Friday 30 September 2022

[REPEAT] THE STRANGE CASE OF DR. MABUSE (McFARLAND, 2005)

To Jacques Champreux.

[First published on this blog in 2008. Moved because of a HTML issue on the original] Hiding in the Darkness, a mysterious mastermind gambles on the weaknesses of the human souls to achieve his sole purpose: the destruction of the civilized world. In five books and twelve movies, under many aliases, many disguises, Dr. Mabuse challenges Humanity.

David Kalat investigates in one of the most interesting books ever dedicated to genre cinema.

« He's stronger than you. He is like a God. » (Cara Carozza in Dr Mabuse der Spieler - quoted in The Strange Case of Dr. Mabuse, Page 5)

SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES

« There is a devil loose in Germany, and one day I think I saw the devil myself...» (Norbert Jacques)

Uncertain times generate all kind of nightmares, but some of these beautiful dreamers who are authors are given the ability to exorcize their fears of these troubled ages by translating the dark recesses of their visions through the creativity of their imagination: Moriarty, Fu Manchu, Fantômas... Mabuse, perils of their times, room 101 of their creators. Something wicked this way comes, and Norbert Jacques has seen it.

« Dr. Mabuse operates in the shadows, ruling a world that does not even know his name. » (David Kalat, The Strange Case of Dr. Mabuse, Page 3)

From the ashes of a fallen empire, from the sins of a cardboard republic, in a country trying to recover from one of the most horrible wars, emerges Dr Mabuse der Spieler. Created by Luxemburg-born journalist turned author Norbert Jacques in 1921, Mabuse first terrifies millions of german readers of the Berliner Ilustrierten Zeitung in a five episodes serial for this magazine, then becomes a best-seller in hardback edition.

« Dr Mabuse der Spieler (« Dr Mabuse the Gambler ») depicts a criminal Führer who exploits social decay to his private advantage. » (David Kalat, The Strange Case of Dr. Mabuse, Page 14) 
 
Everything is said and all ressemblances between the « Man without a Face » and a man with a mustache on his face is the result of circumstances... or prescience. Why "Dr.", by the way? « Germany knows well from countless experiences the effects titles like Doctor, Professor or Count can have on trust and respect. How often have people hung such titles like a curtain in front of certain truths they don't want to have recognized. » explains Jacques in 1928. There's someone behind the curtain, pulling the strings, and this is not the Wizard of Oz.

« He ushered into the world a figure that escaped him. » (David Kalat, The Strange Case of Dr. Mabuse, Page 11)

Then enters a Mabuse in his own respect: German cinema aspiring Wonder boy, womanizer and camera dictator Fritz Lang. Lang adapts Dr Mabuse, der Spieler in 1922 with a two-part movie scripted by him and his wife Thea von Harbou... former wife of the star of the film (in the title role), Rudolf Klein-Rogge.

LANGER, LANGER ZEIT

« With his monocled eye, barking orders in his German accent, Lang typified Hollywood of the 1930's and ‘40 s. It was an image that swiftly turned into cliché , the sadistic stereotype of the Germanic director. » (Page 20)

Fritz Lang can be considered of one of the fathers of the modern commercial cinema, creating as a writer, a director or both, the codes and conventions for adventure films long before movie buffs began to cry for an "Indy IV" (Die Spinnen, Indische Grabmal), conspiracy thrillers (Mabuse), science fiction (Metropolis), 007 movies (Spione)
just watch Octopussy with the work of Lang in mind) or Film Noir (M). Close to him sits Alfred Hitchcock, minus the flamboyance and the genius, and his mother of all the summer pop-corn blockbusters: North by Northwest (1959).

