Showing posts with label • Frankenstein Conquers The World (1965). Show all posts
Showing posts with label • Frankenstein Conquers The World (1965). Show all posts

April 30, 2009

The Posters of Frankenstein :
German Frankenstein Conquers The World


The World Holds It’s Breath: Frankenstein Lives!

This German poster for Ishiro (Inoshiro) Honda’s Frankenstein Conquers The World (1965) features a striking blood-splash background and The Monster’s face painted so as to suggest an exaggerated simian profile, no doubt to justify the unusual title that translate roughly as Frankenstein, The Fright With The Ape Face.


Related:
The Covers of Frankenstein: Famous Monsters of Filmland No. 39


August 31, 2008

The Covers of Frankenstein: Famous Monsters of Filmland No. 39



A scorching, in-your-face cover by Vic Prezio for Famous Monsters of Filmland, June 1966. The solid, eyeball-burning red-orange background must have lept off the stands.

That’s Koji Furuhata as Toho’s Furakenshutain in Frankenstein Conquers the World (1965), a film FMoF presented as “the picture millions have been holding their breath for!”



More covers by Vic Prezio in these related posts:
The Monster Lives!
Monster World No. 2

June 26, 2008

The Web of Frankenstein

Tracking some recent Frankenstein activity on the net… Click away!

August Ragone, author of Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters, runs a terrific blog called The Good, The Bad and Godzilla. It’s highly entertaining, with great info and fantastic pics. Here’s a post about War of the Gargantuas (1966), a film originally called “Frankenstein's Monsters: Sanda vs. Gaira” in Japan, illustrated with a wonderful candid shot of special effects genius Tsuburaya striding a miniature set with one of his Giant Furry Frankensteins. Ragone also posts a great gag shot (glimpsed here, visible in all its uncropped glory on August’s blog) of Tsuburaya and the caveman-like Frankenstein from Frankenstein Conquers the World (aka. Frankenstein vs Baragon) (1965).

Music from the Monster Movies: 1950-69 is another blog recently celebrating the Japanese Frankenstein's conquering ways, complete with twanging guitar sound clips. Hosts Eegah! and Tabonga! also treat us to a short and punchy look at the Mexican-made Orlak, el infierno de Frankenstein (1960).

The Vicar of VHS, holding forth on the splendid Mad Mad Mad Mad Movies is a funny and enthusiastic — nay, exuberant — reviewer. He is not above using CAPS, large type and even color accents to express surprise and sheer, uninhibited and contagious delight. Hang on to something and read his euphoric reviews of Frankenstein monster mashes like Frankenstein’s Bloody Terror, Assignment Terror and Lady Frankenstein (given a possibly record-breaking 6 thumbs up!). By the time you’re done, he’ll have you jumping up and down and flapping your arms along with him.

The excellent Vault of Horror recently posted a scoop about an upcoming project of adapting Wake The Dead, the IDW comic book Frankenstein reboot, to the movies. B-Sol links to an informative interview with creator Steve Niles, of 30 Days of Night fame. Also worth noting: A very well done Vault of Horror Top 10 Horror Films List featuring the 1931 Frankenstein at #8, and 1935’s The Bride of Frankenstein at #2.

One Neat Thing a Day posted about songs with the word Frankenstein in their titles, complete with YouTube links, and over on the recently redesigned Movie Morlocks, Richard Harland Smith says what he REALLY thinks of the Charles Ogle Frankenstein Monster.

On Yahoo Movies, a trailer for Death Race shows it’s a straight up muscle car action picture that has little if anything to do with the original cult classic Death Race 2000 of 1975. The Frankenstein in this version is… a Mustang.

On Broadway, the much hyped Mel Brook’s Musical Young Frankenstein is getting a major face transplant. Sutton Foster and Andrea Martin, who took turns stopping the show as, respectively, Inga and Frau Blucher, are leaving the show. A mass exodus of talent might follow as the producers (no pun here) have called for a “non negotiable”, wholesale salary slash of 50% when player contracts are renewed this summer. The New York Post carries a terse article about it.

On the cultural front, a fascinating exhibition called The Monster Among Us: Frankenstein from Mary Shelley to Mel Brooks is running at the University of Virginia Rotunda Dome Room until November 2008. Curated by Shannon Gorman, it features materials from the collection of Susan Tyler Hitchcock, author of Frankenstein: A Cultural History. Here’s the Exhibition page, and here’s an article about it.


