EUREKA BOX SET: Mabuse Lives! Dr. Mabuse At CCC: 1960-1964: The Death Ray of Dr. Mabuse (1964)

A co-production between France, Italy and West Germany, this is also known as The Secret of Dr. Mabuse. Maj. Bob Anders (Peter van Eyck, who despite his character’s name keeps coming back to fight Dr. Mabuse; here he’s renamed so they don’t have to pay Bryan Edgar Wallace again) is investigating a death ray created by Prof. Larsen (O.E. Hasse), but he’s not the only one interested. Mabuse (Wolfgang Preiss has his name in the credits, but he isn’t in this) remains alive, somehow.

Directed by Argentine director Hugo Fregone — who also made Los Monstruos del Terrorand Victor De Santis, and written by Ladislas Fodor, this gets ahead of Bond by having a spy boss named Admiral Quency (Leo Genn) — kind of Q, I guess, right? — who has a burned face, an eyepatch, a wooden arm, and a team of scuba troopers way before Thunderball. Four years after the new Dr. Mabuse started, worried about the paranoia of the post-war era, we’re suddenly in Eurospy territory. There are also three gorgeous women — Gilda Larsen (Yvonne Fourneaux), Judy (Rika Dialina) and Mercedes (Yoko Tani) — to flirt, fight and/or be saved by the hero, who everyone knows is a spy and he’s clueless to figure out why.

The Italian version, I raggi mortali del Dr. Mabuse, is 17 minutes longer yet seemingly moves faster. It also has an alternate edit. Choose that version when you watch this.

The Eureka box set Mabuse Lives! includes this movie, an introduction by genre film expert and Video Watchdog founder Tim Lucas, a new 1080p presentation from a 2K restoration of the original film elements undertaken by CCC, a commentary track by film historian and author David Kalat, and an alternate ending. You can get it from MVD.

EUREKA BOX SET: Mabuse Lives! Dr. Mabuse At CCC: 1960-1964: Scotland Yard Hunts Dr. Mabuse (1963)

Directed by Paul May and written by Ladislas Fodor from a story idea by Bryan Edgar Wallace, this time Dr. Mabuse (Wolfgang Preiss) has returned as a ghost and Professor Pohland (Walter Rilla) and takes back his criminal empire. He then orders the death of a professor who has invented a mind control device, which puts the man’s daughter Nancy (Sabine Bethmann) into harm’s way, ready to be saved by hero Bill Tern (Peter van Eyck).

The thing I don’t like about this movie? Tern’s elderly mother (Agnes Windeck) has to save the day again and again. She should be the protagonist in this, not her son, who is dumb enough to jump into a river at one point and nearly die. What I did like was seeing Klaus Kinski show up as a cop who gets hypnotized and placed on the side of evil.

These movies have always hinted at a supernatural side of Dr. Mabuse and now, this one pays that off and somehow is one of the slowest of the series.

The Eureka box set Mabuse Lives! includes this movie, an introduction by genre film expert and Video Watchdog founder Tim Lucas, a new 1080p presentation from a 2K restoration of the original film elements undertaken by CCC, a commentary track by film historian and author David Kalat, and an alternate ending. You can get it from MVD.

Murder, She Wrote S1 E15: Tough Guys Don’t Die (1985)

A private detective, hired by Jessica to research an old case, is suddenly murdered.

Season 1, Episode 15: Tough Guys Don’t Die (February 24, 1985)

Tonight on Murder, She Wrote

Jessica meets Detective Harry McGraw (Jerry Orbach) and they solve the case of a murdered detective.

Who’s in it, outside of Angela Lansbury, and were they in any exploitation movies?

Orbach wouldn’t just come back numerous times — six appearances — he even got his own spin-off, The Law and Harry McGraw. He and Lansbury would also be the voices of Lumiere and Mrs. Potts in Beauty and the Beast.

Priscilla Daniels, one of  Archie Miles’ clients, is played by Barbara Babcock.

Larry King is John Furey (Friday the 13th Part II).

Erin Carey is Nancy Lee Grahn, Alexis Davis from General Hospital.

Gavin Daniels is John McMartin (Blow Out).

Ray Kravitz is played by Gerald S. O’Loughlin.

Ernie Santini is Alex Rocco, who has been in many good movies, including Motorpsycho.

Judge Lambert is Fritz Weaver (Creepshow).

The law in this episode, Detective Starkey, is Paul Winfield (The Horror at 37,000 Feet).

