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Frankenstein
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>>> WARNING: Here Be Spoilers <<<

Trivia items below here contain information that may give away important plot points. You may not want to read any further if you've not already seen this title.

  • SPOILER: This film contains several references to previous Frankenstein films: - The Creature is brought to life in a metallic vat, as in Thomas Edison's Frankenstein (1910) - Victor cuts an executed criminal from a hangman's noose and uses the body for his experiments, as in James Whales' Frankenstein (1931). - Another homage to Whales' "Frankenstein:" The Creature is reanimated with electrical charges. This is an invention of Hollywood; the book is silent on how Victor creates the Creature. Also, once the Creature comes to life, Victor triumphantly shouts, "It's alive!", as he did in Whales' film. - The Creature's first spoken word is "friend." This is also the Creature's most frequently-used word when he learns to speak in Whales' Bride of Frankenstein (1935). - Victor uses the brain of a brilliant scientist/mentor for his Creature, as in Hammer's The Curse of Frankenstein (1957). Justine Moritz' role is also expanded and is made to fall in love with Victor in both films. - Victor's mentor, who paves the road for his experiments, brings a severed arm back to life and shows it to Victor, as in Frankenstein: The True Story (1973) (TV). - The Creature hides in some cottagers' pigsty and secretly learns to speak and read from observing them through a peephole. In the book, the cottagers are foreign refugees. In Branagh's film, the cottagers are simply local townsfolk. This variation on the novel was first used in Calvin Floyd's Victor Frankenstein (1977). SPOILER ALERT: Victor revives a mangled and hideous Elizabeth after the Creature murders her, and Victor and the Creature then engage in a battle for her affection. Horrified, the reanimated Elizabeth takes her own life. The same events take place, almost exactly, in Roger Corman's Frankenstein Unbound (1990). - A cholera epidemic sweeps through Ingolstadt, leaving Victor to believe that the Creature died from disease. The made-for-television "Frankenstein" of the previous year (starring Randy Quaid) also features a cholera epidemic under very similar circumstances, even though it is not present in the novel.

  • SPOILER: Kenneth Branagh did an uncredited rewrite on the script. One of his additions was the scene where the reanimated Elizabeth sets herself on fire.


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