November 30, 2008

Young Frankenstein Folds

Broadway’s Young Frankenstein will close on January 4.

The spectacular, $16-million musical, adapted by Mel Brooks from his own film of 1974, officially opened on November 8, 2007. The end comes after 484 performances and some 30 previews, far short of the six-year run enjoyed by Brook’s The Producers.

Broadway is Dry-Eyed as Monster Falls Hard”, writes Patricia Cohen of The New York Times, suggesting that bad marketing decisions were chiefly responsible for the show’s demise. Problems included filling a gigantic 1800-seat theater and sticker shock, with top tickets going for a record-setting, stick-em-up $480 apiece. By the spring of ‘08, ticket prices were adjusted downwards and cast salaries were slashed by as much as fifty percent, but sales remained sluggish. With the current economic downturn starting to bite, the show’s producers decided to call it quits. In a difficult season when an unusually large number of high-end Broadway shows are folding, the bloated and beleaguered Young Frankenstein was doomed.

The producers claim that the show will return with a national tour in the fall of 2009. Rumor has it that Cloris Leachman is being lured back to reprise the Frau Blucher part she originated in the film.


Patricia Cohen’s article in The New York Times.

Young Frankenstein To Close in January 2009 on Playbill.


Related
Previous posts about Mel Brooks' Musical Young Frankenstein


November 27, 2008

Making a List, Checking It Twice


Recently, Brian Solomon, over at The Vault of Horror, asked fellow horror bloggers and critics, 32 in all, to list their choices of “Greatest Horror Films”. The compiled results are posted as The 50 Best Horror Films of All Times. Click through to discover the list for yourself.

The most entertaining thing about Best Of lists is watching people get upset over them. Fans (and, indeed, some of the participants in the survey) disagree with the results. Where’s MY favorite? Thriller — Are you kidding me??? How could you not include a Hammer film? But Alien is NOT horror! What — No Ringu?!?

I think the new list is interesting and it serves its purpose to foster debate. The best thing about these lists is that, perhaps, someone, somewhere, might be surprised or intrigued by a title that got listed and be moved to seek out the film.

Through the focus of this blog, I note that three Frankenstein films made the list: James Whale’s 1931 version is a deserved Top Ten title, coming in at number 6. Whale’s follow-up, The Bride of Frankenstein, is number 12. I was surprised to see J. Searle Dawley’s 1910 version, the so-called “Edison” Frankenstein, at number 36. No doubt this one made the list on the basis of historical significance.

Speaking of lists, I have been tagged by friend and Frankensteinia contributor Thom Ryan of Film of the Year to participate in the Alphabet Meme. The game consists of coming up with a film title for every letter of the alphabet. I thought I’d have some fun with this and I made two lists, a regular one where I listed the first film that came to mind, and another consisting only of Frankenstein titles. Here we go…

The Frankenstein List
Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein
Bride of Frankenstein
Curse of Frankenstein
Dr. Frankenstein’s Castle of Freaks
Evil of Frankenstein
Frankenweenie
Ghost of Frankenstein
House of Frankenstein
I Was a Teenage Frankenstein
Jesse James Meets Frankenstein’s Daughter
Killing Frankenstayn’a kasri (Killing vs Frankenstein)
Lust for Frankenstein
Il Mostro di Frankenstein
Necropolis
Orlak, el infierno di Frankenstein
Prototype
Quella Villa Acanto al Cimitero (The House by the Cemetery)
Revenge of Frankenstein
Sevimli Frankenstayn (aka Turkish Young Frankenstein)
Torticola contre Frankenberg
El Ultimo Frankenstein
Victor Frankenstein
War of the Gargantuas
X-Files: Post-Modern Prometheus
Young Frankenstein
El Zorro Escarlata

The ‘Regular’ List
Atarnujuat, the Fast Runner
La Belle et la bete
Chinatown
Dr. No
8 1/2
Frau Im Mond
Gods and Monsters
Hara-Kiri
Island of the Lost Souls
Je t’aime, je t’aime
Kiss Me Deadly
Lulu (aka Pandora’s Box)
La Mome vert de gris (Poison Ivy, an Eddie Constantine film)
Night of the Living Dead
Out of the Past
Les Parapluies de Cherbourg
Quai des Brumes
Repulsion
Shanghai Express
The Thing From Another World (1951)
The Usual Suspects
Vertigo
Werewolf of London
X, The Man With X-Ray Eyes
Les Yeux sans visage
Z (Costa-Gavras)


Note: The rules of the Alphabet Meme are posted on Film of the Year. The whole thing was originally launched by Blog Cabins.

