June 28, 2009

The Posters of Frankenstein :
Early Promotional Art, Frankenstein (1931)



Following up on my last post, here’s a good look at that early Lugosi/Frankenstein promotional illustration from 1931. Thanks — again! — to James Phillips for spotting this on eBay.

I’d only seen small reproductions of this one, and seeing it large really makes it pop. There’s a lush, painterly feel to it. You can see the brushstrokes. The bold rainbow-striped sky recedes from purple to yellow, creating depth. The Giant, struck by lightning, is cast in green light and sculpted with sharp, dark blue shadows. The artist, Kulz, would produce a number of classic, fully-painted posters for Universal. It was golden era when he, Grosz, Froelich and other top-notch illustrators had free reign, creating vastly original, highly individualistic works.

Size makes details emerge. Note the skyline and lit windows visible through the legs, the Giant rising like a ghostly apparition. The transparent effect is also used in the title, with the Giant’s head and background colors shining through.

The character in the Giant’s hand is clearly a scientist, dressing in a white lab coat, clutching a test tube. I zoomed in and rotated the image, revealing a textbook mad doctor with mustache, goatee and owl glasses. Knowing that Lugosi wanted to play the title character, not The Monster, could this have been his appearance? You could even say the character’s profile is Lugosi’s.

This ad is famous, of course, for announcing Bela Lugosi as the film’s lead. The success of Dracula in February ’31 kicked the actor’s career into high gear, with Universal promoting him as their new horror star. On April 1st, Variety reported that the studio had “other parts in mind” for Lugosi, “one of them being Frankenstein, a medical melodrama”. Press releases also associated him with Murders in the Rue Morgue and a proposed remake of The Hunchback of Notre-Dame.

Frankenstein was turned over to director Robert Florey who wrote a script with Garrett Fort and, in mid-June, directed the infamous, now lost screen test with Lugosi as The Monster. Lugosi balked at playing the mute, makeup-heavy character, but he was still attached to the project after James Whale replaced Florey. News of Lugosi being “switched” to Murders in the Rue Morgue surfaced in mid-July, but his replacement, Boris Karloff, was not named until late August when the film began shooting.

The Frankenstein ad appeared in The Big Book from Universal 1931-1932, a large, lavish exhibitor’s catalog with full-color art. Like Frankenstein, many of the films listed were in early pre-production with credits still tentative. Some of the films ballyhooed were never made. In years to follow, the Universal exhibitor catalogs would announce Boris Karloff as The Invisible Man, a part that eventually went to Claude Rains, or Karloff as the devil-like Cagliostro, a project that somehow transformed into The Mummy. Among the films that never came to be: Karloff was touted as Bluebeard, and Karloff with Lugosi in something called The Monster of Zombor.

The Kulz pre-production painting was eventually recycled as a theatrical poster for the Spanish-dubbed release of Frankenstein with minor corrections, namely giving the Giant a flatter head and requisite neck bolts.


Related:
Frankenstein Sticker
The Selling of Frankenstein, parts one, two, three, and four


June 24, 2009

Frankenstein Sticker


Here’s a real find. This small, two-color sticker surfaced recently at Hake’s Americana and Collectibles. The auction house description is here. It appears to be an early promotional item for James Whale’s 1931 Frankenstein.

The piece is undated, but the style, the hand-lettered logo, the catch phrase — The Man Who Made a Monster! — and the Laemmle credit are all typical of the original ad campaign.

The highly impressionistic image of The Monster, an amorphous golem-like giant with glowing red eyes, suggests pre-production art, something done prior to the now famous makeup having been finalized. It also evokes the earliest Frankenstein poster from a Universal campaign book that promoted Bela Lugosi as the star of the film. That one featured a giant man striding through a modern city, with beams shooting out of his eyes.

The origins of the sticker are unknown. It might be contemporary with the film or made at a later date. As to purpose, it could have been a theater giveaway. Handouts and premiums used to be quite common. My mom had a cutlery set she had assembled going to the movies. Forks this week, soup spoons next week. As a kid, I saw The Three Stooges Meet Hercules (1962) and got a lenticular ring showing Moe making faces. Saw Premature Burial (1962) and got a strip of black and white Monster Stamps, and I still have the May The Force Be With You lapel button they gave out on the first day Star Wars played, in 1977.

Whatever its origins or purpose, the Frankenstein sticker is a unique and very intriguing item.


Thanks go out to James Philips of Batfatty vs. The Chocodiles for the find, and thanks to Ted Newsom for expertise.


