could this Mabuse fellow
be faking it?
Maybe the guy isn't insane after all.
Tell me, do you think that, after treating a patient for years,
I can't judge whether he's really sick or just pretending?
I didn't mean it like that.
But there must be something behind all this.
You know what a genius this fellow was.
It's just possible
that his dead brain has come back to life.
Couldn't Mabuse be writing
these things as a sort of blueprint for a gang of accomplices?
You've always had a wild imagination.
Just hear me out.
What if Mabuse,
with his incredible hypnotic powers,
engaged in some kind
of telepathic hypnosis from his cell?
- Nonsense! - Nonsense?
Say what you like, but there's something weird going on!
Who else besides you knows about Mabuse's notes?
You sound just like a policeman.
I think the police should be informed of this strange coincidence.
Well, perhaps -
Of course you're right. The police would want to know of this.
Of course! I'll go to them at once.
If I can, I'll call you from the station.
Please drive carefully, Doctor. It's been raining.
l do not wish to be disturbed.
Section 2-B.
Let me repeat that back:
a small blue DKW,
license plate 1 A 74259.
Intersection of Grüner Winkel
and Körnerstrasse. We'll take care of it.
Faster!
Faster or we'll miss him!
INGENIOUS JEWELRY HEIST
STOLEN JEWELRY VALUED AT 250,000 MARKS
Pearls, platinum, gold.
One can do a lot with that.
Can? Could!
But what will be done with it?
What's gonna happen with that quarter million?
I ask you -
Will you stay down?
What becomes of it, I ask you?
We buy *** with it,
morphine, ***, ***, whatever you call all that crap.
And instead of making a killing off the dope
for us,
they practically give it away.
What good does it do the boss
to pump the world full of dope
and not make any money off it?
What does it get him?
Nothing!
I follow his instructions and drive ten people nearly crazy
with threats and blackmail.
And when they're ready to pay any sum we ask,
then I'm told to back off and forget about the money.
Only result is they're driven crazy from fear of a scandal.
Is that any business of yours, old boy?
Did you ever fail
to get your pay on time?
You handle the blackmail, and I see to your alibi.
We get our paychecks like clockwork,
so what are you growling about?
I'm not growling.
I just don't get it. If a woman throws herself out the window,
or a fellow blows his brains out, like that bank director,
blackmail letters aren't of much use.
150 grand tossed in the gutter.
Is there any sense in that?
Or take the new instructions about the explosives,
and stealing poison from drugstores - that's scary business.
As it's meant to be, my dear fellow.
But why, in the devil's name?
I think you ask too many questions.
The boss doesn't like that.
What? You know him?
No more than you do, or anyone else in our gang,
and I'm not the least bit curious.
I learned my lesson from your predecessor.
He just had to find out what the man looked like,
the man behind the curtain, the boss.
So one day,
without having been summoned,
he snuck into the famous room with the curtain.
And that's where we found him.
Or rather...
what was left of him.
Cut it out. You're spoiling my appetite.
Tu me coupes l'appé***.
Let me give you a tip.
Let the boss worry about this stuff.
We're well paid. In fact, very well paid.
If something goes wrong, we'll have cast-iron alibis
or a top-notch lawyer.
The boss thinks of everything and takes care of everything
and demands not a penny for himself of all the loot.
for himself of all the loot.
Not a penny.
See? That's just it. Why?
Why doesn't he take a single penny for himself?
I can't understand that,
and that's what's got me uneasy.
Lots of others in our gang probably feel the same and would like
to be done with the whole thing but just don't know how.
"Dearest Lilli, you dashed off so quickly this afternoon
that I had no chance to say what I wanted to tell you. I -"
TONIGHT AT 1:00 A. M. - DR. MABUSE
You say you searched the furthest precincts
and found no trace of Hofmeister?
His description was sent to all officers?
Inspector Lohmann asks if you had the hospitals searched.
A special squad did that,
and Hofmeister hasn't been admitted anywhere?