« Alfred Hitchcock (who freely borrowed from Lang, much to his ire) took inspiration from this sequence [the police raid on Mabuse headquarters] for a very similar climax in his 1934 picture The Man who knew too Much. » (Page 58)

Thea von Harbou and Fritz Lang take the original Mabuse material from Norbert Jacques and make it their own without betraying the author (who collaborates with the duo on the adaptation), with a subtlety equaling the complexity of their professional and personal partnership (« We were married 11 years, because for ten years we didn't have time to get divorced. » cynically admitted Lang). But at the cost of Jacques's descent into collective oblivion (« Jacques did not help matters by largely setting his ambitious litterary projects aside in a vain attempt to recreate the Mabuse magic. », Page 16) as the man sold the property of Mabuse to the successive masterminds behind the cinematographic life of his creature.

« To get one sequence just the way he wanted, Lang fired real bullets at his cast to achieve truly realistic onscreen gun-shots and bullet holes. » (Page 31)

The two-part action packed Mabuse epic is critically acclaimed and is a domestic hit, establishing Fritz Lang as a prominent director in Germany. But parallel to the golden rule that « the Mabuse Principle demands that Mabuse destroys himself. » (Page 31), Herr Lang burns « bridges both behind and ahead of him, abusing and exploiting all around him. » (Page 21) and nearly ruins Ufa, the german answer to Hollywood majors of the time, with his Metropolis (1926).

M SCHLÄGT ZU

« Hitler understood the significance of film... » (Joseph Goebbels - quoted page 62)

You can't keep a « good » movie villain dead, or even in a mental institution, forever. The constant public demand to a Mabuse sequel pressures Fritz Lang and Thea von Harbou to plan a « Mabuse II ». In 1930, the couple consult Norbert Jacques on the script of what is at the time titled Mörder unter uns (Murderers Among Us, released as M the following year) and Lang asks him for suggestions in order to bring back the mad doctor on the screen (« behind » the screen would be more proper, talking about Mabuse...)

Jacques « pitches » Mabuse Kolonie (Mabuse's Colony), his new book project, as a possible basis for such a follow-up. In Kolonie, a mysterious « dragon lady » known as Frau Kristina wants to establish her own mini-empire in the Brazilian jungle and the modus operandi of her criminal project is based on Dr. Mabuse's legacy. Lang feels a lack of cinematic potential of this story but retains the idea of a Last will and Testament. Mabuse will return.

« History was catching up with Art. Dr Mabuse had arrived. » (Page 34)

The sole trail to a gang of counterfeiters, a corrupt ex-cop working undercover, goes insane but leaves a clue to his former boss, Inspector Lohmann
the cynical old dog with new copper tricks from M (played again by Otto Wernicke) and this clue is a name : Mabuse. The problem is that Dr. Mabuse (Rudolf Klein-Rogge, of course) has been locked in the cell of an asylum for a decade and the criminal mastermind is almost a vegetable.

Flashback... 1924, Adolf Hitler is in a cell after a failed coup, and writes Mein Kampf, his manifesto. Fast forward... January 1933, the Nazis come to power in Germany while Lang is shooting simultaneously Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse and Le Testament du Dr. Mabuse (a French version with a French cast and Rudolf Klein-Rogge as Everybody's favourite evil Mastermind). Due to premiere on March 24 in the same theatre that hosted the first Mabuse in 1922, Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse is delayed « for technical reasons » and then officially banned by the German Board of Film Censors, a puppet entity between the hands of
Hitler's minister of propaganda Dr. Joseph Goebbels.

Fritz Lang flees to America. The legend will later tell the tale of a meeting with Dr. Goebbels, like his master a true fan of Lang's work since Die Nibelungen (1924), where Goebbels tempts Lang with a Faustian deal regardless of the jewish origins of the director. Anyway the one who is seduced by "the dark side of the Force" is Thea von Harbou, Lang's wife.

ATZE BRAUNER, DER SPIELER

« This would be the legacy of Artur Brauner. As would happen time and again throughout the history of film, commercial success was bought at price to one's artistic reputation. For everything that Brauner did to revive and reinvigorate German cinema, he would be forever regarded as a glorified P.T. Barnum. » (Page 132)

The prospect of second Mabuse resurrection originates from the dream of a man to rebuild the cinema industry of his country, a genius with an authentic taste for art and a real sense of commerce, first dealing to equalize both before surrendering to box office canons with profit. Despised by his pairs and critics but tacitly approved by the german public, snubbed by movie historians, Artur "Atze" Brauner is the third father of Mabuse after Norbert Jacques and Fritz Lang.

