Tornato al suo villaggio natale per continuare le sue ricerche sperimentali, l'indigente dottor Frankenstein fa rivivere la sua vecchia creatura, ma un ipnotizzatore vuole controllare il mos... Leggi tuttoTornato al suo villaggio natale per continuare le sue ricerche sperimentali, l'indigente dottor Frankenstein fa rivivere la sua vecchia creatura, ma un ipnotizzatore vuole controllare il mostro per sé.Tornato al suo villaggio natale per continuare le sue ricerche sperimentali, l'indigente dottor Frankenstein fa rivivere la sua vecchia creatura, ma un ipnotizzatore vuole controllare il mostro per sé.
- Premi
- 1 candidatura in totale
- Hans
- (as Sandor Eles)
- Body Snatcher
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Hypnotized Man
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Roustabout
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Manservant
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
- Roustabout
- (non citato nei titoli originali)
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- QuizAccording to the Blu-ray's 'making of' featurette, Peter Cushing (Victor Frankenstein) is vigorously cutting away at a cabbage during the title sequence. It was originally used to emulate the crunching sound of slicing through bone, but this was eventually censored with the title music. Cushing, being very adamant on the technical details of his performance, always demanded the presence of technical advisors on set. During the surgical sequences, he wanted to make sure he used the scalpel correctly. He was also quoted to "want to convince any doctors in the audience."
- BlooperThe creature breaks into the Bergomaster's glass bedroom doors but when they're first broken only his shadow is seen and then they're broken more as he walks through them.
- Citazioni
Body Snatcher: [referring to a stolen body] I've got it!
Baron Frankenstein: So I observe... and so will half the county, if you don't hurry up and bring it inside!
- Versioni alternativeTV version removes some scenes from the theatrical release and features 13 minutes of additional footage starring Steven Geray, Maria Palmer, William Phipps. Specifically, the scenes added for TV prints are: the scene in which a reporter asks an old doctor why nobody wants to talk about Baron Frankenstein (the later part of this scene is intercut with shots of the deafmute young woman, who IS part of the movie as originally filmed: the two men watch her and talk about her, but do not interact with her); the flashback scene showing the little girl being traumatized by the monster, becoming deaf and mute as a result (only his feet are shown); and the present-day scene in which the girl's father, now a drunken wreck, is told that psychological help may be able to overcome her muteness. These scenes are inserted into the movie smoothly, via dissolves rather than rough cuts, but they add nothing other than length. None of the characters actually gets involved in the story, and nothing about them is resolved: the reporter doesn't get the scoop he's looking for, the father doesn't get his revenge against the Baron, and the deaf woman doesn't get the therapy mentioned.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Late Movie 18: The Evil of Frankenstein (1980)
Returning back to Karlstad after a ten year absence, Baron Frankenstein (Cushing) hopes that the town has forgotten his monstrous impact on the town previously. With assistant Hans (Eles) in tow, it's not long before the Baron stumbles upon his monster creation frozen in a glacier of ice...
Anything they don't understand, anything that doesn't conform to their stupid little pattern...they destroy.
With Hammer Films finally getting friendly with Universal Pictures, The Evil of Frankenstein forgets the two previous Hammer Frankenstein movies and goes for what is in all essence a rehash of Karloff's stomping days. That's not necessarily a bad thing if one can judge the film as a standalone movie? But creativity is sparse and it's left to the cast and technical department to create an above average Frankenstein movie.
Yep, it sure does look nice, with impressive costuming and well dressed sets, it's a Hammer movie for sure. Bank's score is also classic Hammer strains. Cushing gives his usual dose of quality, though he is a touch restrained here in terms of committed emotion, and you have to smile at his James Bond moment during one getaway scene while a buxom babe looks on with kinky lustation in her eyes. Elsewhere it's a safe turn of cast performances, with future Dad of Delboy Trotter, Woodthorpe, camping it up as the scheming and revenge fuelled hypnotist Zoltan, Wild isn't asked to do much, and neither is Eles, who seems to be in it for some continental flavour. Francis is no Terence Fisher, but he has a good visual flair and he can construct a very good action sequence, such as the excellent finale here.
There's problems for sure; familiarity of Frankenstein movies in general hurts, the make up for the creature is very poor, one back screen projection sequence is very cheap even by low grade Hammer standards, while some of the Baron's reactions to situations don't bear up to logical scrutiny. It's not hard to understand why it's a very divisive movie amongst the Hammer Horror faithful. Yet its merits hold up well and it never once sags or becomes tiring. Cushing, Wilcox and that finale ensure it's a decent night in by the fire. 6.5/10
- hitchcockthelegend
- 24 ott 2012
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- The Evil of Frankenstein
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- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 24 minuti
- Proporzioni
- 1.85 : 1