In the smaller roles, Floyd Levine plays Archie Miles, Alma Leonard plays actress Margery Nelson, Rosanna Huffman plays Connie Miles, Conrad Bachmann is an office manager, Tina Lifford plays Leora Cargill, Jana Brown is a receptionist, and Steven Ameche is a musician.

What happens?

A detective named Archie Miles is killed while investigating a case for Jessica. She wants to solve it, as does his partner Harry McGraw, who wants revenge. He’s not the nice Harry from later episodes.

The cops want Harry to kill the murderer as well, as many of them were trained by Archie. Meanwhile, all of the cases Archie had are still out there, like Mr. Santini, who isn’t cheating on his wife. He’s planning a surprise party. There’s also a Scalpel Murderer who is still free decades after their crimes.

The case that cost Archie his life? Priscilla Daniels. She had an abortion after getting pregnant as a grad student. She’s a politician now, and when Archie discovers the truth about her, his client, Mr. Kravitz, wants to use it against her. Archie refuses.

Who did it?

Mr. Kravitz, who killed Archie for getting in his way.

Who made it?

Another episode for director Seymour Robbie and writer/series creator Peter S. Fischer.

Does Jessica get some?

Harry tells her at the end that he’s only 124 miles from Cabot Cove. Maybe soon?

Does Jessica dress up and act stupid?

No.

Was it any good?

This is a hard-boiled detective story for this show.

Any trivia?

Barbara Babcock would appear on The Law and Harry McGraw as his secretary, Ellie McGinnis.

The Concorde footage is from Airport ’79.

Give me a reasonable quote:

Harry McGraw: Look, Mrs. Fletcher, why don’t you take some advice? Why don’t you devote that boundless energy of yours to needlepoint or a bridge club?

Jessica Fletcher: Eh, I tried that. It’s precisely the reason why I wrote my first book: I was bored out of my mind.

What’s next?

Jessica inherits a football team.

EUREKA BOX SET: Mabuse Lives! Dr. Mabuse At CCC: 1960-1964: The Testament of Dr. Mabuse (1963)

A remake of the 1933 Fritz Lang film, this finds Dr. Mabuse (Wolfgang Preiss) in Hannibal Lecter mode — I get it, Lecter was in Mabuse mode because this comes first, but let me get back to writing this — and trapped in an asylum where Inspector Lohmann (Gert Frobe) keeps visiting, wanting to know how he’s communicating with criminals despite being locked away.

There’s also a boxer named Jonny Briggs (Helmut Schmid) who becomes part of Mabuse’s gang of henchpeople. Maybe he should just not live this life of crime and spend more time with his girl, Nelly. That’s because she’s played by Senta Berger (The Ambushers, When Women Had Tails), and that’s way cooler than being a hood for a mysterious mastermind, but what do I know?

I like how these films are gradually becoming more Eurospy. Here, the last film—The Invisible Dr. Mabuse—leads directly into this one. As no one in the U.S. knew who Dr. Mabuse was—or so they say, despite nearly all of the CCC movies coming out here—this was released as The Terror of the Mad Doctor. This time around, Werner Klingler directs.

The Eureka box set Mabuse Lives! includes this movie, an introduction by genre film expert and Video Watchdog founder Tim Lucas, a new 1080p presentation from a 2K restoration of the original film elements undertaken by CCC, a commentary track by film historian and author David Kalat, and an alternate ending. You can get it from MVD.

EUREKA BOX SET: Mabuse Lives! Dr. Mabuse At CCC: 1960-1964: The Invisible Dr. Mabuse (1962)

Dr. Mabuse has a new base under a theater, a place that is putting on a play about the French Revolution but really, it’s just a place for dancer Liane Martin (Karin Dor, You Only Live TwiceAssignment Terror) to take a steamy bath. Something for daddy, as they say.

Anyhow, Mabuse wants an invisibility machine and he’ll kill for it. Or at least his new henchmen will, who include Walter Bluhm as a murder clown. Only FBI agent Joe Como (Lex Barker) — Perry’s brother? — can save the day. There’s also a mutated scientist, if you have a Letterboxd list of those.

Released in the U.S. as The Invisible Horror, this was directed by Harald Reinl, who also made Chariots of the Gods, Mysteries of the Gods, The Torture Chamber of Dr. Sadism and The Strangler of Blackmoor Castle.

The Eureka box set Mabuse Lives! has this movie, along with an introduction by genre film expert and Video Watchdog founder Tim Lucas, a new 1080p presentation from a 2K restoration of the original film elements undertaken by CCC, a commentary track by film historian and author David Kalat, and an alternate ending. You can get it from MVD.

