Showing posts with label Mary Shelley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mary Shelley. Show all posts

Thursday, November 1, 2018

30 THEATRICAL TERRORS: Frankenstein (Day 30)



This is the 200th anniversary of young Mary Shelley’s novel of hubris and creation, FRANKENSTEIN, and being that Frankenstein’s Monster is one of my favorite literary characters and that Boris Karloff is one of my favorite actors, well, this is what you get on Halloween night from this monster.



In 1931 FRANKENSTEIN was put onto the big screen by Universal Pictures—an instant hit with critics and the audience, director James Whale’s film made Boris Karloff a star virtually overnight.



Adapted from the play by Peggy Webling (and based on Mary Shelley’s 1818 novel, FRANKENSTEIN; or, THE MODERN PROMETHEUS) the film tells the story of a scientist who attempts to create his own man from an amalgamation of corpses dug up from the graveyard and what happens when the experiment goes horribly wrong.



What spawned from Universal’s FRANKENSTEIN films and, thus, Shelley’s story is a pop culture phenomenon. The monster can be found everywhere, in many forms and fashions. Sometimes as less than, but most times as more than human in thought and action. He is a sad and lonely and, therefore, a totally relatable character.




Sadly for the character and his creator, he becomes the monster he was perceived as, because the world turns on him, rejecting him. His father hates him and so he hates his father and the world of the living. And, though he cannot speak, that is the magic of Karloff’s performance—what a critic called a bit of “acting mesmerism”.



As for Universal’s design of the monster, that was make-up artist Jack Pierce’s doing, in collaboration with Karloff. Every day, Pierce spent 4 hours applying the cotton, gum, greasepaint and collodion to the actor in order to give him that gaunt undead look that we’ve all come to know and love.



And here is a look at the trailer for FRANKENSTEIN…

Monday, November 12, 2012

OCTOBER LEAVES

Whenever October ends, I go through a kind of lull as the bestest holiday of the season has already passed and it just seems like an ending.
Which is the point of Halloween, in a big kind of way, I suppose.

Anyway, just gathering the energy to start posting again and figured a good place to start is where I left off:
that thar Frankenstein monster feller!

Some unposted sketches that I figured would develop into final pieces that pretty-much just stayed sketches...

(These sketches were just too big for the scanner, but you get the gist.)
(This is where you can see the torch in the monster's hand--fire not so bad!)
(You can tell I fell in love with this profile of the creature and that black hair as described by Shelley
and perfected by Wrightson.  Here the monster carries a club and strangles a magistrate or official.)
Well that's all for now, back soon as I expect to have time to sketch again shortly.

Sunday, October 28, 2012

MONSTER-MONTH: A COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN (Day 28)

Tonight we go all new wave with the Monster as we take a look at perhaps the blondest Doctor Frankenstein and the most exotic Bride of Frankenstein ever put to film!



THE BRIDE is a 1985 adaptation of Mary Shelley’s FRANKENSTEIN starring Sting as the Baron Charles Frankenstein, Jennifer Beals as his female creation, Eva, Clancy Brown as Viktor, the Monster, and David Rappaport as Rinaldo the Dwarf.



The film begins with the creation of Eva as a mate for the Monster, Viktor.  Upon her creation Eva’s physical near-perfection is noted by all and her rejection of Viktor causes the Monster to fly into a rage that destroys Frankenstein’s laboratory.  Dr. Frankenstein and Eva are seemingly the only survivors and so they flee back to Charles’ castle.  Charles falls in love with her and attempts to make her his ideal woman.  Very Pygmalion of the good Doctor, isn’t it?




Now Charles Frankenstein is a kind of feminist in that he wants his creation to be a new kind of woman--one bold and independent as any man.  Soon enough, during his teachings, Eva shows enough promise to match her teacher.  And so a coming out party is planned for the bride.  All goes swimmingly until a common house cat appears and she reacts in a savage and violent way as she had never seen one before.


Sting wants her to be his and his alone and yet she becomes intrigued by another man and has a liason with him.  Jealous, Frankenstein reveals that he is Eva’s creator and shows her his lab and journal so as to convince her of his power over her--in a sense declaring that he’s her father as well as her husband-to-be.



Up until that point, Eva had believed that she was an amnesiac.  Even still, this new knowledge steers her away from her strong independence not one bit.  She declares that he will have no hold over her so long as she lives.