Get a picture of Hofmeister from the files. We may need to have posters printed up.
Now, then, what is your assessment of the *** in the automobile?
So far, all I know is
that the killer used a Dreyse pistol,
a 7.65-mm, from 1906,
production of which ended in 1916.
This weapon was fired from a distance of not more than 8 meters.
No empty shells were found
in the street nor on the sidewalk,
and the bullet's trajectory indicates
the shot was not fired from a window
but rather from a point almost level with the victim's head.
We may therefore conclude the shot was fired from another vehicle.
Another vehicle?
That would be very interesting indeed.
That opens up a whole new perspective.
Excuse me, Inspector, it's Habermann. This is about the Kramm homicide.
Inspector, we've traced
the *** victim's actions up until 6:10 on the evening of the ***.
Where he was from then until the time of death
we have not yet been able to establish.
But that's what we need to find out.
See that you find out where he was those last two hours.
Müller, arrange to have - No, wait.
Where's the text for the Kramm homicide poster?
"It is essential to obtain information" -
Put another line in here:
"Especially concerning the hours
from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m."
Have those changes made. And - No, never mind, I'll do it myself.
Photo department.
Weber, the old man wants to talk to you.
Trouble?
Enlargements, naturally.
Trace the scratches and see if you can't link them together
into a word or name or something.
I'm sure Hofmeister intended to -
Inspector, they found Hofmeister!
Where?
The police station at Schöneberger Ufer.
A police patrol found him.
At first they thought he was just another drunk
But then they heard him call your name.
Inspector Lohmann.
Why won't you listen to me, for God's sake?
It's a matter of life and death.
Inspector Lohmann, please listen, for the love of God!
The moment he thinks he's being watched,
he starts singing.
When he thinks he's alone, he calls your name.
I'll leave you alone now.
Hofmeister, don't you recognize me?
Hofmeister, it's me, Lohmann.
Your old friend Lohmann.
Answer, for heaven's sake!
Hello. This is Lohmann.
Who is it, please?
Is that you, Hofmeister?
Hopeless.
We'll have no other choice
but to commit the poor devil
to an institution.
Poor devil, eh?
Heaven help me if I ever get my hands on the scoundrel
All of a sudden he stopped writing
and just sat there like a living corpse.
Then he suddenly got an expression in his eyes,
those eyes that leave you practically paralyzed!
The eyes of a man who -
If he were in his right mind,
Would leave his cell to compel people to do his will.
-The professor must come. -The professor is working and doesn't wish to be disturbed.
Winkler, this is Mabuse!
- Not so loud! - The professor will fire me on the spot.
I do not wish to be disturbed.
With great disconcertment I have found out
that in the Hofmeister matter,
surveillance at the print shop
failed in the most irresponsible way.
Don't interrupt. I didn't ask for your opinion.
The Hofmeister affair would have turned into
a catastrophe of the first order
if not for the excellent work
of Division 2-B.
I'll come back to that later.
Even so, in the future, all security measures protecting our organization must be more stringent.
Anyone constituting a menace to our organization
is to be eliminated without exception.
Kent !
it has come to my ears that you
perhaps due to something in your past
that you do not approve of certain of my organization's measures.
I'm warning you, Kent
and I never give more than one warning
in the near future you will have to prove
that you are absolutely committed to our organization
and that you know what you are being paid for.
***
2,000 MARKS REWARD
***.
It's really none of my business,
but I don't think you're taking the doctor's warning seriously enough.
Oh, yes, I do. Division 2-B.
No one in the organization gets out of it alive.
It's hopeless.
There's no turning back.
"I must say farewell forever,
and I can't even tell you why. But there's no other way for me
to stay an honest man in your eyes. You will never know what you've
meant in my botched life. It is very difficult
to say good-bye to you, Lilli." Forget me -
though I shall never forget you!
There. It spells Mabuse.
What spells Mabuse?
Those scratches on the windowpane, Inspector.
It took me forever to discover he was writing as if in a mirror.
Using his left hand,
and behind his back.