June 21, 2009

The Posters of Frankenstein :
Carry On Screaming


Let's see... There’s a freaky Frankenstein-like neanderthal monster with furry claws, a dungeon wall, a boiling vat, a haunted manor, lightning, tombstones, bats… One look at this garish poster and you know exactly what to expect from this film. Cleavage!

Carry On Screaming (1966) is a delightfully silly horror film spoof and an affectionate homage to Hammer Films. A slightly different version of this poster, complete with Fenella Fielding in busty profile as the Morticia-like Valeria Watt, appeared on a British Royal Mail stamp commemorating the Carry On films in 2008.


The original trailer for the film.


Related:
Carry On Screaming
The Stamps of Frankenstein


June 17, 2009

The Posters of Frankenstein :
Vampire Girl vs. Frankenstein Girl


Vampire Girl Yukie Kawamura is armed and ready, posing against the Tokyo Tower where she will fight Frankenstein Girl in the climactic confrontation of, well, Vampire Girl vs. Frankenstein Girl, the new film by Yoshihiro Nishimura (director of the cult hit Tokyo Gore Police) and Naoyuki Tomomatsu.

The film will be shown June 26 at the New York Asian Film Festival with co-director Nishimura, action director Tak Sakaguchi, and visual effects supervisor Tsuyoshi Kazuno in attendance. Click through for details and see the trailer (NSFW, if you must know) featuring frenetic slapstick and literal fountains of blood.


Related:
Vampire Girl vs. Frankenstein Girl


June 15, 2009

Sir Creature


Splendid news has come that actor Christopher Lee, who celebrated his 87th birthday on May 27, has earned a Knighthood. It’s SIR Christopher Lee, now! By the way, last April, Lee and his wife of 46 years, Gitte, were given a Couple of the Year Award by the readers of the German Gala magazine. Deserved honors all around.

Lee’s friend, Peter Cushing, was awarded an OBE, making him an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire, and Hammer Films, the studio that launched Lee and Cushing as gothic horror film stars was given the Queen’s Award to Industry for their contribution to the British economy in 1968. That presentation was made on the set of Dracula Has Risen From the Grave, with the Queen’s emissaries shaking hands with Lee in Dracula cape and fangs.

Back in 1957, though he complained that the part had no dialog, Christopher Lee’s career got a supercharged boost with his appearance as the gangly Creature in The Curse of Frankenstein. Shortly thereafter, he rocketed to international stardom as Dracula (1958), a high orbit from which he has never descended.

The photograph here is another stunning portrait from the excellent Life Magazine online archives. It captures Lee in a quiet moment, wearing gruesome over the head makeup indicating crude brain surgery after being shot in the eye, for the film’s climax.


Related:

June 13, 2009

Dr. Frankenstein : Basil Rathbone


Born June 13 in South Africa, raised in England, Basil Rathbone (1892-1967) was an established Shakespearean by the time he first came to America in 1923, eventually to marry (a second time) and settle in New York. The couple would relocate to Hollywood in 1935 where they came to be known for their lavish parties.

Rathbone played heroes and villains, often in elaborate costume dramas, with nervous energy, delivering lines in a clipped accent as cutting as his profile. He was twice nominated for an Academy Award in serious minded supporting roles, but he is best remembered for popular fare, notably his villainous turns opposite Errol Flynn in Captain Blood (1935) and the magnificent The Adventures of Robin Hood (1938).

His most famous role was that of Sherlock Holmes, beginning in 1939 with big budget period pieces made at 20th Century Fox and continuing in programmers from Universal, fourteen pictures in all (and a radio series, too) over a period of seven years. Aided by Nigel Bruce as an elderly, bumbling Watson, Rathbone’s Sherlock would match wits with George Zucco’s Moriarty, Gale Sondergaard’s Spider Woman and Rondo Hatton’s Creeper.

In the late Forties, Rathbone returned to New York and his first love, the stage. In the Fifties, his popularity sustained by the Sherlock films released to television, he would appear often on the new medium in dramas and variety shows. By 1955, he returned to film, though sporadically. Horror titles included the all-star vehicles The Black Sleep (1956), with Lon Chaney, John Carradine, Thor Johnson and Bela Lugosi, and Comedy of Terrors (1964) with Vincent Price, Boris Karloff and Peter Lorre.