It is this other half of the story that most intrigued me as a viewer, I mean, sure the movie is called “The Bride” but that’s not what I tuned in for!  Clancy Brown, in the earliest role I remember seeing him, was a fine Monster.  The make-up is more subtle in this incarnation than in most.  With a normal flesh-tone and merely an enlarged forhead and some scars, this Monster can almost pass for human rather than humunculus.



Having survived, the Monster wanders into the countryside where Rinaldo, a dwarf, joins him on his journey of self-discovery.  Eventually they become involved in a circus, whose owner eventually kills Rinaldo.  Viktor is thrown into a rage and sorrow deeper than he has known.  Eventually he decides to return to Castle Frankenstein for Eva.



By now, Eva discovers her psychic link to the monster.  She then rejects the Baron as the Monster arrives to rescue her.  In the end, the  Baron falls to his death and Viktor and Eva reunite and leave for Venice.



Jennifer Beals earned a nomination for a Razzie Award for Worst Actress.



Sites cited:



Sunday, October 28, 2012 on TCM:

6:30am - D.O.A. (1950)


8pm - 20 MILLION MILES TO EARTH (1957)


9:30pm - EARTH VS. THE FLYING SAUCERS (1956)


11pm - FIRST MEN IN THE MOON (1964)


1am - THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA (1925)


2:45am - M (1931)




But wait: CHEST TATOO!

Saturday, October 27, 2012

MONSTER-MONTH: A COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN (Day 27)


Tonight we focus on Kenneth Branagh’s contribution to the myth of the Monster known as MARY SHELLEY’S FRANKENSTEIN.  Made in the wake of the very successful DRACULA remake by Francis Ford Coppola, Branagh’s adaptation of the Shelley novel is an ambitious one.  It reaches for the tale as it was originally told, it struggles to find the emotional core of the Creator and the Creation.

Considering that the story of Dr. Frankenstein and his Monster has been around for more than 170 years, mounting yet another screen version seems like trouble.
"The territory has been covered many, many times," acknowledges the filmmaker, 33. "The black and white melodramatic versions have been done. The gory, gory versions, the suspense versions, the comic ver sions: They have all been done. I wanted to make the romantic, cinematic version. That's why I felt that sweeping camera movements were required. I wanted to give people a cinematic experience full of big ideas, vibrant colors, big landscapes.
"I wanted to see people against large mountains and lakes, almost as if I were telling a fairy tale, with Victor and Elizabeth as Hansel and Gretel. I wanted that big, blue ballroom and a long, sweeping staircase. I wanted Victor's home to be lovely but also to be a place that had a dark side, just like in a fairy tale."

And it does have that dark side--especially considering the words by Mary Shelley that open the film:
“I busied myself to think of a story, which would speak to the mysterious fears of our nature and awaken thrilling horror.  One to make the reader dread to look around, to curdle the blood, and quicken the beatings of the heart.”

The film opens on Aidan Quinn as Captain Robet Walton commanding a ship that has become icebound in the arctic as he attempts to find a route to the North Pole.  They are attempting to break free when they begin to hear monsterous cries in the darkness and see the approach of a man.  That man is Victor Frankenstein and he tells his tale to the Captain as the storm and Creature draw near.

The tale within a tale begins with the adoption of Elizabeth (played by Helena Bonham Carter) when she was, perhaps five, into the Frankenstein family as her parents died of the scarlet fever.  Cut to a fifteen years later and Victor confesses his love for Elizabeth and asks for her hand in marraige.  She agrees, but only after Victor is to go to University and she has time to prepare the Frankenstein estate for his return and their family.

Before all this, Victor’s mother has died a tragic death in childbirth and he has sworn to end this thing that has happened to her.  He swears to conquer death itself.

His studies that deal with alchemy make him unpopular with some teachers, but find him kinship with Henry Clerval (Tom Hulce) and a mentor in Professor Waldman (John Cleese).  Victor believes that the only way to cheat death is to birth new life.  Waldman tells Victor that his theory is flawed, that he has experimented with such ideas and the result was an abomination.

Waldman is killed by a patient, soon thereafter and Victor seeks out all of Waldman’s research, incorporating it into his own experiment.  He even includes Waldman’s brain and the body of a murderer into his creation.  Late one night, Victor finally succeeds in giving his own creation life, but is repulsed by it and renounces his experiments.

Thus the tale begins and the tragedy unfolds...

Robert DeNiro’s Monster is one of massive scars and stitches, a bald head a stout build and cunning intelligence.  More true to Shelley’s creation and yet, more creepy and less sympathetic.  His cruelty seems more by intent than by ignorance.  This Monster knows selfishness, cruelty and all of the darker nature of man, because he has known these things more than the other side of our nature.