If you flip it over, see there?
Quite clear.
Wasn't he that -
That doctor back during the inflation?
Quite right, Inspector.
I've got him. 1920 - 1921.
Dr. Mabuse "The Gambler."
Come on, let me see that.
Let's see what business he has being on that windowpane.
When Lohmann has untied all the knots,
then you may sweep up as much as you like.
But until then, he'll go wild as an ape if you touch anything, and he bites.
I'd like to see him try.
The old man's coming. Get out!
Call up G9-19-902.
That's the mental hospital run by Professor Baum
Un certain Dr Mabuse y a été interné.
where they committed a certain Dr. Mabuse.
When?
Dr. Mabuse died this morning.
Today?
Today of all days.
That is quite peculiar.
TONIGHT AT 12:00 - DR. MABUSE
So, you too?
What do you mean, me too?
Something big is on for tonight, it seems.
We've been called in, as have Divisions 5 and 9...
as well as Section 2-B.
Good Lord.
It's no use, Kent.
The doctor is more powerful than you.
Is your curiosity satisfied now, Inspector?
And this corpse is clearly identified as Mabuse?
There's no doubt of that?
Unfortunately not, Inspector.
Unfortunately it is only too certain
that this dead man here is Dr. Mabuse.
Or was.
Alas.
This assessment of the deceased -
Is smoking permitted here? - Yes.
seems to me to be slightly, let's say -
Do you smoke? - No, thanks.
let's say slightly exaggerated.
In the case of Dr. Mabuse, we're not dealing with a human being of value
but with a dangerous criminal
who only escaped the gallows
by entering an insane asylum.
One less insane criminal in the world.
Silence! You have no idea.
No one has any idea what kind of phenomenal, superhuman mind
has come to an end with Dr. Mabuse's death.
This mind would have laid waste to our whole rotten world,which is long overdue for destruction.
This godless world, devoid of justice and compassion,
consisting only of selfishness, cruelty and hatred.
This mind would have destroyed mankind,
which itself knows only destruction and extermination and which could only
have been saved in its final hour through terror and horror.
Mabuse the criminal?
Mabuse the genius!!
His intellectual testament would have turned your world, with its police protection,on its head!
A testament?
You speak of Mabuse's testament ?
Of course, not a testament in the accepted sense of the word.
Just some of his notes,
of interest only to physicians
and men of science.
I'm afraid, Professor,
that you underestimate
the extent of my interests.
Take, for example, a case which concerns me intimately.
Wasn't a young man admitted to your institution earlier today
by the name of Hofmeister?
May I see that man?
I'm terribly sorry, Inspector.
That man seems to be suffering the effects of some frightful experience
that he relives each time someone approaches him.
Then he begins singing like a frightened child sings in the dark.
I must therefore request,
for the good of the patient,
that you refrain from seeing him now.
What is it?
They're waiting for you in anatomy class.
Well, I see the doctor's cell is already occupied again.
Yes, the new one who arrived last night.
The professor ordered that he be isolated.
The doctor's cell just became vacant, so we put him in it.
It's strange
when you come to think of it.
For 10 years I've cared for the doctor, and now he lies down there in the morgue.
Or what's left of him.
TONIGHT AT 12:00 - DR. MABUSE
NOTES BY DR. MABUSE FEBRUARY 15TH TO MARCH 31 ST
"The Empire of Crime."
"Humanity's soul
must be shaken to its very depths,
frightened by unfathomable and seemingly senseless crimes.
Crimes that benefit no one,
whose only objective is to inspire fear and terror."
Because the ultimate purpose of crime
is to establish the endless empire of crime.
A state of complete
insecurity and anarchy,
founded on the destruction of the ideals of a world
doomed to annihilation.
When humanity,
subjugated by the terror of crime,
has been driven insane
by fear and horror,
and when chaos has become supreme law,
then the time will have come for the empire of crime.
ATTACKS UPON RAILROAD LINES, GAS STORAGE TANKS, CHEMICAL FACTORIES
You have the special maps for the northern area?