I am now supposed to tag other bloggers. If I may, I’ll limit the damage to three names: Kate at Love Train For The Tenebrous Empire, Illoc Zoc at Zombos Closet of Horror and Karswell at The Horrors of it All.


The illustration for this post is from Bernie Wrightson’s Frankenstein, previously reviewed here.


November 26, 2008

Wake The Dead Concept Art


No sooner has one comic book writer's interpretation of Frankenstein been revealed (see previous post) that another one appears. Steve Niles’ Wake The Dead is being made into a movie, and Shock Till You Drop has posted a pre-production portrait of the creature.

Steve Niles has visited Frankenstein before. His short version of the original novel, illustrated by Scott Morse, appeared in The Little Book of Horror: Frankenstein, and his DC Comics horror superhero, Simon Dark, uses elements of Frankenstein and Edward Scissorhands.

Wake The Dead, first published in 2003, updates the basic premise of the classic tale —Victor is a contemporary science student assembling a man from spare parts — and takes it from there into new territory. The screenplay, by Jim V. Hart and director Jay Russell, further expands the story, “beautifully”, according to Niles.

The pre-production art, overseen by Peter Jackson’s WETA special effects house, is the work of Gino Acevedo.


Click through to Shock Till You Drop’s article to see the full portrait in great detail.

An interview with director Jay Russell on io9.

Steve Niles’ website, and an interview with Niles about the upcoming film, on Comic Book Resources.


November 25, 2008

Frankenstein's Womb



Here’s a first look at The Monster by artist Marek Oleksicki in Frankenstein’s Womb, a graphic novella — fancy-speak for “one-shot comic book” — written by cult favorite Warren Ellis.

The story plays off Mary (then Godwin) Shelley’s purported but unlikely visit to Burg Frankenstein during her elopement/vacation with Percy in 1814. Speculation has it that Mary visited the castle there and heard stories about the blasphemous experimenter Johann Konrad Dippel, providing, two years later, a name and a model for her fictional scientist.

Frankenstein's Womb has Mary visit the old castle and encountering the creature haunting it. Considering how Ellis, on his game, can weave a story with the finesse of a fine watchmaker, this new variation on the Frankenstein myth sounds very promising.

The 48-page, black and white book arrives in comic shops in December, or you can order it through the Frankenstore.


Avatar Press website.
Warren Ellis is ubiquitous on the Net. Here’s his blog.
With thanks to Monster Rally for the heads up.

November 22, 2008

Frankenstein Meets Mickey Mouse


The Mouse, created by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks, first graced the screen in 1928. The Monster, assembled by James Whale, Jack Pierce and Boris Karloff, followed in 1931. Twentieth Century icons, their parallel paths would intersect twice in the first sixty years of their ongoing careers.

The phenomenally successful Frankenstein made its Monster an instant cultural reference, signaled by appearances in three animated shorts in 1933. Betty Boop’s Penthouse features a laboratory-made, wraith-like Frankenstein menace, and Bosco’s Mechanical Man is a frenzied robot called Frankensteen. It fell to Mickey’s Gala Premiere to present the first recognizable representation of the Karloff Monster.

The story — Mickey’s new picture premieres in Hollywood — serves as an excuse to caricature a parade of then current movie idols, from the Marx Brothers, Greta Garbo and Mae West, to now largely forgotten stars like George Arliss, Chester Morris and Mark Swain. The Frankenstein Monster appears in the company of Bela Lugosi’s Dracula and a missing link-like Fredric March as Mr. Hyde. The monstrous trio, enjoying the show, laugh in perfect unison. According to studio archives, the sequence was animated by Art Babbitt.

What’s interesting here is that the animator’s reference was obviously a photo of an unused, early test makeup that had curious fleshy folds, or ‘horns’, on the forehead. Babbitt replaced the circular clamps with safety pins and added electric wires to the neck bolts.


In 1995, Mickey Mouse became the Frankenstein Monster in Runaway Brain, an energetic short where Mickey’s brainwaves are switched with that of a giant creature with a peg leg and a flat Frankenstein skull. The film, nominated for an Academy Award, was directed by Chris Bailey.

In the age of YouTube, Mickey’s Gala Premiere, unseen for many years, is now freely available on the Net (see how many Golden Age movie stars you can ID!), as is the entertaining Runaway Brain.