Founder of CCC Films in 1946, Brauner wants to lure back to Germany the director of Das Testament des Dr. Mabuse, the film who gave him the will and the strength to reach the top of the food chain of the german cinema industry. « It was the first true gangster film, garnished with every delicacy that would then become typical of this genre... » once recalled the man with the most sincere emotion.

« Lang makes you want to puke. Nobody in the whole world is as important as he imagines himself to be. I completely understand why he is so hated everywhere. » (Kurt Weill - quoted page 92)

Perceived as a "little dictator" in the United States, a Mabuse with a monocle, Fritz Lang « had fought almost everyone in Hollywood from the most revered of moguls to the most anonymous of technicians. » (Page 111)
to the point that some even wanted to kill him changing studios at the speed of light, the director of The Big Heat (1953) puts methodically nails in the coffin of his US career in the most mabusian self-destructive way.

Artur Brauner, the most powerful movie tycoon of postwar Europe, dreams of a remake of Das Testament but seduces the Great Herr Lang's ego with an offer his vanity cannot refuse : the remake of the two-parter Indische Grabmal (1921) scripted by Thea von Harbou and Lang but directed by Joe May, much to Lang's discontent. The wonderful Der Tiger von Eschnapur and Das Indische Grabmal (1959) are panned by malicious critics. Behind the curtain, Mabuse awaits...

LA VENGANZA DEL DR. K

« I already killed that son of a bitch! » (Fritz Lang)

A Berlin cop (Gert Fröbe), an american businessman and playboy owner of a nuclear plant (Peter Van Eyck) and a young and beautiful damsel in distress (Dawn Addams) are the pawns on a luxory but deadly chess-board... the Hotel Luxor. And the game is watched by 1000 eyes monitoring the private lives of the guests in the palace. Only a psychic (Lupo Prezzo) and a psychiatrist (Wolfgang Preiss) seem to know the rules and why is an irritating insurance salesman (Werner Peters) the only one in position to checkmate the Master?

Mabuse is dead, long live Mabuse! Die 1000 Augen des Dr. Mabuse (The 1000 Eyes of Dr. Mabuse, 1960) is the swan song, the testament of Fritz Lang. Perils of troubled times, room 101 of a creator, from the anticipation of the Nazi terror to the nuclear Angst of the sixties and the intrusion of technology in everyday life, something wicked this way comes, and Fritz Lang has seen it all. Instead of the remake wished by Brauner, Lang offers a brand new Mabuse. 1000 Augen is a hit in Germany and is regarded as a masterpiece in France. Brauner offers the Master to helm a franchise but Lang refuses.

« There is no Mabuse because "Mabuse" is not a name, not in the traditional sense. It is a sign. It is a password. It is an ideology » (David Kalat, The Strange Case of Dr. Mabuse, Page 5) .

Stop the press! (the Yellow Press ball?) The strength of The Strange Case of Dr. Mabuse, by David Kalat, lies here: Mabuse survived Fritz Lang and Mr Kalat recalls us that reality. Dr. K is not only the author of one of the greatest books ever written about a genre movie series (with Focus on... The Pink Panther by Philippe Lombard) but also the boss of All Day Entertainment, a company releasing Collector's Editions of "Cult movies" on DVD. « My passion for the Mabuse series drove me to write this book, and it also drove me to license some of them for DVD release through All Day. » confesses the man almost as an apology for those who could consider that this situation could affect his comments. Rather call this professional consciousness...

« If Lang would not cooperate, his low-rent doppelgänger Dr. Harald Reinl would » (Page 143). Like specialist Jean-Pierre Dionnet during the wonderful and glorious hours of Cinéma de quartier for french pay-tv channel Canal Plus, David Kalat puts the spotlight on the « others » Mabuse : six movies produced between 1961 and 1970 deliberately ignored or despised by movie critics or historians.