Back in 1939, Rathbone was cast as the first in Universal’s long line of science-meddling Frankenstein heirs with Son of Frankenstein, a film that inaugurated the studio’s second wave of monster movies. As Baron Wolf von Frankenstein, with wife (Josephine Hutchison) and young son (Donnie Dunagan) in tow, Rathbone reclaims his family’s castle estate against the protest of distrustful locals for whom the family name is synonymous with “Maker of Monsters”. Exploring the shattered remains of his father’s laboratory, Rathbone’s Baron encounters the broken-necked Ygor (Bela Lugosi) and his “friend”, the comatose Monster (Boris Karloff).

In a memorable scene, Rathbone examines The Monster, measuring its superhuman strength, noting the peculiar composition of its blood, and counting the bullets lodged in its beating heart. Re-energized, The Monster is used by Ygor to settle accounts with the men who had ordered his botched hanging.

The film was Karloff’s last pass at playing The Monster, the part largely robotic, performing Ygor’s commissioned deeds. Lugosi, cast against type in scruffy, snaggletooth makeup, and obviously enjoying himself, fairly steals the show. Lionel Atwill is also excellent as the ramrod Inspector Krogh, with an artificial arm replacing that which was ripped from its socket years before, when he was but a child, by the rampaging Monster.

As Frankenstein’s son, Rathbone displays naïve enthusiasm and genuine wonder at his father’s monumental achievement, mimicking The Monster’s gait and raising his glass to a large painting of Colin Clive. Facing the revived Monster, Rathbone is terrified as he comes to understand the danger personified by a giant he can never hope to control. In a swashbuckling climax, his child in jeopardy, Rathbone’s Wolf von Frankenstein finds his courage and, swinging from a rope, he kicks The Monster into a boiling sulfur pit.

Son of Frankenstein was the template for Gene Wilder and Mel Brook’s Young Frankenstein.


Basil Rathbone, Master of Stage and Screen, an excellent fansite loaded with information and candid photos.


Related:
Previous posts about Son of Frankenstein
Portrayals of the Dr. Frankenstein character


June 11, 2009

The Posters of Frankenstein :
Lady Frankenstein


An Italian poster for Lady Frankenstein, also known as La Figlia di Frankenstein (1971) signed, top left, by L. Crovato, whose poster work, as best I can tell, spans the Seventies and Eighties. His name appears on a number of nicely composed giallo and action film posters, including
5 donne per l’assassino, the 1974 thriller starring Francis (Revenge of Frankenstein) Matthews, and 1970’s Hercules in New York, Arnold Swarzenegger’s first film.

I like the artist’s mix of styles, the prominent, realistic portrait likenesses combined with the highly stylized rendering of the couple in action.


Related:
Dr. Frankenstein: Joseph Cotten
Dr. Frankenstein: Rosalba Neri


June 9, 2009

Richie Rich Meets Frankenstein

Beginning in the Forties, Harvey Publications produced comics aimed at the younger end of the market, featuring bizarre child characters. There was Hotstuff, the Little Devil who was solid red, with cute horns, a pointy tail, and asbestos diapers. Wendy, the Good Little Witch flew around on a broom. There was Little Lotta, a little girl who was extremely fat, and Little Dot, a child obsessed with round objects. One rather obscure characters was Archie-type teen called Flat-Top who wore a buzz cut that made his head as flat as Frankenstein's. The best known Harvey character was Casper, the Friendly Ghost who was, it follows, a little dead boy. As for Richie Rich, the name says it all, here was a child who had all the money in the world. I don’t know how he’s doing in today’s recession. Is he getting bailout money?

I am delighted to have Rob Kelly returning as Guest Blogger. Previously, Rob walked us through a hilarious, boneheaded 1963 adaptation of Frankenstein from Dell Comics. This time out, Rob documents the momentous meeting between Richie Rich and Frankenstein!


Richie Rich Meets Frankenstein, by Rob Kelly

Yes, the Poor Little Rich Boy's adventures did go beyond just looking for places to store his money. In 1975’s Richie Rich Vault of Mystery No.2, (one of approximately 10,000 different Richie Rich titles) Richie and his less solvent pals had all kinds of adventures, none as exciting for monster fans as this issue, when he encountered Frankenstein, Dracula, and the Wolf Man!

This story opens with Richie and his pal Freckles visiting "The famous old Castle Theater!"

At first, Richie and Freckles think the spooky sound is just the wind, but then an old sandbag comes crashing down the rafters, almost killing Richie! Richie is still not put off, but even he starts to worry when a knife comes sailing from out of the darkness and lands just a few inches above his head!