November 20, 2008

The Art of Frankenstein : M.S.Corley


Struck to life by a lightning bolt through the heart, sporting a tattooed symbol of his genesis, this forlorn Frankenstein Monster is one of an excellent and promising set of Horrors of Literature portraits undertaken by young American illustrator M.S.Corley.

The artist is putting together a wonderful collection of characters that not only includes classic figures like Dorian Gray, Dr. Jekyll and H.P.Lovecraft’s creations, but also illustrates the more obscure and rarely seen dramatis personae, like Guy de Maupassant’s Horla, Algernon Blackwood’s Wendigo, Allain and Souvestre’s Fantomas, and Alcasan’s Head from C.S.Lewis’ That Hideous Strength.

Given there’s an inexhaustible supply of fictional frights, one hopes there’s lots more to come from Mr. Corley.


M.S.Corley’s blog.

Via Under Vhoorl’s Shadow.


November 17, 2008

The Covers of Frankenstein : Famous Monsters No. 42


I hadn’t planned on making this a Frankenstein Meets The Wolf Man week, but here’s a nice tie-in with my two previous posts: A Ron Cobb reworking of the film’s original poster as a cover for Famous Monsters of Filmland No. 42, January 1966.

Cobb got started professionally at Disney Studios, working as an inbetweener on Sleeping Beauty, in 1955. By ‘66, he was an “underground” artist and a celebrated political cartoonist for the L.A. Free Press. In 1967, he created the classic LP cover for Jefferson Airplane’s After Bathing at Baxter’s.

By the late 70’s, Cobb was combining a vivid imagination with meticulous drafting skills to produce designs and concept art for motion pictures. His credits include Star Wars, Conan The Barbarian, and The Abyss. He designed and directed the opening sequence for the Spielberg-produced TV series Amazing Stories. He created the spaceship for Alien, the Nazi flying wing for Raiders of the Lost Ark and the time-traveling DeLorean for Back to the Future. He also wrote the story that would eventually become E.T. The Extraterrestrial. Cobb’s non-film clients include NASA, the Los Angeles Olympics, and Peter Gabriel.

Ron Cobb has enjoyed a superlative career. It's nice to note that, along the way, he painted 11 splendid covers for Warren magazines.


Ron Cobb’s official website and IMDB page.

Creative Masters video interviews with Cobb on Wacom’s The Art of Wa site.


Related
When Frankenstein Met The Wolfman
Frankenstein y el hombre lobo
The Covers of Frankenstein: Mad Monsters No. 5
Happy 125th, Bela Lugosi


November 14, 2008

Frankenstein y el hombre lobo


On the cover, the two graceful, elongated monsters seem to float like characters in a Cocteau movie. Here’s a unique, rarely seen graphic adaptation — artist unknown — of Frankenstein Meets The Wolf Man (1943), published in Spain by Editorial Fher, in 1946.

The book, a collection of postcard-like images, is done in expressionistic black and white washes. It is a perfect companion to the film, a wonderful Folk Art rendering of an elaborate fairy tale about two timeless monsters teaming up in an Oz-like quest for Frankenstein’s notebooks. One, lusting for artificial life, seeks a power boost. The other, cursed by the Moon, dreams of permanent death.


The story, told at a pace of one frame per page, 144 in all, is very faithful to the film, some of the art suggesting scenes remembered and reinterpreted by the artist, such as The Monster discovered in a very stylized ice wall. Other scenes, notably the laboratory sequence, are obviously copied from lobby cards or available stills.


Throughout, the anonymous artist’s style shines, his characters fairly dancing off the page. Wolfman Larry Talbot leaps from a speeding wagon and the bendy Frankenstein Monster towers over terrified villagers and strikes poses like Goya’s Straw Mannikin.


There’s very little information available on this lovely and intriguing book. Images measure 18 by 13 cm (roughly 7 by 5.5 inches). I've a seen photo of the cover art printed in purple.

All the illustrations here come from the excellent Spanish blog, El Desvan del Abuelito (Grandpa’s Attic). Click the link to see more great images.

If anyone reading this has any additional information, please share (in the comments, or email me: Frankensteinia at gmail.com) and I’ll update this post.


Related
When Frankenstein Met The Wolf Man


November 11, 2008

When Frankenstein Met The Wolf Man


On this day, November 11, in 1942, Frankenstein Meets The Wolf Man wrapped after a month of filming. During the editing process over the days that followed, the film would be fundamentally transformed.

