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The Teenage Frankenstein (1959, Donald F. Glut)

The Stop Button Posted by on Aug 7, 2012

The Teenage Frankenstein. Where to start. How to start. First, it’s not exactly The Teenage Frankenstein, it’s more The Teenage Bride of Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man, which actually works out pretty well. It’s unclear why teen auteur Glut includes a werewolf–who saves Dr. read more

Rue Morgue UK Presents: CREEPY CLASSIC HORROR TRAILERS! FRANKENSTEIN(1931)

Classic Horror Campaign Posted by Richard on Mar 11, 2012

The Classic Horror Campaign in association with the Rue Morgue UK facebook page presents : CREEPY CLASSIC HORROR TRAILERS today featuring FRANKENSTEIN (1931) starring horror icon Boris Karloff! ) Rue Morgue magazine has a tradition of combining coverage of contemporary horror alongside a celebration read more

AFI Top 100: Frankenstein

Spoilers Posted by Duke Mantee on Jan 16, 2012

The 1931 version of Frankenstein features ? as The Monster, an actor we now know as Boris Karloff. This monster movie is representative of the time it was made in, aesthetically and theatrically. The acting style looks almost foreign to us today, and the cinematography, without modern camera equipm read more

Young Frankenstein (1)

Cinemaniac Reviews Posted by Alexander Diminiano on Jan 13, 2012

Bottom Line: Defines the word “comedy”. “IT’S ALIVE!!” —Gene Wilder as Dr. Frankenstein Directed by: Mel Brooks Starring: Gene Wilder, Madeline Kahn, Marty Feldman Tongue-in-cheek parody of Mary Shelley’s classic horror has Mel Brooks engraved all over it. Writt read more

Andy Warhol’s Flesh for Frankenstein

MacGuffin Movies Posted by RBuccicone on Oct 20, 2011

Warhol's Flesh for Frankenstein (1974)      After viewing Flesh for Frankenstein , I have to wonder if Producer Andy Warhol had said to himself, “How do we modernize Frankenstein. I know! Add loads of breasts and sex!” For that really is all that Flesh for Frankenstein is. It follo read more

Edison Studio’s Frankenstein (1910)

Pretty Clever Films Posted by Pretty Clever Film Gal on Sep 28, 2011

The 1910 Edison Studios production of Frankenstein is the first film adaptation of Mary Shelley’s novel. Believed to be lost for many years, the film later turned up in the hands of a private collector who proved unwilling to share. By the time BearManor Media released the restored public dom read more

It Came from Outer Space (1953) & Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948)

Hollywood Revue Posted by Angela on Oct 27, 2010

On Saturday, I had the absolute pleasure of going to a Halloween double feature at The Redford Theater of It Came from Outer Space in 3-D and Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein.  I can’t think of a better way to spend a rather dreary Saturday afternoon just before Halloween!  The turn-out read more

Young Frankenstein (1974, Mel Brooks)

The Stop Button Posted by on Jul 7, 2010

Young Frankenstein does not feel like a Mel Brooks film. It’s so startlingly well-directed, one could almost believe he didn’t direct it himself. Brooks, for the film, has this way of keeping the camera mostly stationary and letting his actors and the sets do all the work–one can& read more

Frankenstein (1931, James Whale)

The Stop Button Posted by on Sep 23, 2008

I’m trying to imagine how Frankenstein looks on the big screen–maybe on one the size of Radio City Music Hall; James Whale fills the screen upward. He directs the viewer’s attention always up, starting with the first scenes in the tower laboratory. The frames are obviously filled read more

Lightning Flash Giveaway ~ Frankenstein and The Bride of Frankenstein on the Big Screen

Out of the Past - A Classic Film Blog Posted by Raquel Stecher on Nov 30, -0001

It's time for yet another lightning flash giveaway hosted by TCM and NCM Fathom Events. I'm giving away three pairs of tickets to the Wednesday October 24th double-feature screening of Frankenstein (1931) and The Bride of Frankenstein (1935). Check out the NCM Fathom Events page for the screening fo read more

Abbott e Costello às voltas com fantasmas / Bud Abbott and Lou Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948)

Critica Retro Posted by Lê on Nov 30, -0001

Abbott e Costello às voltas com fantasmas / Bud Abbott and Lou Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948) Os tempos mudam, as décadas passam, o cinema se modifica, mas há algo que nunca para de provocar riso: a comédia física. Desde os primórdios do cinema, ela estava lá. Max Linder, Mabel Normand, read more

Frankenstein (1931) and The Bride of Frankenstein (1935) on the big screen

Out of the Past - A Classic Film Blog Posted by Raquel Stecher on Nov 30, -0001

Last Wednesday I got the chance to see Frankenstein (1931) and The Bride of Frankenstein (1935) on the big screen courtesy of TCM and NCM Fathom Events. I had never seen these films and it was a treat for Halloween that's for sure. Before the films were screened, there was an intro with Robert Osbo read more

Paul Morrissey’s Baron Frankenstein: The Great Villain Blogathon

Random Pictures Posted by Amy on Nov 30, -0001

There is a lot of yelling in Paul Morrissey’s “Flesh for Frankenstein,” primarily overbred aristocrats shouting at peasants. One of the things that makes this film so special is what the rich are yelling about: zombies. And sex. If Shelley’s Victor Frankenstein was a man dri read more
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