Bride of Frankenstein |
Margarette Connor |
|
Introduction |
Better than the Original |
The Monster speaks |
Teaching with both Versions |
Actors |
Improvised
lines |
Unexplained casting change |
Trouble with
the censors |
Fought censorship |
Amazing special effects |
DVD version now available |
The Opening Scene |
Remade in 1985 |
Sources |
|
Introduction |
As early as 1932, Universal Studios wanted to expand
its Frankenstein franchise with a sequel. It took some time for a script
to be approved, though, and originally James Whale said he would not
direct, but in 1934 he changed his mind, and much of the original cast
was reunited.
|
TOP |
Shot in 46 days, which was actually 10 days over
schedule, the final cost of the film was $397,023 more than $100,000
over the original budget. (Tucker)
|
|
“The original length of Bride of Frankenstein
was 92 minutes, but it was cut down to 75 minutes. The prologue was
edited because Mary, Percy, and Lord Byron's tales were a little too
bawdy. A court scene was deleted and an entire sub-plot with Karl having
the monster murder his miserly aunt and uncle was removed.” (Tucker)
|
TOP |
Better than the Original |
Although both Whale and Karloff preferred the first
film, Bride is generally considered one of the few Hollywood
sequels better than the original. This was partly due to
Whale himself. This was his seventh film after the original
Frankenstein , which had only been his third film, so
technically he was much better at directing than he had been four years
earlier.
|
|
In the intervening years, Whale was also influenced
by the German Expressionism happening in European cinema, and traces of
it can be seen in his filming here. This gives the second
film a very different “look” from the first film
|
|
As one reviewer put it: “The macabre, satirical film
is generally considered one of the greatest horror films of all time - a
spectacular, bizarre, high-camp, excessive, humorous, farcical and
surrealistic film. ... The film reunited Colin Clive (as Dr.
Frankenstein) with Boris Karloff as the Monster, but brought two new
characters to the forefront: Ernest Thesiger as a necromancer who has
miniaturised and imprisoned various human beings in glass jars, and Elsa
Lanchester as the Monster's Bride.” (“Bride” Filmsite.org)
|
|
The film also has an excellent script.
The opening credits read "Suggested by the original story written in
1816 by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley and Adapted by William Hurlbut, John
Balderston. Only Balderston had worked on the first film,
but again, Whale had input as well. |
|
And unlike
Frankenstein
this film was heavily edited by censors who had
gained considerable control in the intervening years
. |
TOP |
The Monster speaks |
The sequel also called for The Monster
to have lines. Karloff argued that it was a mistake to have the Monster
speak, that it would build up too much sympathy for The Monster.
In a way, he's correct that the monster speaking made it more “human,”
hence sympathetic. |
|
There are a number of other ways that the Monster
becomes more sympathetic in this version, and that's one of the reasons
why critics and fans like it better.
|
|
But being able to speak also changed the look of the
Monster. In order to speak properly, Karloff had to replace
the partial bridge that he had removed during his work on the first
film. In this film, his face is much fuller.
|
TOP |
Teaching with both Versions |
Even though
The Bride of Frankenstein
is seen as a sequel, I often view it as part two
of the same film. The second film includes footage from the
first, and according to the internal chronology, the second is supposed
to follow immediately after the first. Both films are
short--the total running times of the release versions is only 174
minutes. As a result, I usually show both films as “a”
Frankenstein film. |
|
But a warning for teachers: I've had students cry for
the fate of the Monster after both films, but Bride usually
produces more tears.
|
TOP |
Actors |
Boris Karloff had reservations about
reprising his most famous role. But he took the role, losing
about 10 kilos during the film's shooting thanks to the weight of his
costume and the physical exertion he the role entailed. |
|
Colin Clive, as Henry Frankenstein, is supposed to
be in feeble health in the sequel and is therefore less dynamic than
before, yet his nervous tension is shattering and overtones of tragedy
hover around him. It wasn't all make-believe. Shortly before
the shoot, Clive broke his leg in a riding accident, so most of his
scenes are shot sitting down. But also, Clive was suffering
from acute alcoholism during the filming. This disease led
to his death at the age of 37, just two years after filming
Bride
.