DR. MABUSE SCHLÄGT WIEDER ZU

« Reinl retooled the Mabuse genre he inherated from Lang. Discarding any pretensions to art, he rebuilt it as a franchise, with an easy-to follow formula. And his contributions were significant: Lang directed three Mabuse films, Reinl two. » (David Kalat, The Strange Case of Dr. Mabuse, Page 145 )

Artisan and artist extraordinary, king of german box office at the heights of his career, the name of Harald Reinl is associated to the Golden Age of Germany's popular cinema: Edgar Wallace, Winnetou, Jerry Cotton, Kommissar X... and of course Mabuse. With its omnipotent all-star yet invisible (almost...) villain played by Wolfgang Preiss, the return of his challenger Inspector Lohmann (Gert Fröbe, called "Kras" in the previous episode but who cares?), the mysterious triple-crossing charming superspy (Lex Barker) and the gorgeous lady with a secret (Daliah Lavi), The Return of Dr. Mabuse (1961) delivers with style top-notch entertainment. And why has that guy Bömmler the face of the insurance salesman of 1000 Augen (the great Werner Peters)?

The Return scribe Ladislas Fodor pens two more Mabuse : The invisible Dr. Mabuse (1962), directed by Reinl (with Lex « the Rex » Barker again), and The Testament of Dr. Mabuse. This Testament des Dr. Mabuse (1962) is directed by Werner Klinger, another artisan, who realizes Artur Brauner's dream of a remake of Fritz Lang's masterpiece. The next entry, Scotland Yard vs. Dr. Mabuse (1963) transposes heavily Mabuse into the Edgar Wallace franchise (through the adaptation of a book of his son, Bryan Edgar Wallace) and The Death Ray of Dr. Mabuse (1964) strikes too much like Thunderball (actually released the following year... Another mabusian trick?)

« Even Brauner himself seemed a triffle scandalized by the whole affair ; of the eight films he produced with Jess Franco, La Venganza del Dr. Mabuse (« The Vengeance of Dr. Mabuse », 1970) is the only one not listed in CCC's official catalogue of films. » (Page 239)

They say that all good things must come to and end but Dr. Mabuse is all but good and his evil never ends. He resurfaces in Spain with La Venganza del Dr. Mabuse (1970). Produced discretely by Artur Brauner, this Vengeance in color is directed by the most revered icon of the genre cinema : el Don of B to Z movies with an attitude, spanish director Jesus Franco himself. Die Hard with a Vengeance?

DR. M LIVES

« No one will discover me. No one imagines that Dr. Mabuse lives. » (Professor Farkas in La Venganza del Dr. Mabuse)

The Strange Case of Dr. Mabuse - A Study of the Twelve Films and Five Novels, by David Kalat (published by McFarland) not only explores the universe of the litterary Mabuse and the "official" movies but also, two movies: Scream and Scream Again (1969) and The Image of Dorian Gray in the Yellow Press (1984) which he associates to the character.

« Chabrol's love of Lang is absolute. » (Page 275)

David Kalat ends his fabulous book with a study of the excellent Club Extinction (aka Dr. M, 1990), the Claude Chabrol tribute to the Langian visions of Mabuse. Dr. Marsfeldt is the last heir of the testament of Dr. M, or is he? Mabuse lives through the book of Mr Kalat, a celebration of one of the monuments of popular german cinema, a cinema unfairly ignored. Mabuse will return, he always does.

Uncertain times generate all kind of nightmares, but some of these beautiful dreamers which are authors are given the ability to exorcize their fears of these troubled ages by translating the dark outposts of their visions through the creativity of their imagination : Moriarty, Fu Manchu, Fantômas, Mabuse... Marsfeldt, perils of their times, room 101 of their creators...

