Dr. Victor von Frankenstein (Patrick Bergin) creates his creature (Randy Quaid), who escapes into the countryside to find that humanity has only pain and sorrow for him. But a psychic link b... Read allDr. Victor von Frankenstein (Patrick Bergin) creates his creature (Randy Quaid), who escapes into the countryside to find that humanity has only pain and sorrow for him. But a psychic link between created and creator draws the two ever nearer, until their paths must inevitably cr... Read allDr. Victor von Frankenstein (Patrick Bergin) creates his creature (Randy Quaid), who escapes into the countryside to find that humanity has only pain and sorrow for him. But a psychic link between created and creator draws the two ever nearer, until their paths must inevitably cross again.
- Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
- 4 nominations total
- Hunter 1
- (as Maciek Czapski)
- Director
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Featured reviews
This was a made-for-cable production, and it was a good attempt. A lot more faithful to the novel than other carnations (but it still freely takes its liberties ), this movie presented some new ideas that were interesting to think about. But the major change was the film's biggest disappointment: The monster was no longer a resurrected assembly of corpses, but a being cloned from Dr. Frank himself. Therefore, they can feel each other's pain and emotions. "Two parts of a single man," as the good doctor states. The twist is more like a "Jekyll and Hyde" idea, rather than the usual father and son relationship. It was a fascinating concept, but not really a good idea for a Frankenstein film claiming it is faithful to the book.
Other than that, it is a top notch job. David Wickes directs with good timing and the suspense it well brought out. Bergin and Quaid are good in the leads as the doctor and the monster, and John Mills also brings in a powerful performance in a cameo as a blind man. This is worth a comparison to the much better "Mary Shelley's Frankenstein," directed by Kenneth Branagh. Both have similar style and terror.
***1/2 out of *****
I won't even waste my time criticizing Branagh's Version. Branagh's Version stays with the book until it is time for the monster to kill Victor's wife,then Branagh throws in this ridiculous resurrection of Elizabeth scene which was totally horrible. Branagh ended his movie exactly as the book ended with the monster and his dead master floating away on a sheet of Ice burning up.
This Version of Frankenstein was made in 1993 for TNT. It was one of the first original movies made for that network, Gettysburg premiered that same year on that station.
This version stays pretty close to the basic plot of the book but it adds a twist. The Death of Elizabeth is exact to how she died in the book, the monster breaks her neck, the rest of the scene was different from the book.
The film adds some new twists to the story that make it all the more interesting. William is a teenager in this version not a child and has a somewhat different role.
This version remains pretty faithful to the basic plot of the book not the details of the book like Branagh attempts to stick to in his version but pathetically failed at towards the end.
John Cameron did a superb job with the music score for this film!
I give this film 4 stars. Excellent viewing for a rainy day!
Did you know
- TriviaPatrick Bergin broke his arm during shooting.
- GoofsAt around 1h 44 mins, when Victor Frankenstein and the crew are on the deck of the ship stuck in the Arctic ice, no breath (vapour) can be seen from their mouths. This is despite ice visibly clinging to their facial hair, and on the heavy layers of their clothing.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Troldspejlet: Episode #10.3 (1994)
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- Frankenstein: The Real Story
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- Runtime1 hour 57 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1