|
Colin Clive, Elsa Lancaster, Boris Karloff and as The Monster meets his
Bride. Source: IMDB.com.
http://www.imdb.com/gallery/mptv/1302/3318_0030.jpg?path=gallery&path_key=0026138
|
|
Ernest Thesiger played Professor Pretorius, and he
delivered a knock-out performance. He'd worked with Whale
before, who brought Thesiger to the US in to play the acerbic,
effeminate Horace Femm in his The Old Dark House (1932)
. Writers for years have claimed that Pretorius was gay.
Some critics have gone so far as to write that Henry and Pretorius are a
gay couple, with the Monster and the Bride as their children.
Whether Whale envisioned him as such is debatable, and overall, I really
don't think it matters much either way. Thesiger's
performance in the film is genius, and that's all that really counts.
(This, of course, gets back to Whale's open homosexuality which is
discussed on the Frankenstein page.)
|
TOP |
Improvised
lines |
Thesiger got most of the film's best lines, many of
which he improvised:
|
|
"I also have
created life, as they say, in God's own image." |
|
"Sometimes I think it would be better if we were all
devils, with no nonsense about angels and being good."
|
|
"The creation of
life is enthralling, distinctly enthralling, is it not?" |
|
"Leave the charnel house and follow the lead of
nature or God, if you like your Bible stories."
|
|
As the great experiment begins, he exults, "Once we
should have been burnt as wizards for this experiment!"
|
|
Leading his entourage into the watchtower, he tells
them to "Mind the steps a bit slimy, I expect. I think it's a charming
house."
|
|
To the Monster's line "I love dead, hate living," he
snaps back, "You're wise in your generation. We must have a long talk,
and then I have an important call to make."
|
TOP |
Unexplained casting change |
Although most of the original cast reprised their
roles, there is one change. The beautiful blonde fiance,
Elizabeth, played by 21 year old American Mae Clarke in the original
becomes the stunning brunette wife Elizabeth, played by 19 year old
Northern Irishwoman Valerie Hobson.
|
|
There is never an official reason for the change, and
it seems slightly odd considering that Mae Clarke (most famous for being
hit in the face with a grapefruit by James Cagney in 1931's Public
Enemy) was a rising star in the early 30s. According
film critic Leonard Maltin, “Bad luck and personal problems drove her
out of the limelight” in the early 30s. (“Biography”)
Perhaps Whale or the studio wanted to distance themselves from Clarke.
But why not chose another blonde actress?
|
TOP |
Trouble with
the censors |
Between the first Frankenstein film and the second,
Hollywood was getting cleaned up by the self-regulating Hays Code, at
that time headed by Joseph Breen. When Breen saw the first
copy of the script, which he had to approve before shooting could begin,
he called for a number of cuts. He felt the film was
sacriligious and too violent.
|
|
The original body count in the script was 21 people
killed. In the final version of the film, it is down to
eleven. (Scott)
|
|
Then, when Breen saw the
finished film, he had a few scenes cut for being too sexy.
In the opening scenes, especially, he felt there was far too much of
Elsa Lanchester's breasts showing.
|
TOP |
Fought censorship |
Whale was very much
against Breen's proposed cuts, and while there was little he could do to
fight the cuts in sex and violence, he retained most of the religious
imagery that had worried Breen. |
|
Though a scene where the Monster mistakes a statue of
the crucified Christ for a suffering soulmate and tries to rescue him
was cut, the captured Monster, raised aloft on a pole and pelted by
rocks, obviously symbolizes crucifixion. Additionally, a crucifix in the
hermit's cabin is heavily emphasized.
|
|
Instead of the scene of the Monster trying to help
Jesus on the cross, the Monster angrily topples a statue of a bishop;
and Pretorius impiously quotes Biblical phrases ("Male and female
created He them. Be fruitful and multiply.").