The guys decide to split, but on the way out they encounter...The Wolf Man! Freckles calls it "The Ghost of the Wolf Man!" — why it couldn't just be The Wolf Man, I don't know. Maybe Freckles knows something we don't. The Wolf Man chases them, throwing stage pegs. He hits a lever on the wall, causing a trap door to open underneath Richie and Freckles.

They land in a room where props are kept and they run into Frankenstein's Ghost (again with the ghost stuff!). They run away from Frankenstein, only to run into the Wolf Man again. They head down another corridor, only to be met by...The Ghost of Dracula! End of Part One!

After a break consisting of two one-page Richie gag strips, we're back to our main story:

Hmm, these monsters seem pretty clumsy. I wonder...

Anyway, Richie's pants get stuck on a nail and, in his rush to escape, he tears off his pocket, leaving a trail of money in his wake. While Freckles runs away, Richie stops to notice that the monsters are happily scooping up the cash! What kind of monsters are these?

Richie and Freckles hide in a nearby sarcophagus (you'd think this would be a perfect time for the Mummy to make an appearance, but no). The monsters think they've scared the kids off, so they resume their "plan", which involves them heading down yet another trap door. Richie and Freckles follow, and we see that the monsters are in the middle of digging through a wall, into the bank next door!

Richie is now convinced these aren't real monsters, or ghost monsters, or whatever — they're just crooks in make-up! Freckles asks what he and Richie can do to stop them, but Richie says they don't need to do anything!

Freckles is confused at that, as the monsters drill through to the bank…

... the end!

While it's disappointing to this monster fan that Frankenstein, Dracula, and the Wolf Man aren't real, merely crooks involved in a Scooby Doo-esque plot, I am intrigued at the notion that these (or any) monsters do, in fact, exist for real in the universe of Richie Rich. After all, Richie and Freckles don't immediately come to the conclusion that these are just guys in costumes--for a moment, they believe they are the real deal, which I find an intriguing footnote to the world of Richie Rich.

Like most Richie Rich stories, there are no writing or art credits on this story, although it’s safe to assume that this was penciled by the great Ernie Colon. He does a great job rendering the three monsters, especially on the cover, which is about as moody as Harvey was going to allow a Richie Rich comic to get.

One other interesting note: in this story, Dracula is clearly the ringleader, yet the group is called "The Frankenstein Gang." But we know who the real star is, don't we?


Rob Kelly is a professional illustrator, a comics expert and a prolific blogger.
See his art blog and follow the links to his comics blogs.


Harvey Comics is now Harvey Entertainment.


Related:
The Monster Lives!, The Dell Comics Frankenstein, by Rob Kelly


June 7, 2009

Benjamin Franklin Meets Frankenstein


Based on Duplessis’ famous etching of Benjamin Franklin, with a little Karloff thrown in, artist Mikey Hester has designed a nifty Franklinstein t-shirt (image slightly cropped here), available through the Threadless online store.

The connection between the Franklin and Frankenstein has been explored extensively. The real-life Franklin and the fictional Victor Frankenstein were contemporaries, and both were electrical experimenters. Frankenstein observed a tree shattered by lightning, and Franklin apocryphally flew a kite and a key in a thunderstorm, inspiring movie Frankensteins to release kites, capture lightning and zap monsters to life.

Mary Shelley was familiar with Franklin and his experiments. Her mother, Mary Wollstonecraft, was tutored in politics by Dr. Richard Price who supported the American Revolution and corresponded with Franklin. One of her publishers, Joseph Johnson, had released Franklin’s works in London, and her lover, Gilbert Imlay, was American and a Revolutionary fighter. Mary Wollstonecraft’s husband, William Godwin, was influenced by Franklin’s politics and he was a member, as was Franklin, of the scientific Royal Society of London. Mary Shelley’s companion, Percy Bysshe Shelley, studied Franklin and was conversant with electrical experimentation.

There is frequently quoted speculation that Mary’s choice of name for her scientist was inspired by, and perhaps even an homage to Franklin, though “Frankenstein” was not a rare name and Mary had almost certainly encountered it in 1814 during her trip down the Rhine and a stopover in the vicinity of Burg Frankenstein. Nevertheless, it is said that Franklin’s electrical experiments were so widely known and notorious that the novel’s original readers, back in 1818, would have easily made the Franklin/Frankenstein connection. Many scholars have since explored the influence of Benjamin Franklin on Mary Wollstonecraft, William Godwin, Percy and Mary Shelley, and its reflection in Mary famous novel, making Founding Father Benjamin Franklin one of numerous men of science of the era who are thought of as the “real” Frankenstein.

