Film Review
Universal's
Frankenstein
series had had quite a good run until it got to this, the fourth,
outing for Mary Shelley's Gothic horror creation. Prestige
productions, crafted with care and imagination by a highly talented
team, the first three
Frankenstein
films -
Frankenstein (1931),
Bride of Frankenstein (1935)
and
Son of Frankenstein (1939) -
are enduring classics of the horror genre. Not so for what came
afterwards.
The Ghost of
Frankenstein marked the series' sudden downgrade to B-movie
status, with a lower budget and noticeably smaller pool of
creative talent. By this stage, Universal were more interested in making a
quick buck than in delivering high quality pictures for a discerning
movie audience, and it shows.
The Ghost of Frankenstein is
not a particularly badly made film. In fact, the production
standards are well above average for a B-movie. The sets,
although less ambitious than in the previous
Frankenstein films, are atmospheric
and appropriately lit in the expressionistic style that befits a Gothic
horror film. The story moves at a fair pace, and with a run time
of just over an hour, the audience doesn't have chance to get
bored. Of course, Lon Chaney Jr. is a poor substitute for Boris
Karloff - the make-up is less convincing and there is none of the
heart-wrenching pathos that Karloff brought to his portrayal of the
monster. But Chaney's lumbering monster still delivers the
requisite thrills and conveys genuine menace, unlike the uninspired
dial-a-monster thing seen in the subsequent
Frankenstein films.
This film has much going for it, but unfortunately it also has one
major failing: the screenplay. Okay, so perhaps we shouldn't be
too vexed by the obvious continuity lapses. Ygor looks remarkably
well after having been riddled with bullets at the end of the previous
film, but maybe he was wearing a bullet-proof jacket? And
why should Basil Rathbone be Frankenstein's only son? A man who
was so keen on creating life could have had any number of offspring,
all potential monster-makers. Admittedly, the strange
displacement of the sulphur pit into which the monster fell (from deep
beneath Frankenstein's laboratory to near the outer walls of his
castle) takes some explaining...
No, what is so frustrating about the screenplay for this monster mash
is that virtually
none of it
makes any sense. Every one of the characters looks as if he
is suffering from an acute logic bypass which compels him
to do the most unutterably stupid and incomprehensible things
possible. The eminent neurosurgeons Frankenstein and Bohmer are
reluctant to dismember the monster because they know this is tantamount
to murder. But they then happily agree to take out the monster's
brain and replace it with the brain of one of their colleagues (who was
conveniently killed a few hours previously). Presumably the
monster's brain is destroyed, so isn't this also murder? And just
why does Bohmer allow himself to be duped by so obvious a rogue as
Ygor? Just
why does
Ygor want to end up in the body of an overgrown misshapen misfit who
has next to no chance of forming his own appreciation society?
And why, oh why, does the monster himself want to be given the brain of
a little girl? I could go on for hours, but you probably get the
message. This script looks like it was written by someone who
clearly had his mind on other things.
Significantly,
The Ghost of
Frankenstein is the last of Universal's
Frankenstein films in which the
monster makes a solo appearance. In the three subsequent films,
he/it appears with Universal's other horror creations, the Wolf Man and
Dracula. Whilst all these films are great fun to watch, they are
a mere shadow of what went before. It would not be until
Hammer came
along with its own Gothic horror revival in the late 1950s that
audiences would once again become acquainted with the true horror of
Frankenstein...
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
It has been several years since the village of Frankenstein was
terrorised by a rampaging monster, but the locals are still haunted by
the curse of their troubled past. To put an end once and
for all to the evil that blights their community, the villagers set out
to destroy Frankenstein's castle, but, in so doing they unwittingly
release the monster from the sulphur pit that has imprisoned it these
last few years. Ygor, the madman who has survived the hangman's
noose and a hail of bullets, is delighted to be reunited with his old
friend and guides him to the safety of the surrounding
countryside. Here, a lightning bolt re-energises the
monster. Realising that the monster needs the services of a
specialist brain surgeon, Ygor intends to pay a call on Dr
Frankenstein's second son, Ludwig. The latter has perfected a
technique for curing any mental illness by removing the brain of his
patient from its skull, operating on it, and then returning it to the
body. Ludwig will have no part in Ygor's plan and decides to
destroy the monster by dismembering it. After the monster has
killed one of Ludwig's assistants, the scientist is visited by the
ghost of his father, who persuades him that if the monster had been
given a good brain he might not have turned out so bad. Ludwig
performs the brain transplant operation, unaware that his colleague, Dr
Bohmer, has given him Ygor's brain. Far from being a reformed
monster, Frankenstein's creation will now pose a much greater threat for mankind...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.