The fire in the chemical factory
in quadrants E-9 and K-14 -
Repeat that.
They are to be concentrated
so as to spread the blaze mainly to the storerooms and depots.
Is that clear? - Yes, sir.
By the time the fire crews arrive,
the flames must be impossible to subdue.
Division 3
and Dr. Hauser to the boss.
ACTIONS AGAINST BANKS AND CURRENCY
- Division 3? - Yes.
And Dr. Hauser.
Report.
Per my orders, the letters incriminating
the signatory of the Overseas Bank were not returned to him,
even when very large sums were offered,
until he agreed to comply completely with our demands.
We are now in possession of duplicate keys
to every one of the bank's vaults,
as well as combinations to all the safes and plans for all alarm systems.
Only after successful completion of our mission will the letters be returned.
Turn the material over to Division 3 and wait downstairs. I'll need you later.
Division 3,
you are to bundle the completed counterfeit bills this morning
and affix the stamps of the Overseas Bank.
Per the instructions you have just received,
at exactly 11:00 tomorrow night
you will break into the bank
and replace the bills now deposited in the bank
with the counterfeit bills
so that the bank itself will distribute the counterfeit money.
The bank guards are to be killed.
Killed!
There mustn't be the slightest clue to suggest the safes were opened.
Once everything has been executed according to plan,
the bank's alarms must be set off
to simulate a burglary interrupted in progress.
Do you understand? - Yes, sir.
Division 3 is no longer needed.
I LOVE YOU!
I was here in the afternoon, too,
but you weren't home.
Nor were you here earlier this evening.
So I waited, Tom,
a terribly long time.
Won't you at least offer me a seat in return, Tom?
What a lovely place you have here.
I like rooms that have such wide, tall windows.
such wide, tall windows.
Is this true?
But I wrote to you!
And I gave you my answer, Tom.
But you don't even know who I am, Lilli.
My dear Tom, isn't that entirely beside the point?
Beside the point?
Entirely beside the point!
We'll see right now whether it's beside the point!
There you have it, in black and white - just who I am.
Official confirmation
with the seal and signature of the prison director
and everything that goes with it.
- Prison. - Yes, prison!
Four and a half years in prison!
The last six months commuted
for good behavior.
Why should I care, Tom? I love you.
You don't know why I was in prison.
I killed two people.
One was my girlfriend,
and the other was the man I'd thought was my best friend.
Why should I care, Tom? I love you.
Then I'm forced to tell you the rest, Lilli.
I lied to you, Lilli!
I told you I'd found a position, didn't I?
Well, I certainly did.
Do you know where?
In a counterfeiting lab.
That's one place that can use an engineer who's an ex-con.
If I had only known
what I know now!
Along with destruction of the crops,
water supplies must be poisoned.
Epidemics of every kind must break down
any resistance on the part of the people.
A warning to unreliable elements will not be issued again.
The slightest sign of treachery
will be punished immediately by death.
You see, Lilli?
This time you don't say,
"Why should I care, Tom? I love you."
Look, Tom. When I received your letter,
did you really think me so dense
that I wouldn't sense the despair in your heart?
I thought to myself,
"What he needs
is to regain his faith in himself,
to believe that everything can turn out well again."
And I thought to myself,"Maybe you can restore his faith in himself
if you tell him how much you care for him
and that you will stand by him for better or for worse."
And so I came to you.
Tell me, have you taken it upon yourself to rob me of my last shred of sanity?
You have to report that he's failed to show up.
Let's wait.
Finished.
I guess I have no other choice.
-Section 2-B? Yes. -This is Division 3.
I must report that Kent didn't show up.
Believe me, Tom,
your life is just beginning.
A brand-new life,
clean, spotless and good.
It's true, Tom!
We'll put it all behind us and make a fresh start.
And you know who'll help us?
L'homme qui autrefois...
Yes, Tom. The man who once, When he had to arrest you,
he was so decent and compassionate towards you.