|
TOP |
Amazing special effects |
One of the scenes that made the film stand out at the
time and still has an impact today is Pretorius' seven miniature
“people” in their glass jars: the king (a replica of England's Henry
VIII), the queen (supposedly Anne Boleyn), the archbishop, the
ballerina, the mermaid, and the devil (to whom Pretorius claims a
worrying relationship). These six are introduced by
Pretorius, but the seventh figure, a baby, played by midget Billy Barty,
is not mentioned.
|
|
Students are often charmed by this scene, even though
it makes them feel very uncomfortable about the Pretorius character.
|
|
To film this scene, careful measurements were made of
camera elevations, distances and angles, as well as the sizes of the
jars and other props. The actors were photographed separately in
large-scale jars and matted into the small jars. The composites are
flawless, including a scene in which the king escapes and Pretorius
picks him up and imprisons him back in his jar. Considering the year,
the special effects were wonderful.
|
TOP |
The cover to the 1999 DVD release based on an original movie poster..
Source: A Face for the Monster: The Universal Pictures Series, Bride of
Frankenstein
http://members.aon.at/frankenstein/frankenstein-universal2.htm |
DVD version now available
In 2001, Universal released a DVD version of the film
as part of their “Classic Monster Collection”. One feature
that makes this DVD especially helpful to teachers is the extra
featurette, “ She's Alive! Creating the Bride of Frankenstein
,” an original documentary from filmmaker David J. Skal, hosted and
narrated by director Joe Dante. The DVD also features
commentary by film historian Scott MacQueen. Both features are excellent
resources for both teachers and students of the film.
|
TOP |
The Opening Scene |
Bride of Frankenstein memorably opens with Mary and Percy
Shelley along with Lord Byron sitting out a thunderstorm in Lake Geneva.
I have found a transcript of the opening scene on-line at filmsite.org
and I present it here. What I find interesting is Byron's
introduction of the three elegant people. Folks were
expecting a modern horror story (the 1931 version was set in
contemporary times), not a costume drama.
|
|
From “The Bride of
Frankenstein” pages on filmsite.org: |
|
“In the film's prologue, the camera pans toward a
light shining in the window of Lord Byron's estate on a stormy dark
night as thunder crackles. Inside the elegant drawing room of the Villa
Diodati on Lake Geneva in Switzerland, in the early 1800s, three
characters are lounging and talking together in an historical
reconstruction: Lord Byron (Gavin Gordon), poet Percy Shelley (Douglas
Walton) and his 19-year-old bride Mary Shelley (Elsa Lanchester). The
memorable scene recreates a discussion the trio may have had. Before a
roaring fire, Mary expresses her unusual fear of thunder and the dark:
|
|
Lord Byron: The crudest, savage
exhibition of Nature at her worst without, and we three, we elegant
three within. I should like to think that an irate Jehovah was pointing
those arrows of lightning directly at my head, the unbowed head of
George Gordon Lord Byron, England's greatest sinner. But I cannot
flatter myself to that extent. Possibly those thunders are for dear
Shelley - heaven's applause for England's greatest poet.
Shelley: What of my Mary?
Lord Byron: She is an angel.
Mary: You think so?
Lord Byron: Do you hear? Come, Mary. Come and watch the storm.
Mary: You know how lightning alarms me. Shelley darling, will you please
light these candles for me?
Shelley: (laughing) Mary, darling.
Lord Byron: Astonishing creature.
Mary: I, Lord Byron?
Lord Byron: Frightened of thunder, fearful of the dark. And yet you have
written a tale that sent my blood into icy creeps.
Mary: (giggling) Ha, ha, ha.
Lord Byron: Look at her Shelley. Can you believe that bland and lovely
brow conceived of Frankenstein, a Monster created from cadavers out of
rifled graves? Isn't it astonishing?
Mary: I don't know why you should think so. What do you expect? Such an
audience needs something stronger than a pretty little love story. So
why shouldn't I write of monsters?