A quick Googling reveals that images mashing Franklin and Frankenstein are fairly common. A few are sampled here: Another t-shirt, this one on Zazzle; The greenish character is Benjamin Franklinstein, "American leader in the field of undead rights", as profiled on the Uncyclopedia; The black and white image is from Young Franklinstein, a Spanish site, and the Franklinstein photograph is from Komplexify. There’s more, if you care to go looking.

Lastly, courtesy of Wonderful Wonderblog, Franklin-Stein appears on an Ohio lottery ticket from Halloween 2008.


Mary Wollstonecraft history source: Dorothy and Thomas Hoobler’s The Monsters: Mary Shelley and the Curse of Frankenstein (2006).


Related:
Monster Money


June 5, 2009

David Carradine, 1936-2009



A moment, if I may, to mark the passing of actor David Carradine. His Frankenstein credit comes as the patchwork racer with the grenade embedded in his hand in Paul Bartell’s delirious Death Race 2000, one of the most demented and entertaining films ever to come from the Roger Corman stable.

David father, of course, was John Carradine, the horror film icon who had his own Frankenstein credits, including the key bit part as the hunter who breaks up The Monster and the Hermit’s idyll in The Bride of Frankenstein (1935). He also claimed to have been considered for The Monster's part in the original Universal film of 1931.

The Carradine family, many of John’s sons and grandchildren, made their careers in the arts. David credited his father for instilling in him a love for sculpting. No doubt the elder Carradine’s prolific acting career was also influential. David Carradine seemed proud of his B-Movie roots and he was always fascinating in all the character parts he played.

He will be remembered, no doubt, for Kung Fu and Kill Bill. I’ll remember him, fondly indeed, as the leatherclad Frankenstein prowling an American dystopia is a souped-up, green monster Corvette, scoring points by hitting pedestrians on the way to the finish line.


New York Times obituary.

David Carradine’s Official website.

Death Race 2000 trailer.

Photo source


June 3, 2009

Frankenstein is Groovy


A groovy Frankenstein cover from Curt Purcell’s superlative Groovy Age of Horror blog. This image is one of several Frankenstein fumetti magazine covers posted there, along with links to Purcell’s previous posts on the subject. Fascinating, eye-popping stuff.

Please be aware, NSFW content awaits you. Purcell explores the outer reaches of horror pop culture, and the illustrated nudes depicted above are very tame compared to some of the material regularly posted on Groovy Age.

By the way, Curt Purcell is interviewed on the Eerie Books Blog, a feature of the Eerie Books website, home of the Wylie, Texas store devoted to horror books, movies and collectibles. Eerie Books recently posted a list of 42 Frankenstein Movies to See Before You Die. Every title links to a different website, with Son of Frankenstein linking to Frankensteinia. Thanks for the shoutout!

Much thanks also to writer Mike Segretto for including Frankensteinia on his Frankenstein A to Z list posted in May on his blog, Psychobabble, which is devoted to classic horror and Rock n’Roll. A nice mix, if you ask me. Mike’s A to Z goes all the way from Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein to Zacherley’s Frank and Drac Are Back, with stuff like The New York Dolls, Frankenhooker and Remco toys in between.


The Groovy Age of Horror (NSFW)

Eerie Books Blog: Curt Purcell Interview, and Frankenstein Movie list.

Mike Segretto’s Frankenstein A to Z on Psychobabble.


June 1, 2009

The Covers of Frankenstein : Scary Monsters Magazine No. 71


There’s nothing quite like Scary Monsters Magazine — now in its eighteenth year of publication — with its unabashed fanzine aesthetics and its exhuberant celebration of the Monster Kid universe. The current issue, No. 71, has a terrific wraparound cover by Terry Beatty featuring nineteen versions of The Frankenstein Monster. Can you ID them all?

Artist Terry Beatty is best known for his comics, notably his Eisner Award winning work on Batman titles and his crime comics collaborations with writer Max Allan Collins on Ms. Tree, Johnny Dynamite and Mickey Spillane’s Mike Danger. Beatty is also a teacher, an accomplished sculptor of figural model kits and a painter with a passion for classic horror films, evident in his numerous covers for publisher Dennis Druktenis’ Scary Monsters.


Terry Beatty’s website and blog.

Scary Monsters Magazine website, with ordering info, back issues and monster merchandise.