What is it?
Voberg is here. He claims to have some important news.
Give me a cigar and raise the shades,
then show him in.
Well, Inspector, it's like this.
Schulz and I think we've stumbled across something -
Lower those shades.
We stumbled across something that might lead us to the jewelry robbers.
We saw a girl running around
with a big pearl necklace.
Moi, je n'y connais rien.
She couldn't tell me anything except that she had bought it for 25 pfennig.
But Schulz knows about these things,
and he swears that necklace is genuine.
So far all we know is that
she's the sweetheart of a scoundrel
who's an expert on anything having to do with jewelry robberies.
- Where are the others? - They had a few details to take care of.
Come on, let's go!
Off you go, then, but remember: Be careful.
You're dealing with a dangerous international crook.
Understand? - Yes, Inspector.
You were ordered to prepare
the strike against the Overseas Bank.
You failed to carry out your orders.
Failure to obey
is tantamount to treason.
The only penalty for both offenses is death.
Let the woman go free.
Do with me what you like, but let her go free.
You and that woman
will never leave this room alive.
You will never leave
this room alive.
You have three hours
left to live.
What's that?
Whatever it is, Lilli,
we must find it
and put an end to it.
You'll be taking over Kent's job, by the way.
-He won't be able to do it anymore. -What do you mean?
He's otherwise engaged.
Who could that be?
How do I know? Maybe it's the mailman.
Wanna go and see who that is?
Hold on.
Who is it?
The gas man.
I'd like to inspect the meter.
You want to look at the meter?
Come back some other time.
I've got company right now.
Ça va pas ?
How dare you! - Police. Open up.
Look out! Police!
- Don't shoot! - Shut up, you idiot!
Quick, out the back door!
We don't have one!
You idiots get an apartment with only one exit?!
What about the window?
- From the fourth floor? - There must be some way out!
And I who wanted an elevator
Now we're really done for!
It's your own damn fault for firing at him!
Leave me alone, you hear? Stop giving me a hard time!
Listen, try to knock a hole through the ceiling. Maybe we can escape to the roof.
I'll try to hit the guy and keep him back from the door!
Stay back.
Notify the Special Tactics Squad and get hold of - Damned scoundrel!
Homicide ! Inspector Lohmann!
It's no use. We'll never get out this way.
The window, Tom.
We could try to break through that.
-Cement. -But the brick, maybe.
ey! How far are you in there? I can't hold this door forever.
Lohmann and his whole gang are here.
That's it! I'm out!
What do you mean by that?
What do I mean? I'll tell you what I mean!
Watch the door!
Hardy, be sensible. It's no use.
We won't get anywhere on the roof.
Let me talk to them.
Let me tell you something.
Anyone who gets near that door,
inside or out,
is gonna get it.
Understand?
Go keep an eye on them! Move it!
What's the matter, Tom?
It's no use, Lilli.
Behind those bricks is a steel plate.
Is he dead?
Anni, get some towels.
It's no use.
Better keep an eye on the door.
- Why didn't you let me negotiate?
- You and your stupid shooting!
I've got you now.
Open up! It's Lohmann!
-What's the matter? -Lohmann's outside.
Reste ici ! Je t'interdis !
Tu tiens à la prison ?
Tu crois que je me laisserai faire ?
Be sensible.
It's no use.
We've got hand grenades.
I'll give you one last chance.
If you're reasonable, we'll be reasonable too.
That's the way.
Isn't it heartwarming?
Now, open the door!
Hands up!
- How many of you are there? - Five, Inspector.
Diamond Anna! See you don't catch a cold, my dear.
Four. Where's the fifth?
A Dreyse pistol.
What do you know?
A Dreyse pistol, no less.
Made in 1906, 7.65-mm.
Apparently the former owner -
a friend of yours -
That's funny.
It says here that the two of you were close friends.
It's signed by Karetzky, Diamond Anna, and her sweetheart.
One shouldn't forsake a friend who's died.
I'm not forsaking him.
That's more like it.
