Film Review
With its fortunes beginning to show a marked decline in the late 1960s,
Hammer Films took the decision to focus its efforts on
the genre that had
given the company its biggest success over the previous two decades -
the Gothic horrors.
The Horror
of Frankenstein was conceived as a remake of
The Curse of Frankenstein
(1957), Hammer's first film in the fantasy horror genre and the one
that effectively launched the career of its stars Peter Cushing and
Christopher Lee. The studio approached the writer of that film,
Jimmy Sangster, for a new script treatment. Sangster, who had
scripted many of Hammer's early horror films, was at first reluctant to
come on board but agreed when the studio allowed him to produce and
direct the film. One thing Sangster was keen to do was to give
this Frankenstein film a new slant, by introducing some dark humour
into the story and making the scientist much more of an irresponsible
villain.
Up until this point, Peter Cushing was the only actor to have played
Baron Frankenstein in the Hammer films. When the actor was
unavailable for
The Horror of
Frankenstein, the studio was keen to hire as his replacement
Ralph Bates, a rising young star who had won acclaim for his portrayal
of Caligula in the ITV series
The
Caesars. Bates had originally been intended to play
Dracula in Hammer's previous Gothic horror,
Taste the Blood of Dracula, but
this was vetoed by the film's distributors who insisted that
Christopher Lee reprise the role of the famous vampire. With his
Byronic good looks and flair for downbeat comedy, Bates proved to be an
ideal casting choice for the part of the young Baron
Frankenstein. Ralph Bates would come a familiar face on British
television in the 1970s and '80s, starring in such prestigious series
as
Poldark, but he died from
pancreatic cancer at the age of 51.
The part of the monster went to Dave Prowse, who would later become
known to millions of schoolchildren in Britain as the Green Cross Man,
before finding even greater fame as Darth Vader in the
Star
Wars films. Kate O'Mara, who played Victor's buxom
housekeeper and all-round playmate, would also become a major star,
best known for her role as the villainous Cassandra Morrell in
the American super-soap
Dynasty.
The most distinguished actor in the cast at the time the film was made
was Dennis Price, who plays the graverobber; he is best remembered for
his portrayal of the man who repeatedly killed Alec Guinness in the
Ealing classic
Kind Hearts and Coronets
(1949).
Although it shares the impressive production values of Hammer's other
Gothic horrors (as well as the derisory budget),
The Horror of Frankenstein is an
altogether different kind of film. With its quirky humour and
portrayal of Frankenstein as an anti-establishment sex-hungry rebel,
the film is an obvious attempt to attract a younger audience.
Unfortunately, this departure was far from successful and Hammer would
revert to its tried and tested formula for its subsequent Gothic
horrors. For the next (and final) Frankenstein film made by
Hammer,
Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell
(1974), the part of the scientist would once again be played by Peter
Cushing.
The Horror of Frankenstein may
not be the best film in Hammer's series of horror films, but its
radically different take on a familiar story makes it interesting and
entertaining. However, you can't help wondering that it might
have been a much better proposition if Hammer had shown a little more
daring and made it as an out-and-out parody, as Mel Brooks did so
successfully in his 1974 film
Young
Frankenstein.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Victor Frankenstein is a precocious young man whose passion for science
is matched only by his interest in the female sex, which is good
because it helps him in his understanding of human anatomy. When
his skinflint father refuses to pay for his further studies, the
cunning Victor arranges for him to have a convenient death and heads
off to Vienna to begin his university career. All to soon, Victor
becomes bored with the dull routine of lectures and lab work and so,
when he learns he has made the Dean's daughter pregnant, he jacks it in
and heads back home to continue his research in the comfort of his own
castle. Assisted by his young friend Wilhelm Kassner, Victor
begins experiments to understand what causes life. When he
succeeds in reanimating a stolen tortoise, he decides to create a man
from the body parts of corpses. Naturally, young Wilhelm objects,
so Victor has no choice but to shove a few thousand volts through
him. Ironic, really, that in order to create one life a chap is
obliged to destroy so many others. Such is the price of
progress. Anyway, Victor perseveres, employing a friendly
grave robber to supply him with the raw materials for his work.
Although obsessed with his endeavours, Victor still finds time to amuse
himself with his housekeeper, Alys, although she too becomes an
irritant and soon ends up on the scientist's blacklist. Good
thing he has a large supply of sulphuric acid. Several grisly
murders later, Victor's efforts are finally rewarded. Once he has
assembled all of the body parts, he puts them together and - to his
delight - he has made a living, breathing man. Unfortunately, the
thing he has created turns out to be a surly beast with absolutely no
manners whatsoever. Instead of showing gratitude for the life it
has been given, the brute merely smashes things up and starts killing
people. Victor is most vexed. Perhaps splitting the atom
would have been a more fruitful line of research?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.