TUBI ORIGINAL: An Unusual Suspect (2025)

Directed and written by Booker T. Mattison (Twisted Marriage Therapist), this is the tale of the impossibly named Viola January (Christie Leverette). Just out of law school and in a new job, she’s also working a case pro bono to free Will (Derrick J. Smith), a man she believes was wrongly accused of kidnapping a young woman. But the truth is more complicated, and now, the real criminal is after her.

I should have gone to law school, I think, after seeing this. Viola has no idea who the killer is, but somehow gets in the middle of this mess, dragging the police into things and screaming so much — so many screams — until we have numerous people drawing guns, cops in shadowed rooms with guns out and somehow, Viola gets to follow the cops in there.

If I saw this as a kid, the end scene of the dude hiding in the house’s air ducts would have given me nightmares. Also, a shower scene without nudity is bad directing. Also also: That headshot at the end was great.

You can watch this on Tubi.

EUREKA BOX SET: Mabuse Lives! Dr. Mabuse At CCC: 1960-1964: The Return of Doctor Mabuse (1961)

The second of the 1960s CCC Films Dr. Mabuse film series, this movie follows up Fritz Lang’s The Thousand Eyes of Dr. Mabuse. Gert Fröbe, who plays Inspector Lohmann, was the selling point in the U.S., as he had become known as Goldfinger.

The lawman is called away from his vacation to investigate a series of murders, including an Interpol agent with proof that American organized crime is working with a European crime syndicate, as well as the wife of one of that group’s members, who is killed by a flamethrower in a scene that’s pretty intense seeing as how this was made in 1961.

That woman was carrying Lohmann’s book, The Devil’s Anatomy, which was written by a Reverend Briefenstein of St. Thomas Church. That book has a theory: Satan is a spirit that can take the form of a werewolf, vampire or Dr. Mabuse. Yet, isn’t Dr. Mabuse dead?  A priest informs Lohmann that even though the body can die, a soul can infest the bodies of other men. At that very point, Dr. Mabuse’s voice crackles from the church’s speaker system, demanding that the investigation stop now.

Mabuse (Wolfgang Preiss) now has an army of zombie criminals that he will use to take anything he wants, including giving these zombies orders to every prisoner in a jail and then sending them to destroy a nuclear power plant.

This movie would be followed by three more: The Testament of Dr. MabuseScotland Yard Hunts Dr. Mabuse and The Secret of Dr. Mabuse. In 1990, Claude Chabrol would bring the character back for his movie Dr. M.

This film’s director, Harald Reinl, also made the krimi The Strangler of Blackmoor Castle.

The Eureka box set Mabuse Lives! has this movie, along with an introduction by genre film expert and Video Watchdog founder Tim Lucas, a new 1080p presentation from a 2K restoration of the original film elements undertaken by CCC and a commentary track by film historian and author David Kalat. You can get it from MVD.

EUREKA BOX SET: Mabuse Lives! Dr. Mabuse At CCC: 1960-1964: The Thousand Eyes of Dr. Mabuse (1960)

A CCC Filmkunst (West Germany), C.E.I. Incom (Italy) and Critérion Film (France) co-production — a UN of a movie — this is the last film ever directed by Fritz Lang, bringing back his villain of all villains, Dr. Mabuse. Lang had made the first two movies about this character, Dr. Mabuse the Gambler and The Testament of Dr. Mabuse, in 1922 and 1933.

It’s based on Mr. Tot Buys A Thousand Eyes by Jan Fethke, which was written in Esperanto. I love this Wikipedia description, which said it was a modern take on Dr. Mabuse that combined “German Edgar Wallace film series, spy fiction and Big Brother surveillance with the nihilism of the Mabuse world.”

Dr. Mabuse is dead. But they always say that. And if he is, who kills reporters and anyone who gets close to the truth? Who was in the vision of the murder that blind telepath Peter Cornelius (Wolfgang Preiss) saw? Is the doctor inside the Luxor Hotel, a place wired by the Third Reich to spy on its guests? What’s the deal with clubfoot wifebeater Roberto Menil (Reinhard Kolldehoff), who has abused his wife Marion (Dawn Addams) to a suicide jump and into the arms of American Henry Travers (Peter van Eyck)? What’s the story with Hieronymus B. Mistelzweig (Werner Peters)? Is that Jess Franco’s — Jess would later make The Vengeance of Doctor Mabusefavorite bad guy, Howard Vernon? How about how in America, the posters claimed that this starred Gert Frobe, Mr. Goldfinger?