Lord Byron: No wonder Murray's refused to publish the book. He says his
reading public would be too shocked.
Mary: It will be published, I think.
Shelley: Then, darling, you will have much to answer for. |
|
Mary defends her Frankenstein novel to her admirer,
arguing that it was more than a story about a mad scientist and a
monster. It was a philosophical consideration of a man who defied God's
natural laws and sovereignty by daring to create life:
|
|
Mary: The publishers did not see that my purpose was
to write a moral lesson. The punishment that befell a mortal man who
dared to emulate God.
Lord Byron: Well, whatever your purpose may have been, my dear, I take
great relish in savoring each separate horror. I roll them over on my
tongue.
Mary: Don't, Lord Byron. Don't remind me of it tonight.
|
|
The film dissolves and flashes back to moments from
the first film, in order to summarize what happened, and includes a few
additional shots created for the flashback. [In several respects,
however, Bride of Frankenstein contradicts the ending of
Frankenstein .] Bryon recalls:
|
|
What a setting in that churchyard to begin with. The
sobbing women, the first plod of earth on the coffin. That was a pretty
chill. Frankenstein and the dwarf stealing the body out of its new-made
grave, cutting the hanged man down from the gallows where he swung
creaking in the wind. The cunning of Frankenstein in his mountain
laboratory, picking dead men apart and building up a human Monster, so
fearful - so horrible that only a half-crazed brain could have devised.
And then the murder! The little child drowned. Henry Frankenstein
himself thrown from the top of the burning mill by the very Monster he
had created. And it was these fragile white fingers that penned the
nightmare.
|
|
Mary pricks herself while sewing, drawing blood and
becoming squeamish at the sight. Percy questions why Mary ended her
story prematurely: "I do think it a shame, Mary, to end your story quite
so suddenly." Mary contends that she has told only part of her story,
and then explains that Frankenstein's Monster (Boris Karloff) did not
perish, but actually survived the fire that destroyed the blazing old
windmill in the first film:
|
|
Mary: That wasn't the end at all. Would you like to
hear what happened after that? I feel like telling it. It's a perfect
night for mystery and horror. The air itself is filled with monsters.
Lord Byron: I'm all ears. While heaven blasts the night without, open up
your pits of hell.
|
|
Mary weaves her new tale of horror, providing a
lead-in to the visualization of the film's story. The camera pulls back
from the trio and dissolves into the sequel: "Well then, imagine
yourselves standing by the wreckage of the mill. The fire is dying down.
Soon, the bare skeleton of the building will be dissolved. The gaunt
rafters against the sky."
|
TOP |
Remade in 1985 |
In a move that probably seemed good at the time, but
which proved failure, em>The Bride of Frankenstein was remade in
1985. The new film, The Bride , starred the
musician/sometime actor Sting as Baron Charles Frankenstein, who creates
a bride, “Eva,” (Jennifer Beals) for his monster, Viktor.
Most critics panned the film, but it does have a bit of a cult
following, and it's still available on DVD and video today.
It might make an interesting “compare and contrast” project for an
interested student.
|
TOP |
Sources: |
“Biography of Mae Clarke” Internet Movie
Data Base 16 Mar 2005 |
http://imdb.com/name/nm0164883/bio |
|
Bride of Frankenstein”
Filmsite.org” 16 Mar 2005
http://www.filmsite.org/bride.html |
|
“Bride of Frankenstein” Internet Movie
Data Base 16 Mar 2005 |
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0026138/ |
|
Scott, Cavan and
Steve O'Brien. “The Bride Of Frankenstein Explored!”
The Graveyard Shift
©2005 16 Mar 2005
http://www.graveyardshift.co.uk/bride2.htm
|
|
Tucker, Jake. “Universal Terror:
Part Five” Classic Horror: Reviewing
the History of Terror.
Originally Published 07/2001. 16 Mar 2005. |
|
http://classic-horror.com/articles/universalterror5.shtml |
TOP |
|
|
|