Mabuse$521097$ - translation to English
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Mabuse$521097$ - translation to English

FICTIONAL CHARACTER CREATED BY NORBERT JACQUES IN THE GERMAN NOVEL DR. MABUSE, DER SPIELER
Dr Mabuse; Doctor Mabüse; Doctor Mabuse
  • Dr. Mabuse

Mabuse      
n. cognome; Jan Mabuse (1478-1533?) artista fiammingo (noto anche come Jan Gossaert)
Jan Gossaert         
  • ''[[Jean Carondelet]]''
  • The Holy Family, about 1507–1508
  • The Adoration of the Kings]]'', formerly at [[Castle Howard]], now at the [[National Gallery]]
  • Portrait of Hendrik III, Count of Nassau-Breda
  • Jan Gossaert-self portrait (1515–1520). Collection of the [[Currier Museum of Art]], Manchester, New Hampshire
  • Three children of [[Christian II]] of Denmark 1526
FLEMISH PAINTER (1478–1532)
Jan de Mabuse; Jan Mabusa; Jan De Mabuse; Gossaert; Jan Mabuse; Jan Gossart
n. Jan de Mabuse (1478-1533?) pittore fiammingo
Jan Mabuse         
  • ''[[Jean Carondelet]]''
  • The Holy Family, about 1507–1508
  • The Adoration of the Kings]]'', formerly at [[Castle Howard]], now at the [[National Gallery]]
  • Portrait of Hendrik III, Count of Nassau-Breda
  • Jan Gossaert-self portrait (1515–1520). Collection of the [[Currier Museum of Art]], Manchester, New Hampshire
  • Three children of [[Christian II]] of Denmark 1526
FLEMISH PAINTER (1478–1532)
Jan de Mabuse; Jan Mabusa; Jan De Mabuse; Gossaert; Jan Mabuse; Jan Gossart
n. Jan de Mabuse (1478-1533?) pittore fiammingo

Wikipedia

Dr. Mabuse

Dr. Mabuse is a fictional character created by Norbert Jacques in his 1921 novel Dr. Mabuse, der Spieler ('Dr. Mabuse, the Gambler'), and his 1932 follow-up novel Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse (1932).

The character was made famous by three films about the character directed in Germany by Fritz Lang: Dr. Mabuse the Gambler (silent, 1922) The Testament of Dr. Mabuse (1933) and the much later The Thousand Eyes of Dr. Mabuse (1960). Five other films featuring Dr. Mabuse were made by other directors in Germany in the early 1960s, followed by Jess Franco's interpretation The Vengeance of Dr. Mabuse in 1971.

Although the character was deliberately written to mimic villains such as Dr. Fu Manchu, Guy Boothby's Doctor Nikola, Fantômas, or Svengali, the last of which was a direct inspiration, Jacques' goals were commercial success and to make political comments, in much the same way that the film The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920) had done just a few years previously.