« ... From this summary of recent events, what meaning can we deduce? Can we recognize the coming apocalypse ? What horrible future do these signs portend? » (Norbert Jacques, Mabuse Kolonie, 1930) 
  

Monday 19 September 2022

MONEY. MURDER. ZURICH. (DER ZÜRICH-KRIMI) - EPISODE 15: BORCHERT UND DAS GEHEIMNIS DES MANDANTEN (DAS ERSTE, 2022)

Launched in 2016, the brilliant 90-minute crime drama Der Zürich-Krimi returns this month on German pubcaster Das Erste with Borchert und das Geheimnis des Mandanten and Borchert und die dunkeln Schatten.

Der Zürich-Krimi stars the great Christian Kohlund (Das Traumhotel, Black Forest Clinic) as the melancholic Thomas Borchert, an "unlicensed attorney" who works in Zurich for lawyer Dominique Kuster and often acts as a private investigator. Ina Paule Klink (Wilsberg) co-stars as Dominique. The other regulars are Pierre Kiwitt as Police captain Marco Furrer, Robert Hunger-Bühler (Dr. Reto Zanger), Susi Banzhaf as Regula Gabrielli (Dominique's assistant) and Yves Wüthrich (Urs Aeggi, Furrer's deputy). Andrea Zogg, who plays taxi driver Beat Bürki, is absent from this episode.

Thomas Borchert and Dominique Kuster attend the vernissage of portrait photographer Corinna Riemer. Stephan Altweger, the nephew of entrepreneur Jürg Altweger, shows arrogance towards Italian caterer Giovanni Lazzari but Thomas puts him straight. Outside the gallery, Borchert sees a man leaving the courtyard in a hurry and he discovers that Jürg Altweger has been shot dead. Surprisingly, Captain Marco Furrer arrests Giovanni Lazzari. The caterer was heard arguing with Jürg and gunshot residues were found on his hand. Thomas and Dominique accept to defend Giovanni but the Italian is hiding something to his lawyers.

The suspenseful Borchert und das Geheimnis des Mandanten was penned by Robert Hummel (Letzte Spur Berlin) and directed by Roland Suso Richter. Also with Julia Richter (Corinna Riemer), Michele Cucioffo (Giovanni Lazzari), Clelia Sarto (Cristina Lazzari), Moritz von Treuenfels (Stephan Altweger), Birte Wolter (Sandra Altweger), Liliom Lewald (Dennis Kovac), Steffen Münster (Jörg Altweger), Kathleen Gallego Zapata (Judge Mildenberger), Michael Stobbe (Prosecutor Favre), etc. Produced by Graf Film with Czech company Mia Film (Allmen) for ARD Degeto and Das Erste

Produced by Klaus Graf, Annemarie Pilgram and Michal Pokorný. Katja Roesch, Ondřej Nerud and Sandra Moll (ARD Degeto) are the production managers. Filmed in Zurich and Prague. Music by Michael Klaukien. Cinematography by Max Knauer, BVK. Production services in Switzerland provided by Christof Neracher for Hugofilm. Made with the support of the Czech Film Fund Episodes 1 to 9 of Money. Murder. Zurich. (the international title of Der Zürich-Krimi) are available in the United States and Canada on the SVOD service MHZ Choice. Distributed by Beta Film.
 

Friday 9 September 2022

ON THE OTHER HAND, DEATH: A DONALD STRACHEY MYSTERY (2008, HERE TV)

Donald Strachey is the quintessential private eye, a worthy heir to Philip Marlowe, but with a difference... He's gay. On the Other Hand, Death (2008) is the third of four excellent made-for-TV movies based on a literary series.
 
Donald Strachey was created by American journalist and author Richard Lipez, who died in March 2022. He was openly gay and wrote 16 Donald Strachey Mystery novels (published between 1981 and 2019) under the nom de plume Richard Stevenson. A posthumous 17th book is to be published. Strachey lives in Albany, N.Y. with his longtime partner Timothy "Timmy" Callahan, the assistant to a New York state senator. His cases often concern the local gay community. 