So your old buddy held on to this gun
because he was used to it.
Actually,
haven't these things been out of style for some time?
I'm no gun expert.
That's right.
You're more of an expert on automobiles.
What make of car did Dr. Kramm drive? A Hanomag or a DKW?
Dr. Kramm, the guy you two rubbed out from your car.
I don't know what you're talking about, Inspector.
It's no good, Lilli.
I can't find a thing.
My dear little Lilli.
There might be another way.
It's a long shot.
- What if we flood the room with water? - Water?
- What are you looking for, Tom? - My knife.
Water lessens the force of an explosion. - There it is.
It just might break through the wall for us.
What if it doesn't, Tom? If the water rises, and we're -
Let's try it, Tom.
So you don't know anything about Dr. Kramm's ***?
No, Inspector. Never heard of it.
Let me show you something. Come here.
Take a look at this still life.
You're familiar with this here. A 7.65-mm Dreyse pistol made in 1906.
It belonged to your friend.
He shot himself with it.
But do you know
what's in there?
Well, then, look here.
Take that magnifying glass
and take a careful look at these two Easter eggs.
See any difference?
No, not the slightest.
You see, my boy, that's just it!
None of us police could detect any difference either,
neither with the magnifying glass nor in the photographs.
These two bullets are so completely identical
that they could only have
been fired from the same gun.
Yet one was taken from the skull of the deceased Dr. Kramm,
and the other was found in the skull of your dead friend Harry.
What do you say?
So now tell me why your friend Hardy shot and killed Dr. Kramm.
- I can't tell you that, Inspector. - Liar!
Kill me if you like, but I don't know what Harry's orders were!
So you had orders?
Not me. Harry.
From whom?
I couldn't tell you, Inspector. I've never seen the man in my life.
Now enters the mystery man.
Just what we needed:
the man in the shadows.
So you don't know the man's name?
On my honor, Inspector, I don't know who gave Harry those orders.
Then there's nothing we can do.
Dictate for the record what you know about the whole case.
It was like this, Mr. Assistant Inspector.
I was just washing my car,
because everything has to be in top shape in these days of keen competition.
Suddenly the phone rings, and Harry picks it up.
Then he came and said we were to catch up with Dr. Kramm's car
at the intersection of Körnerstrasse and Grüner Winkel.
So we set out, of course,
and pretty soon he showed up.
Sergeant, take this man away.
Isn't Professor Baum's insane asylum on Grüner Winkel?
So that's where Dr. Kramm spent his final two hours.
Look and see if we have
any police record for Dr. Baum. Baum - Bertha, Anna, Ulrich, Max.
Nothing on him?
Get Professor Baum
on the phone for me.
Professor, it's police headquarters. Inspector Lohmann wishes to speak to you.
This man swears you've been treating him for the last two months.
I think he's just trying to establish an alibi. I'd like to confront him with you.
Without him knowing who you are, of course.
Could you come over right away?
Thanks a million, Professor.
If I'm on the right track now,
I'll be laughing hard tonight!
That's our way out! We're saved!
Inspector, when are you going to let me out of this monkey cage?
My dear fellow,
-we're glad we've got you in there. -But I've told you everything I know.
Well, Professor, do you know that man?
Is he the one?
No, Inspector. I've definitely never seen him before.
Just as I thought.
Then I've troubled you for nothing.
Sorry to disturb you, Inspector, but we need your signature here.
I'll be right with you. Pardon me a moment, Professor.
Perhaps you might wait in my office.
Room 204, at the end of the hall. - Thanks.
- Any of you know that man? - No, Inspector.
- No. - Never seen him before.
Bredow, do you know the man you just saw with me?
No, Inspector. I don't know the gentleman.
Sad business, isn't it?
Especially for you, since you were a friend of the victim.
Yes, we were on excellent terms as colleagues.
The poor fellow even visited you on the day of his death.
You could have saved us a lot of work, Professor,
if you'd reported that to the police.