The film disappointed at the box office and was moderately a critical success.  It has very strong visuals, but I think I agree with part of Roger Ebert’s review that the film was too frantic and manic to allow for the full dramatic effect of the core moments register.  To me, it seems this was, in part, an effort to recreate the Hammer feel of filmmaking as the plot rushes forward and the drama is high.

Not the best FRANKENSTEIN film, but a very worthy one to contribute to the legend, Branagh in the learning process of telling a tale of the fantastic.





FIVE FRANKENSTEIN FUN FACTS:
  1. De Niro studied stroke victims to get a feel for one struggling to speak.
  2. Branagh insisted that everyone refer to DeNiro’s character as “The Sharp-Featured Man” as he was identified in the credits.
  3. Producer Francis Ford Coppola originally planned to direct thie film as a companion piece to DRACULA, but stepped back to allow Kenneth Branagh the job.  Coppola later regretted the decision after disagreements with Branagh.
  4. After viewing a rough cut, Coppola insisted on cutting the first half hour of the film.  When Branagh refused, Coppola publicly denounced the film.
  5. This film contains several references to previous FRANKENSTEIN films, such as Thomas Ediston’s, James Whale’s, The Bride of Frankenstein, The Curse of Frankenstein, Frankenstein: The True Story, Terror of Frankenstein and Frankenstein Unbound.

And now for your postage needs:

Thursday, October 18, 2012

MONSTER-MONTH: A COUNTDOWN TO HALLOWEEN (Day 18)

Tonight we return to the world of comics for there are numerous iterations of Shelley’s modern Prometheus story.  The particular one we look at is a strong and powerful and very political one.  DOC FRANKENSTEIN was as close as the Monster ever got to being Doc Savage…

(Click to Frankensize)

Geof Darrow had been considering his next project after THE MATRIX concept work and two of the possible ideas were Doc Frankenstein and Shaolin Cowboy.  His friend and collaborator on The Matrix, Steve Skroce really liked the idea of Darrow’s that he wanted to do a story about Frankenstein’s Monster living in the modern age as a rich influential action hero.  Fortunately for him, Darrow was more interested in doing his Shaolin Cowboy idea and agreed to collaborate with Skroce on DOC FRANKENSTEIN.

(Click to Frankensize)

While briefly shopping the idea around to publishers, Skroce was told by the Wachowskis that they intended to start up their own comic book company and Skroce thought it was a good idea to take his comic to them for publication and possible collaboration.

(Click to Frankensize)

Burlyman Entertainment, the name of the Wachowskis’ company, ended up publishing both SHAOLIN COWBOY and DOC FRANKENSTEIN.  The series was written by the Wachowskis (Andy and Larry, who is now Lana or Linda?).  Skroce was responsible for the art of this series that has halted at issue number six.  That is unfortunate, for it was an entertaining one full of action and attitude.

(Click to blow up real good!)

The series tells the tale of The Monster after surviving the finale of Shelley’s novel and went on to claim his creators’ name and educate himself, earning doctoral degrees and  the nickname “messiah of science”.  He has been involved in the history of the world leading up to today as we learn in flashbacks that present him as a gunslinger in the old West, a World War II soldier, a supporter of the teaching of evolution in the Scopes Trial and a supporter of the Roe v. Wade decision.



Over the centuries, he has earned an enemy of fundamentalists who have sought to kill him countless times.  The clash of the truth-seeking and fact-finding of science supported by Doc Frankenstein, who is a living, breathing example of it, and the old ways of faith and belief and the power these old institutions are fighting desperately to hold onto seems to be the main theme of the series.

It would be interesting to see if this ideology for the series was what Darrow's original vision for the character was or if this was the point of view brought to the subject by the Wachowskis.

(Click to Burlyman)


DOC FRANKENSTEIN ws nominated for the 2005 “Best New Series” Eisner Award.  Brian K. Vaughan’s EX MACHINA won that award.

Here is a twelve page sample of the series' first issue
(Click any image to Frankensize):

 






There has not been a seventh issue in all the years since #6 came out and many think the entire Burlyman Entertainment line of comics to be “dead”.  However, as recently as 2010, Geof Darrow has said that Skroce is still drawing it and the first arc will be finished and collected in a graphic novel format.

So, perhaps, it is just possible that THIS creature will get up off of the slab again with a little help from the lightning and time.  Or maybe not, as later this month SHAOLIN COWBOY returns from Dark Horse Comics instead of Burlyman…


Here are some neat links to check out for interviews,
reviews and general info about the series: