Film Review
Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein
was the first (and best) of a series of enormously popular films that
Universal Pictures made in the 1940s and 1950s which pitted the
legendary comedy duo Abbott and Costello against the monsters that
appeared in the studio's horror films of the '30s and '40s. The
film's title is an obvious misnomer because, of the many weird and
wonderful characters the duo meet in this film, Dr Frankenstein is
sadly not one of them. The film's more lurid working title,
The Brain of Frankenstein, would
have been equally inaccurate.
The film is significant in that it marks the end of Universal's run of
films featuring three of its most successful creations -
Dracula,
Frankenstein and
The Wolf Man. Two of the actors who made these
characters so memorable - Bela Lugosi and Lon Chaney Jr. - reprise
their respective roles - Dracula and the Wolf Man - for the last
time. Boris Karloff was approached to play the part of
Frankenstein's monster but declined (he considered the film to be an
insult), so the part went to Glenn Strange. Chaney played the
monster in one scene (the one where it throws Lenore Aubert through a
window) after Strange sustained a foot injury.
Karloff agreed to appear in the comedy duo's next horror spoof
Abbott and Costello Meet the Killer, Boris Karloff (1949),
continuing a series of films in which Bud and Lou
crossed paths with various ghouls and fiends which concluded
with
Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy (1955).
Considered by many as the best horror film spoof,
Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein
is a gloriously entertaining mix of knockabout farce and Gothic
horror. Unlike many similar films, this one respects the
tradition that it so effectively lampoons. The sets,
cinematography, make-up and photography are all on a par with
Universal's best horror films of the period, whilst Lugosi, Chaney and
Strange all play their monster characters for chills, not for
laughs. Lenore Aubert is deliciously terrifying as the femme
fatale turned mad scientist. Indeed, if Abbott and Costello were
taken out of the picture, this could make a respectable horror film,
and even with the comic duo it still manages to send a tingle down the
spine in a few scenes. This film is a delight - a glorious
way to bring down the curtain on Universal's association with Dracula,
Frankenstein's monster and the Wolf Man. Lugosi
would get to play the stylishly dressed bloodsucker on screen one last time in
Mother Riley Meets the Vampire (1952).
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Chick Young and Wilbur Grey are baggage clerks who, one day, are asked
to deliver two crates to a waxworks museum. According to the
crates' owner, these contain the last remains of Dracula and
Frankenstein's monster. Sure enough, as Chick and Wilbur are
unpacking the crates, the two horror fiends are revived. Dracula
spirits the monster away to his island castle where he engages a
scientist, Dr Sandra Mornay, to make the creature easier for him to
control. Dr Mornay suggests that she will have to replace the
monster's brain with that of someone who is more pliable and less
aggressive, someone like the man she is currently dating, Wilbur
Grey. Meanwhile, Chick and Wilbur are visited by a strange man
named Larry Talbot who insists that they help him destroy Dracula and
his pet monster. Unfortunately, Talbot has problems of his
own. When the moon is full he turns into a werewolf...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.