The project began as a vehicle for Lon Chaney Jr., touted by Universal as their new horror star. The young actor had gone directly from his break-through part in The Wolf Man to The Ghost of Frankenstein, taking over The Monster role vacated by Boris Karloff. The new film, as planned, would combine the two monsters, with Chaney, the “Master Character Creator”, playing both parts.

Two days into shooting, on October 14, Variety was still reporting on Chaney’s “double-header” part, but that notion had been scrapped. The flashy twin-role stunt would have meant the use of doubles and complicated split-screen effects, not to mention the wear and tear of heavy makeup sessions on a notoriously impatient Chaney. The actor settled for his signature role as the lycanthropic Larry Talbot and, at the last minute, Bela Lugosi was drafted for The Monster’s part. It made sense. In the previous Frankenstein film, Chaney’s Monster had been given Lugosi/Ygor’s brain and distinctive voice.

Technically speaking, it was Lugosi’s second swipe at the part. Eleven years earlier, he had piled on the makeup for the notorious, now lost test reel for the original Frankenstein. But Lugosi had begged out of the part he felt “any half-wit extra could play”, only to see it make a star out of his replacement, Boris Karloff. By 1942, Lugosi had settled in as a Poverty Row menace and he no longer had the means to refuse a part, even the one he had evaded earlier. “Isn’t it crazy” Lugosi’s wife, Lillian, said, “After turning down the original, Bela winds up doing it anyway… He finally did it because of money. He didn’t do it any other way!” At least, this time, The Monster’s part was a speaking one.

Lugosi, who turned 60 on October 20th, was not in good health. Reports had him rising at 2:30 AM, soaking in a hot bath and taking a massage to prepare for the grueling, four-hour makeup session and the sixteen-hour workday. Lugosi’s age shows through the makeup. He appears frail and shrunken in the big Monster suit. On November fifth, inevitably perhaps, Lugosi collapsed on set, due to exhaustion. It wasn’t a good day for the film’s cast: During another setup, a horse-drawn cart overturned, spilling Chaney, who suffered cuts and bruises, and Maria Ouspenskaya (as the old Gypsy Woman), who broke her ankle.

Lugosi’s part was filled out by a tag team of stuntmen. Sharp-eyed viewers can make out different people wearing the neck bolts and hinged skullcap in scenes showing The Monster lying in a block of ice, throwing barrels off a speeding wagon, carrying off sculptural heroine Ilona Massey, battling The Wolf Man, and getting violently swept away in the closing tsunami. In fight scenes, Lugosi appears in brief close-up inserts, tying the action together.

Update: Stuntman Eddie Parker has often been credited as Lugosi's stand-in, but careful study of the film indicates that most of the stunt work was done by Gil Perkins.

Shooting had been an ordeal for Lugosi, but the final ignominy was still to come. According to screenwriter Curt Siodmak, The Monster’s dialog “sounded so Hungarian funny that they had to take it out”. It seems late in the game, after a month of shooting, to decide that Lugosi’s accent was unsuitable for The Monster. Perhaps Lugosi spoke his dialog with Ygor’s spirited, lusty delivery, which had worked beautifully for that character but would have been overdone for the stone-faced Monster. Whatever the reason, the solution was drastic. Entire scenes were dropped and, in short sequences that couldn’t be excised, Lugosi’s voice was erased, though we still see his lips move.

Gone were all the exposition between Lugosi and Chaney. Surviving stills show Chaney and Lugosi sharing their stories in front of a warming fire in the ice cavern. Also gone with the dialog was a key plot point explaining how The Monster was weakened, half blind, and dependent on Chaney’s Larry Talbot. As a result, Lugosi’s flung-back head stares and outstretched arm gropes are interpreted as robotic spasms, and the impact of the final laboratory scene is lost: After the juice is turned on and The Monster is re-energized, a shot of Lugosi grinning malevolently was meant to signal that he was back at full danger-zone power, with eyesight restored.

For all the butchering done in editing, the resulting film is surprisingly effective. It’s a brisk and very entertaining adventure movie, with monsters. The graveyard opening sequence and Chaney’s moonlit reanimation is gorgeous. Chaney and Lugosi meet in an underground ice cavern, and go on to explore a wonderful smashed castle set. The local Tyrolean-type town and its festive villagers provide scenes for genre regulars Dwight Frye and Lionel Atwill, and everyone panics on cue when The Monster clomps down Main Street. The climactic wrestling match between the title monsters is a little too short to be entirely satisfying, but the stunt men go at it with wild abandon, Wolf Man leaping and The Monster throwing refrigerator-sized lab equipment, until the dam blows and the monsters are drowned, or at least sent into icy hiatus until the next film.