From 2005 to 2008, U.S. premium LGBTQ (1) channel Here TV shown four films shot in Canada and starring Chad Allen (Dr Quinn, Medicine Woman) as Donald Strachey and Sebastian Spence (First Wave) as Timothy Callahan: Third Man Out (2005), Shock to the System (2006), On the Other Hand, Death (2008) and Ice Blues (2008). The last two were filmed back-to-back but On the Other Hand, Death is actually the fourth movie. All were helmed by director Ron Oliver (Queer as Folk, Psi Factor), who brought a substantial dose of his creativity to the TV versions of Richard Stevenson's books (2). 
 
On the Other Hand, Death is based on the second novel (published in 1984) and was written by Gillian Horvath (Highlander: The Series, Forever Knight) and Ron McGee. Donald Strachey is tailing a woman who happens to be an undercover cop, Officer Gina Santer. She and Detective Bub Bailey interrogate Donald. He tells them a mysterious client paid him in cash to follow his unfaithful wife. Later, Timothy and Don join Tim's ex-boyfriend Andrew McWhirter, who supports a couple of lesbian friends: Dorothy Fisher, a school guidance counselor, and her partner Edith Strong. Dorothy is on paid leave because a parent accuses her of promoting homosexuality as she advises his gay son.
 
The couple's home is the subject of homophobic attacks, including one in presence of Strachey and Callahan. The P.I. investigates while Kenny Kwon, his assistant, searches for information on the "client". Chad Allen brings back his character with talent and class. The chemistry between the gay actor (outed by a tabloid in 1996) and Sebastian Spence, who's straight and plays his role with ease, is essential to these adaptations where mystery and a film noir atmosphere are combined with romance. This romantic aspect is influenced by the Thin Man movies (1934-1947) and their husband/wife sleuth duo Nick and Nora Charles (3).
 
Another pleasant element of the Donald Strachey Mysteries is the presence of the irresistible Nelson Wong as the enthusiastic and irreverent Kenny Kwon. The role was a bit part in Third Man Out but Kenny returned in Shock to the System to be Donald's secretary ("office manager") and now he's training to be a private detective. Since Ice Blues, the last Donald Strachey, Nelson Wong played characters named "Kenny Kwon" in a long list of Hallmark TV movies directed by Ron Oliver. Fans of both Hallmark Channel and Wong call these participations "the Kennyverse".
 
Daryl Shuttleworth plays Albany Police Detective Bub Bailey. Margot Kidder, aka Lois Lane in the Superman movies, shines as a superheroine of her own with the role of Dorothy and Gabrielle Rose is perfect as Edith. Like  the other Donald Strachey Mysteries made for television, On the Other Hand, Death is a celebration of detective fiction. Also with Damon Runyan (Andrew McWhirter), Lori Triolo (Gina Santer), William MacDonald (Jonas Baskin), Barclay Hope (Carl Deems), Kerry James (Joey Deems), Ralph Alderman (Sheriff Reg Howard), Keegan MacIntosh (Derek Baskin), David Orth (Peter Garritty), etc.
 
Produced by Shavick Entertainment with Here!. Exec produced by Barry Krost and Brad Danks. Produced by Paul Colichman, Stephen P. Jarchow and James Shavick. Philip Webb is the supervising producer. Music by Peter Allen. Cinematography by C. Kim Miles, CSC. Editing by Tony Dean Smith. Production designed by Rick Whitfield. Costumes designed by Karen Munnis with Katie Quinn. The superb title sequence was designed by Krista Lomax. Filmed with the participation of The Canadian Film or Video Production Tax Credit and the  Province of British Columbia Film Incentive BC.  
 
Chad Allen retired from acting (and production) in 2015 to become a psychologist. The versatile Ron Oliver became the king of Christmas movies. Mentioned in the On the Other Hand, Death TV movie, The Trevor Project is an important suicide prevention and crisis intervention organization for LGBTQ young people. 
 
(1) Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, and Questioning.
(2) (3) See Bonnie Jean Mah's excellent documentary Martinis & Murder: Inside the Donald Strachey Mysteries (2009).
 
