Curse of Frankenstein
Published November 10, 2004
A few months back, I revisited one of the great early Hammer horror pics, Horror of Dracula, thanx to a Warner Bros. DVD reissue. Last weekend, I took a step further back to the Hammer release that sparked the studio's successful run of low-budget blood-and-thunder gothics, 1957's Curse of Frankenstein.
I was happily surprised in my viewing of the WB DVD: my first experience viewing this seminal film was an airing about ten years ago on Cinemax. The copy that the cable net had showed was so faded that the full-color film looked like the sepia opening to Wizard of Oz. The 2002 Warner Home Video reissue is much more vibrantly colored. This is no small selling point. When Curse first debuted, the primary pallet for horror flicks was black-and-white: the moment Baron Victor Frankenstein (Peter Cushing) first nonchalantly wipes the blood off his hand and onto his lab jacket is a touchstone in the evolution of horror cinema. That small bit of business (should we credit Cushing, screenwriter Jimmy Sangster or director Terence Fisher?) changed the movie landscape forever. . .
To be sure, the shift from b-&-w to color isn't the only thing that separates Curse from its predecessors. Scripter Sangster took a substantively different approach to Mary Shelley's gothic novel than the makers of the Universal Frankenstein. Where the thirties era take on the book's protagonist was to treat young Baron Frankenstein as an obsessed but ultimately decent guy, Cushing & Fisher's antiheroic Victor Frankenstein is a ruthless bastard from the outset. He pushes an elder professor off a balcony so he can steal the guy's brain (only to have it damaged when an ambivalent assistant wrestles him for its glass container); he's shtupping the maid (Valerie Gaunt) even as his fiancée (Hazel Court) is under the same roof; and, after his creation goes on the inevitable murderous rampage through the Swiss forests, he revives the monster a second time even though the creature's been shot in the head. Tampering in God's domain? Hell, this guy is tromping through the flowers in heavy boots!
- Curse of Frankenstein
- Published: November 10, 2004
- Type:
- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Video: Horror
- Writer: Bill Sherman
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