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Frankenstein
(1931)
In James Whale's horror classic about a Monster:
- in the opening memorable, expressionistically-filmed
grave-robbing sequence, brilliant medical scientist (but slightly
insane and overwrought) Dr. Henry Frankenstein (Colin Clive) and
his dwarfish, bumbling, hunchbacked assistant Fritz (Dwight Frye)
watched a funeral, and then after the gravedigger had filled in
the grave, dug it back up - to steal the newly-buried fresh
male corpse and place it in a coffin for transportation - for an
experiment that Frankenstein was conducting on the secrets of life
- in the next sequence in the Goldstadt Medical College,
Fritz snuck into an amphitheatre after a lecture, where two
glass jars of brains were on display; he picked up the one labeled "Cerebrum
- Normal Brain," but inadvertently dropped it when startled
by the loud sound of a gong; the dim-witted Fritz desperately grabbed
the other glass jar labeled
"Dysfunctio Cerebri - Abnormal Brain"
- during the remarkable creation sequence,
the Monster's body (Boris Karloff), an incomplete, lifeless creation,
was covered and stretched out in Dr. Frankenstein's laboratory
on an operating table; the moveable platform with the body was
raised to the open skylight at the rooftop of the tower where it
could electrified by a lightning strike; after the table's descent
back into the lab after jolts of lightning, Dr. Frankenstein delivered
an hysterical reaction when the Monster came to life: "Look!
It's moving. It's alive. It's alive....It's alive, it's moving,
it's alive, it's alive, it's alive, it's alive, it's alive! Oh
- in the name of God. Now I know what it"
- the first chilling appearance and unveiling of the
Monster came when the door slowly swung open, revealing a dark, lumpish
silhouette in the doorway in a full figure shot; the bulky figure
lurched clumsily into the room with halting steps, gradually revealing
a bulky head and broad back - the Monster awkwardly moved into the
room by backing in!; the hulking Monster then slowly turned
around, and then provided a shadowy profile in the first chilling
close-up look of his blankly expressionless, tabula rasa face
First Appearance of the Monster
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- in the film's most moving symbolic sequence,
Henry opened the ceiling's skylight above him, and the Monster
saw sunlight for the first time and his face came alive; he slowly
rose, faced the light, and pleaded and groped heaven-ward - he
stretched out his long, huge, open, corpse-like, scarred hands
to try and reach up and grasp the golden shaft of sunshine coming
through the skylight
- the Monster played with little
eight year-old Maria (Marilyn Harris) by a lakeside, throwing
flower petals in the water - but then he innocently murdered her
by tossing her into the water when the petals ran out; she screamed
out: " "No,
you're hurting me. No!"; nonetheless, he enthusiastically threw
her in the water - expecting that she, too, would float like the
flower petals; she floundered and splashed in the water and quickly
sank and drowned; as he staggered away from the lake, the Monster
seemed to express some confusion, despair and remorse
The Monster Drowning Maria
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- the Monster approached toward Frankenstein's
fiancee-bride Elizabeth (Mae Clarke) through the window of the
Frankenstein mansion; she was wearing her beautiful wedding gown
with a long train for their wedding day, seated - alone and helpless;
she was horrified by his appearance and screamed loudly, the Monster
was driven off by the screams and by Frankenstein and his servants
who rushed to her aid
- the townspeople and Henry pursued the Monster
in the dark with torches; when Henry became separated from the mob,
he came face to face with his hideous, angry creation on a rocky,
hilltop outcropping; the Monster dragged Henry to a nearby windmill
- in the film's finale, there was a life and death
struggle in a windmill between the Monster and its creator; after
Henry was thrown to the ground outside the mill, the poor, tragic
Monster waved his arms and ran around in a panic when the mill
was set on fire; he let out frightened, high-pitched, quavering
cries; he was crushed by a falling beam in the mill tower and pinned
down, apparently perishing in the blazing fire and the collapsing,
incinerated structure
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Grave-Robbers Dr. Henry Frankenstein and Assistant Fritz
(Dwight Frye)
Fritz' Theft of an Abnormal Brain
Dr. Frankenstein's Hysterical Reaction to the Monster: "It's
alive!"
The Monster Reaching for Sunlight
The Monster's Attack on Elizabeth
The Townsfolk and Henry Pursued the Monster with Torches
Monster in Flaming Windmill
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