 
See also:   
 

Thursday 1 September 2022

ALLMEN: THE PINK DIAMOND (ALLMEN UND DAS GEHEIMNIS DES ROSA DIAMANTEN - DAS ERSTE, 2017)

A philosophical dandy turned art detective and his loyal butler are looking for a stolen diamond. Allmen und das Geheimnis des rosa Diamanten is the second of a very enjoyable and stylish German feature-length comedy/detective series aired on Das Erste since 2017.

Johann Friedrich von Allmen lives in Zurich. He's a bon vivant, a man of culture and taste who likes elegance and refinement. Allmen has no equal when it comes to spending his money, to the point that he squandered the family fortune and lost his beautiful home. Thankfully, he turned an expertise in tracing missing artworks into a profession as the founder of Allmen International Enquiries. Though it allows him to maintain his idea of a costly lifestyle, his faithful Guatemalan valet Carlos does his best to moderate not without a touch of irony the flamboyant "Don John". Created by bestselling Swiss author Martin Suter, Allmen first appeared in Allmen and the Dragonflies (Allmen und die Libellen, 2011), a novel followed by five more. 
 
Four Allmen TV movies based on the books were aired by pubcaster Das Erste between 2017 and 2021: Allmen und das Geheimnis der Libellen, Allmen und das Geheimnis des rosa Diamanten, Allmen und das Geheimnis der Dahlien and Allmen und das Geheimnis der Erotik. The project of a fifth one,  Allmen und der Koi, was evoked last year but shooting hasn't started. Those films star Heino Ferch (Nordholm, Anatomy of Evil) as Allmen and Samuel Finzi (Flemming) as Carlos. Adapted by scriptwriter Martin Rauhaus (Hotel Heidelberg) from the book Allmen and the Pink Diamond (Allmen und der rosa Diamant), Allmen und das Geheimnis des rosa Diamanten was directed by Thomas Berger (Kommissarin Lucas). The mysterious Mr. Montgomery gives Allmen a SFr.20,000 retainer to find a stolen pink diamond known as The Eye of Shiva.
 
The precious stone is believed to be in the hands of a Russian businessman named Artjom Sokolow. The art detective looks for information — Allmen style in a nightclub. Carlos meets Sokolow's Colombian housemaid Maria Moreno and falls for her. Allmen finds the Russian at a prestigious German hotel where death soon strikes. The epicurian dandy and his manservant face dangerous adversaries. Most of the charm of these adaptations of Allmen comes from the performances of the  both talented Heino Ferch (with an incredible look) and Samuel Finzi. The likeable duo is often compared to P.G. Wodehouse's Jeeves and Wooster. Andrea Osvárt (Tranporter: The Series) plays Joelle "Jojo" Hirt, the daughter of one of the richest men in Switzerland and Allmen's love interest. Isabella Parkinson joins the regular cast as Maria Moreno.  
 
Also with Nora von Waldstätten (Vanessa), Daniel Wagner (Artjom Sokolow), Alexander Finkenwirth (Neuenhauser), Oscar Ortega Sánchez (Don Gregorio), Tomas Sinclair Spencer (Colin Montgomery), Robert Seeliger (American), Roman Šmejkal (Taxi driver Arnold) etc. Allmen und das Geheimnis des rosa Diamanten was mostly shot in Prague. Produced by UFA Fiction and Mia Film (Der Zürich-Krimi) for  ARD Degeto and Das Erste. Kristina Henning-Egger and Benjamin Benedict are the producers. Co-produced by Zbyněk Pippal and Michal Pokorný. Holger Krenz and Kirsten Frehse (ARD Degeto) are the line producers. Music by Fabian Römer and Mathias Hillebrand-Gonzalez. Benedikt Herforth is the production designer. Cinematography by Frank Küpper. Editing by Lucas Seeberger and Melania Singer
 
Allmen und das Geheimnis des rosa Diamanten is available in the U.S. and Canada as Allmen: The Pink Diamond, thanks to MHz Choice.