INFORMATION OF ANY KIND ESPECIALLY CONCERNING THE HOURS FROM 6:00 TO 8:00 P. M.
This request was published in every newspaper and posted on kiosks all over the city.
I never read newspapers, only medical literature.
And today's the first time I've been in town in four weeks.
Dr. Kramm came to look something up
in a scientific book in my library.
He left in the best of spirits.
As for his death,
it's as much a mystery to me as it is to you.
Then I'm terribly sorry to have troubled you for nothing.
Why, it's Kent!
Do you know him?
-Who? -Him.
I asked you if you knew him.
-Where would I know him from? - I have no idea, yet you just spoke his name.
That was you, Inspector.
Inspector, I must speak to you. It's terribly urgent.
I suppose I may leave, Inspector? My time is -
Of course. By all means, Professor.
Just a moment, Kent.
Many thanks for coming.
Go on in.
It's tremendously important -
Just a moment. This is crucial:
Do you know that man who just left?
- No. - Are you certain?
Yet I could swear he knew you.
Most certainly not. I've never seen him before.
What happened to you, for God's sake?
That's why we've come.
And what is the name of this "boss" you mention?
*** it!
Mabuse again! The man is dead!
He's alive and kicking, I tell you.
I saw the cadaver myself.
Bless you.
I'm telling you, he's not dead. I think the two of us are living proof of that,
though as for "living," that was pure luck!
Inspector, I put myself completely in your hands.
Last night...
I could have fled but I didn't,
because I realized this is about more than my life or liberty.
My God, how can I convince you?
Is this proof enough for you?
Typewritten.
That's no proof. Could be someone else.
Someone else?
I'm not in for anybody. No exceptions.
All the evidence leads again and again to that insane asylum.
Müller, get the car.
I may be putting my neck on the line,
but I'm going out there once more,
and you're going with me, Kent.
Perhaps you're right and
Mabuse is still alive.
I'd like to speak with Professor Baum. - I'm afraid that's impossible.
The professor can see no one.
Just tell him that Police Inspector Lohmann wishes to see him.
Gentlemen, it's really impossible. The professor gave strict orders not to disturb him.
My good man, I must speak with him.
Now go on and announce me.
Fine. Don't announce me. - But, Inspector - - Will you announce me or not?
I do not wish to be disturbed.
That's him! That's his voice! - What?
That's the boss's voice.
I'd recognize it anywhere.
That's the man!
Where is the man whose voice we just heard?
Kent, come over here.
That's his voice.
Nice little contraption.
Very clever.
No wonder you failed to recognize the man's voice.
You only heard a mechanical reproduction of it.
- The professor? - Baum. Of course.
But where is he hiding?
What's this?
A map of the northern part of town?
That must be the Löhr & Stegerwald chemical factory.
And today's date.
Strange. Very strange.
What's one to make of that?
There's something else here. It's in pencil.
8:30 p.m.,
and today's date.
It's now 9:10.
Kent, call the chemical plant.
There won't be anyone there, but they must have guards.
And here's something else.
"Notes by Dr. Mabuse"? Isn't that interesting.
Good Lord! The chemical factory!
"Fires started in this manner in a chemical factory's storerooms
cannot be extinguished by firefighters.
Tanks exploding from the heat will quickly release immense quantities
of poisonous gas
into surrounding areas of the city."
Damn it! They're playing cards again instead of keeping guard.
Here's your line, Inspector.
- Lohmann, look! - What? - In the light there!
- Nothing. - Damn it!
Where's my driver? Krause!
I'll drive, Inspector.
Push that car out of the way.
I just hope this piece of junk can make it.
The empire of crime... The empire of crime... 1098 01:51:48.500 --> 01:51.52.500 Gloria...Gloria Lovely are the maidens in Batavia...
Permit me to introduce myself.
My name is Mabuse. Dr. Mabuse.
Who opened that door?
We're looking for - Hofmeister!
The man's name is Mabuse, Inspector.
Come, my boy,
A mere Police inspector
can't do anything more here.