Meanwhile, last May 17, visitors to the Museum of the History of Science in Oxford, England, were treated (and what a treat indeed!) to a one-day only display of an actual, handwritten manuscript page from Frankenstein, by Mary Shelley, on loan from the Bodleian Library. The event was accompanied by a showing of the 1931 movie with Boris Karloff.


And, finally, here’s a tip of the Frankenstein flattop to Kitty LeClaw, horror movie coinnoiseuse and hostess of Killer Kittens From Beyond the Grave, for her kind words about this blog, posted under the cockle-warming title of I Left my Heart in Frankensteinia. Kitty recently “invoked” the beautiful Bride, Elsa Lanchester, in acrylic, and displays her paintings here.


December 22, 2007

Frankenstein Events of 2007

Starting here and all this coming week, I will undertake to list the Top 5 Frankenstein Events of 2007.

This list, of course, is entirely personal, wildly arbitrary and seriously subjective. These are the events I interpret as being significant. The only criteria used here is What Struck Me. Anyone else might remix the list in a different order or come up with a whole different batch of events that deserve mention. I cannot judge films, plays, books, toys and merchandising I haven’t seen, so unless any of these garnered uncommon critical praise or high media visibility, they can’t make the list.

Perhaps, if we’re still meeting here in a year’s time, if you like the concept, I might assemble a panel of experts from among our very knowledgeable readers and come up with a more informed and inclusive list of Frankenstein Events for 2008. We’ll see. For now, without pretensions, here’s my list, with my heartfelt Season’s Greeting to all.


First, some runners-up…


GIANT FRANKENSTEIN PEZ DISPENSER

It is one of the most common search engine terms leading to this blog. The folks at Pez Candy, Inc. produced this special, limited edition, Universal-licensed, Frankenstein head Pez dispenser. It’s a foot tall, it lights up and makes noise. Candy and batteries are included, and both taste the same. You are more likely to find one on eBay than in your local pharmacy’s notions department.




THE BEDSIDE FRANKENSTEIN

Continuum Publishing’s playful series invites its readers to sample their books at leisure, serving up its contents in bite-size articles, sidebars and capsules. The Bedside, Bathtub & Armchair Companion to Frankenstein, written by Carol Adams, with Douglas Buchanan and Kelly Gesch, encompasses all aspects of Frankenstein’s stride through popular history, complete with quizzes, a crossword puzzle, flip-books, “monsterbilia”, and maps of Mary Shelley and Victor Frankenstein’s travels. There are interviews with Forrest J Ackerman and Frankenstein uber-expert Don Glut. I love the great cover by Dan Piraro.

You can sample pages from the book on Amazon’s Online Reader.


FRANKENSTEIN CONQUERS DVD

The Monster’s heart, a Nazi submarine, the bombing of Hiroshima… And that’s just the beginning of this, one of the most delirious Frankenstein films ever made. It ends with a 25-foot tall, flathead, caveman Frankenstein battling what appears to be a giant vinyl octopus. And its got Nick Adams in it, too.

Frankenstein Conquers The World, aka Frankenstein vs Barugon (1965) makes the Year’s Best DVD list over at Tim Lucas’ Video WatchBlog. David Kalat calls it “A stellar job, a DVD done right”. Fellow reviewer Sheldon Inkol says, “you owe it to yourself to experience the unbelievably loopy Devilfish finale.”


MARION MOUSSE'S FRANKENSTEIN

My #5 pick for Frankenstein Event of 2007 goes to Marion Mousse’s gorgeous graphic novel version of Mary Shelley’s book, which I previously blogged about here.

The art is loose and confident, cartoony, yet accurate and detailed. This engrossing adaptation is very faithful to the original, and still allows for exploration and development of the themes and characters. Volume one (of three) ends, tantalizingly, with the creation scene. The next two episodes are coming out in 2008.

Published by Delcourt of Paris, this one deserves to be translated into English, perhaps collecting the three 48-page parts together into one book. Like I said in my original review, pending a translation, this one is worth getting for the artwork alone.


Next up: The countdown continues with a Frankenstein Controversy!