Mary Shelley (born Mary
Wollstonecraft Godwin) an English novelist planned a summer trip with the poet
Lord Byron at Lake Geneva, in May 1816, accompanied by Percy Shelley and their
son. She began writing what she assumed would be a short story, but she expanded
this tale into her very first novel, “Frankenstein: or, The Modern Prometheus”,
published anonymously in 1818. Upon waking from a dream, Mary Godwin conceived
the idea for Frankenstein:
“I saw the pale student of unhallowed arts
kneeling beside the thing he had put together. I saw the hideous phantasm of a
man stretched out, and then, on the working of some powerful engine, show signs
of life, and stir with an uneasy, half vital motion. Frightful must it be; for
supremely frightful would be the effect of any human endeavour to mock the
stupendous mechanism of the Creator of the world.”
She later
described that summer in Switzerland as the moment "when I first stepped
out from childhood into life". The story has been fictionalized several
times and formed the basis for a number of films.
The first film adaptation of the tale (a brief 16 min.), Frankenstein, was done by
Edison Studios in
1910, written and directed by J. Searle Dawley, with Augustus Phillips as
Frankenstein, Mary Fuerte as Elizabeth, and Charles Ogle as the Monster. There was also at
least one European film version, the Italian Il
Mostro di Frankenstein ("The
Monster of Frankenstein") in 1921. The film's producer Luciano Albertini
essayed the role of Frankenstein, with the creature being played by Umberto
Guarracino, and Eugenio Testa directing from a screenplay by Giovanni Drivetti.
The film is also now considered a lost film.
The most famous adaptation of the story, 1931's Frankenstein,
was produced by Universal
Pictures directed by James Whale, and starred Boris Karloff as the monster. Karloff would reprise the Monster role in two
of the sequels; Bride of Frankenstein
(1935) & Son of Frankenstein
(1939). The James Whale directed film Bride of Frankenstein also featured
actress Elsa Lanchester portraying both Mary Shelley and the Bride. Lon Chaney
Jr., would fill the Monster’s shoes in the sequel Ghost of Frankenstein (1942), starring along side Bela Lugosi as Ygor.
Lugosi who turned down the role of Frankenstein’s Monster would don the neck
bolts in the crossover movie Frankenstein
Meets the Wolf Man (1943). In both House
of Frankenstein (1944) & House of
Dracula (1945), the role of Frankenstein’s Monster was played by stunt man
Glenn Strange.
In Great Britain, the Frankenstein story
would be adapted by Hammer Films. The
Curse of Frankenstein (1957) was the first British Gothic horror film made
by Hammer, starring Peter Cushing as Victor Frankenstein and Christopher Lee as
the Monster. Hammer would make a series of Frankenstein films many of which
were stand alone films with different actors portraying the Monster or
“Creature”, and starred Peter Cushing as Victor Frankenstein. The Revenge of Frankenstein (1958) – two
creatures Michael Gwynn & Peter Cushing, The Evil of Frankenstein (1964) – Kiwi Kingston, Frankenstein Created Woman (1967) –
Susan Denberg, Frankenstein Must Be
Destroyed (1969) – Freddie Jones, The
Horror of Frankenstein (1970) – David Prowse, and Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell (1974) – David Prowse. In 1959, Hammer shot a half-hour pilot
episode for a TV series to be called Tales
of Frankenstein, in association with Columbia Pictures. Anton Diffring played the Baron, and Don Megowan his creation. Curt Siodmak directed. The
series was scrapped, largely because of the two companies' disagreement over
the direction of the show.
In 1957, American International Pictures (AIP) released the low-budget I Was A Teenage Frankenstein.
Whit Bissell stars
as Prof. Frankenstein, Gary
Conway plays the creature. A
follow-up, How to Make a Monster, was
released in July 1958. This film featured actor Gary Conway as an actor playing the Teenage
Frankenstein in a film. In 1958, Boris Karloff would return to the name
Frankenstein in a wildly differing adaptation. The film Frankenstein 1970, focused on the themes of nuclear power, impotence, and the film
industry. Boris Karloff stars
as Dr. Frankenstein, who harvests the bodies of actors to create a clone of
himself using his nuclear-powered laboratory. His intention is to have this
clone carry on his genes into future generations. This year also brought the
bizarre Frankenstein’s
Daughter, in which modern descendant of Frankenstein Donald Murphy
experiments with a Jekyll/Hyde type of serum before stitching together a
grotesque female creature.
In 1966, Toho, known for their Godzilla and man-in-suit
monster movies, made the film War of the
Gargantuas, a sequel to Frankenstein
Conquers the World (although
this is obscured in the US version), with the Frankenstein Monster's severed
cells growing into two giant humanoid brother monsters: Sanda (the Brown Gargantua), the strong and
gentle monster raised by scientists in his youth, and Gaira (the Green Gargantua), the violent and
savage monster who devours humans. The two monsters eventually battle each
other in Tokyo.
In 1970, Dracula vs.
Frankenstein by Al Adamson, an extremely low-budget horror thriller,
stars aged film stars J. Carroll Naish and Lon Chaney Jr. In the film, Count
Dracula (Zandor Vorkov) has the last living descendant of Frankenstein (Naish)
revive his famous ancestor's creation (played by John Bloom).
Frankenstein
(the Monster) and Mary Shelley’s story would continue to be adapted in many
medians and influence generations to come. Next year, Frankenstein’s monster
will return to the big screen in “I, Frankenstein” starring Aaron Eckhart as the Monster. The film
is an adaptation of the graphic novel that is influenced by Mary Shelley’s
novel.
You’ll find many versions of Frankenstein’s Monster at Horrorbles and in many shapes and sizes…Lee, Karloff, and everything in between! Toys, shirts, collectibles, and movies…Frankenstein is alive, ALIVE!, and continues live on through the imaginations of readers and moviegoers.
~Maniac Matt
You’ll find many versions of Frankenstein’s Monster at Horrorbles and in many shapes and sizes…Lee, Karloff, and everything in between! Toys, shirts, collectibles, and movies…Frankenstein is alive, ALIVE!, and continues live on through the imaginations of readers and moviegoers.
~Maniac Matt
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