Frankenstein Meets The Wolf Man’s advertising campaign, touting the “Titans of Terror”, yielded a great movie poster, a lurid pulp magazine-style painting of The Monster cranking up a knockout blow against The Wolf Man’s animalistic lunge. The title logo has “Frankenstein’ spelled out in riveted letters, and “The Wolf Man” written in fur. Ilona Massey reclines across the bottom of the image in a flimsy, off the shoulder nightgown.


The original script by Curt Siodmak, entitled Wolfman Meets Frankenstein — featuring all of The Monster’s dialog — is still available in book form.

The film is available on DVD packaged with The House of Frankenstein, or as part of The Wolf Man Legacy Collection.

The film’s very entertaining re-release trailer is on You Tube.


November 9, 2008

The Political Frankenstein


Frankenstein was frequently referenced in the recent, interminable American election campaign, mostly in regards to Republican candidate John McCain.

Newspaper editorials spoke of “McCain’s Frankenstein” after a reform bill the Senator had championed in 2002 “turned against its creator”, drastically limiting his fund-raising abilities. Less kindly, McCain’s handicap, a stiff, straight-out arm salute, was lampooned as “The Frankenstein Wave” or “The Frankenstein Handshake”.

Back in 2004, Democratic candidate John Kerry’s stern looks and elongated, Herman Munster face rated numerous Frankenstein comparisons. The illustration at left is by Christopher Foote.

Four years earlier, Al Gore’ characteristically rigid posture made him the Frankenstein of that contest. When he approached his opponent during a televised debate, bearing down on George Bush to make a point, the press referred to the moment as Gore’s “Frankenstein lurch”.

The illustration above is from The Party’s Over, a post-campaign satirical picture book by artist Zina Saunders. The McCain Frankenstein is raised by campaign mastermind Steve Schmidt as a familiar-looking Bride looks on. Another illustration in the book shows the McCain Monster set upon by the torch-wielding ladies of TV’s The View.


Frankenstein’s Monster, truly indestructible, endures as a strong political symbol, suggesting menace, things gone wrong or, as caricature, mocking a public figure’s demeanor. It’s a long tradition going all the way back to 1824, barely 6 years after Mary Shelley’s book was first published, when a British Parliamentarian compared newly emancipated slaves to potential Frankenstein Monsters. Politicians, political commentators and editorial cartoonists have alluded to Frankenstein’s Monster ever since.

In the most recent campaign, Senator McCain turned the joke around, introducing himself at a rally by saying, “I’m older than dirt, and I’ve got more scars than Frankenstein!


A video clip of John McCain’s (slightly flubbed) Frankenstein self-reference.

Zina Saunders’ The Party’s Over, with a preview of the book.

Zina Saunders’ website.


Related
Frankenstein For Fear
Frankenstein For President


November 6, 2008

Frankenstein For Fear

A few days ago, I posted the Frankenstein For President video. Here’s what the poster for that campaign must have looked like. It's a witty take on the famous and iconic Obama/Hope poster. Note the small type, “Paid for by the “Vote No on Fire” group”, and how the Obama "O" and flag logo is changed to depict flames. Brilliant!

The original Obama poster was created by L.A.-based contemporary street artist Shepard Fairey as a limited edition silkscreen job. It may be the first political poster to have become phenomenally popular through exposure on the Internet.

Interestingly, Fairey used a photograph of the candidate he plucked off Google. The image was transformed into bold geometric shapes, its red, white and blue palette muted with intermediary colors. The first version said “Progress”, which became “Change” before it settled for “Hope”. The result is a powerful, instantly classic poster.


The Frankenstein/Fear campaign poster is from zero-lives photostream on Flickr. There’s also a nice Jekyll-Hyde 2008 poster (“Vote for change!”). Found, with thanks, via Sailormoms.

Obama poster creator Shepard Fairey’s website, his Wiki page, and an interview with the artist.


Related
Frankenstein For President


November 5, 2008

The Beer of Frankenstein


I bet you thought those neck protrusions were bolts for articulation or electrodes used to juice up The Monster. Now it can be told, they’re bottle openers!

This ad campaign proclaims Heineken Beer as the Official Sponsor of Halloween. Check out the
I Believe in Adv
site to see posters of Dracula, the Wolfman, the Mummy, a Zombie, and Death itself joining the Frankenstein Monster and enjoying a brew.

Prosit!


Related

November 2, 2008

Frankenstein For President



To our American friends who are voting this week... Have you considered the Green candidate?