Despite Mabuse being surrounded by technology, it’s suggested that his power is near-supernatural. I’m all for that. I also kind of love that Mabuse’s plan is never explained. Why has he brought all of these people together? What’s he trying to do? It doesn’t matter. He’s just evil. Sometimes, that’s all a villain requires.

The Eureka box set Mabuse Lives! has this movie, along with an introduction by genre film expert and Video Watchdog founder Tim Lucas, a new 1080p presentation from a 2K restoration of the original film elements undertaken by CCC, a commentary track by film historian and author David Kalat, and an alternate ending. You can get it from MVD.

A NATURAL DOUBLE FEATURE ON THE DIA DF!

This Saturday, Bill and I are showing two movies at 8 PM EST on the Groovy Doom Facebook and YouTube channels.

Want to know what we’ve shown before? Check out this list.

Have a request? Make it here.

Want to see one of the drink recipes from a past show? We have you covered.

Up first, Carnival of Blood which is on Tubi.

Every episode, we watch movies, look at ads and make themed drinks. Here’s the first drink for this week.

Coney Island Iced Tea

  • 1 oz. rum
  • 1 oz. vodka
  • 1 oz. gin
  • 1 oz. tequila
  • 1 oz. orange liqueur
  • 1 oz. lemon juice
  • Cola
  • Mint
  1. Tear up some ginger and put it in a glass with ice.
  2. Pour alcohol in, top with cola and stir.

Our second movie is Curse of the Headless Horseman which is on Tubi.

Here’s the second drink.

Headless Horseman

  • 2 oz. vodka
  • 4 oz. ginger ale
  • 3 dashes bitters
  1. Chase some hippies out of your bar, then throw all of this in a glass with ice.
  2. Stir and drink.

See you Saturday.

RADIANCE FILMS BLU RAY RELEASE: Tattooed Life (1965)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Joseph Perry writes for the film websites Gruesome Magazine, The Scariest Things, Horror FuelThe Good, the Bad and the Verdict and Diabolique Magazine; for the film magazines Phantom of the Movies’ VideoScope and Drive-In Asylum; and for the pop culture websites When It Was Cool and Uphill Both Ways. He is also one of the hosts of When It Was Cool’s exclusive Uphill Both Ways podcast and can occasionally be heard as a cohost on Gruesome Magazine’s Decades of Horror: The Classic Era podcast.

Official synopsis: Tetsuo, a low-level yakuza, is double-crossed by his boss and attacked. His younger brother Kenji, an aspiring artist with no connections to crime, comes to his aid and kills Tetsuo’s assailant. Fearing repercussions from the yakuza, they flee to Manchuria where they risk coming under suspicion of rival gangs. Seijun Suzuki remains loyal to the conventions of the yakuza film, yet Tattooed Life contains flashes of his later creative genius, including a final act of explosive visual excess that has become one of the director’s all-time classic scenes.

Seijun Suzuki directs the yakuza drama Tattooed Life with flair, and although the majority of the film involves brotherly drama and romances that cannot be, the climax provides a fine payoff. Hideki Takahashi gives a standout performance as older brother and yakuza member Tetsuo, who does his best to hide the identities of himself and his younger brother Kenji (Kotobuki Hananomoto, also solid as a tortured artist consumed by love with their boss’s wife), as both are on the run after a yakuza murder.

Lighthearted moments prevent the film from becoming overly heavy, as camaraderie, cautiousness, suspicion, and semi-unrequited love are all at play. Lighter on violence than later films in the subgenre, there are still flashes of ferocity and danger. The members of the sizable cast all give fine performances, and just wait until you get a load of the beautifully choreographed swordplay. Tattooed Life comes strongly recommended from me for aficionados of Suzuki’s work, yakuza films, and Japanese cinema in general.

Tattooed Life screens on OVID in May 2025. For more information, visit https://www.ovid.tv/.

It’s also available from Third Window Films and has extras such as audio commentary by William Carroll, author of Seijun Suzuki and Postwar Cinema, a newly edited archival interview with Seijun Suzuki, a newly edited archival interview with art director Takeo Kimura, a trailer, a reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Time Tomorrow, a limited edition booklet featuring new writing by Tom Vick and a newly translated archival review of the film, all in a limited edition of 3000 copies, presented in full-height Scanavo packaging with removable OBI strip leaving packaging free of certificates and markings. This is the first time this movie has been available in the West and you can get it from MVD.