Film Review
The fourth entry in the series of
Frankenstein
films made by Hammer Film Productions in the 1950s and 1960s is
generally considered the best of the bunch, and sees the inimitable
Peter Cushing once again exuding cold charm and sinister evil as the
brilliant but misguided Baron Frankenstein. The film was to have
been made several years earlier, which explains its quirky title, a
rather silly take on the French film
And God Created Woman, released
in 1956, the film that made a star of Brigitte Bardot and helped launch
the sexual revolution on an unsuspecting world.
By the mid-1960s, Hammer's Gothic horror films were becoming
increasingly formulaic and were starting to lose their appeal. Spoofs such as
Carry on Screaming (1966) were
beginning to sound the death knell for the genre and unless things
changed it would take far more than a few pints of blood to bring
Dracula back from the dead.
Frankenstein Created Woman was the
first film to break ranks, promising an original storyline, greater overt
sexuality and more graphic violence. This is
probably the first of the Hammer horror films that can be rightly
classified as a slasher film, although it is pretty mild by today's
standards.
Another thing that makes this film stand out from the other Hammer
Gothic horror offerings is its unsettling dreamlike feel, a darkly
poetic aura that somehow the other films lack. The
location setting, interior sets and photography all have an unreal,
other-worldly quality that evokes something of romantic literature of
the early 19th century (which is where, after all, the genre had its
origins). The tragic love story involving the characters
Hans and Christina has a distinct touch of Goethe or Emily Brontë
about it and the film's portrayal of Frankenstein, with its
metaphysical slant, is much closer to Mary Shelley's creation than what
we find in most other horror films.
Of all the horror films made by Hammer,
Frankenstein Created Woman is
probably the most subversive. Whilst it has all the
trappings of the classic Gothic horror film, it is clearly doing its
utmost to push the genre in new and more interesting directions,
exploiting recent relaxations in the censorship rules to cater for a
grower audience sophistication. Since Universal Pictures began
making its horror films in 1930s, the genre was pretty well set in
stone until the mid-1960s and no one seemed ready to depart from the
familiar iconography created by Universal. There was only one way
of realising Frankenstein, Dracula or the Mummy on screen, and
audiences would accept nothing else.
Frankenstein Created Woman was one
of the first films to try something new. Out went the lumbering
monster; Dr Frankenstein is now interested in transferring souls
between bodies instead of reviving cobbled together cadavers. The
film's success encouraged Hammer to take even bigger gambles in some of
its subsequent films, the result being some increasingly bizarre
reinterpretations of the classic Gothic horror film in the 1970s.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Next Terence Fisher film:
The Devil Rides Out (1968)
Film Synopsis
Baron Frankenstein believes he has perfected a means of extracting the
soul of a human being from a corpse and transferring it into another
body. He gets the opportunity to test his theories when his young
assistant, Hans, is executed, after having been tried for the murder of
a local innkeeper. The recipient of Hans' soul is the innkeeper's
disfigured daughter, Christiana, who drowned herself after seeing Hans,
her lover, guillotined. Not only does Frankenstein succeed in
reviving Christina with Hans' soul, but he also manages to remove her
disfigurements, making her a beautiful young woman that no man can
resist. Guided by Hans' soul, Christina attracts the three odious
young dandies who killed her father and lures them to a grisly end...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.