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Synopsis:
Mary Shelley reveals the main characters of her novel survived: Dr. Frankenstein, goaded by an even madder scientist, builds his monster a mate.
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"Actor => Role"
"Actor .=> Role"
*(Crew Jobs)*
/
CastCrew:
Boris Karloff => The Monster (as Karloff) Colin Clive => Henry Frankenstein Valerie Hobson => Elizabeth Ernest Thesiger => Doctor Pretorius Elsa Lanchester => Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley / The Monster's Mate Gavin Gordon => Lord Byron Douglas Walton => Percy Bysshe Shelley Una O'Connor => Minnie E.E. Clive => Burgomaster Dwight Frye => Karl Reginald Barlow => Hans Mary Gordon => Hans' Wife Ted Billings => Ludwig Robert Adair => Hunter in Woods (uncredited) Billy Barty => Baby (uncredited) Maurice Black => Gypsy (uncredited) Walter Brennan => Neighbor with Ax (uncredited) Mae Bruce => Villager (uncredited) John Carradine => Lost Hunter at Hermit's Cottage (uncredited) Marilyn Harris => Girl (uncredited) Carmencita Johnson => Friend of Murdered Girl (uncredited) Murdock MacQuarrie => Sympathetic Villager (uncredited) Torben Meyer => Victim in Flashback (uncredited) Tempe Pigott => Auntie Glutz (uncredited) Joan Woodbury => Queen (uncredited)
!~mov~!~Movies I Own~!
^~ser~^~Series I Own~^
@##Series and Franchise Names##@
@#Episode Names#@
@%Movies I Don't Have%@
`~John Doe~`
/
Trivia:
`~5621~`, who played Maria, the girl The Monster accidentally kills in the original !~frankenstein_1931~!~Frankenstein (1931)~!, appears uncredited as another young girl. She is the leader of the group of young schoolgirls who encounter the Monster as he runs away from the blind man's burning house. Director `~5609~` deliberately gave her a one-word line ("Look!"), so she would be paid more by the studio as an actor with a speaking role, instead of as an extra. Not long before filming began, `~3559~` broke a leg in a horse riding accident. Consequently, most of Henry Frankenstein's scenes were shot with him sitting. `~3560~` protested against the decision to make The Monster speak, but was overruled. Since he was required to speak in this film, Karloff was not able to remove his partial bridgework as he had done to help give the Monster his sunken cheek appearance in the first !~frankenstein_1931~!~Frankenstein (1931)~!. That's why The Monster appears fuller of face in the sequel. The musical soundtrack for this film proved so popular, it was used again in the @##Flash Gordon##@ and @##Buck Rogers##@ serials starring `~Buster Crabbe~`. `~3559~`'s alcoholism had worsened since the first film, but `~5609~` did not recast the role because his "hysterical quality" was necessary for the film. `~3560~` sweated off 20 pounds laboring in the hot costume and makeup. 2007: The movie's line "We belong dead" was voted as the #63 of "The 100 Greatest Movie Lines" by Premiere magazine. `~Jack P. Pierce~` altered the make-up of Frankenstein's monster from this film's predecessor to reflect that he had survived the mill fire at the end of !~frankenstein_1931~!~Frankenstein (1931)~! with some flesh burns and with much of his hair singed off. When filming the scene where the monster emerges from the burnt windmill, `~3560~` slipped and fell into the water-filled well. Upon being helped out, it was discovered that he had dislocated a hip in the fall. The hip was strapped into place and Karloff soldiered on. He continued to receive massage and heat treatments for the hip for the rest of the shooting of the film. `~7451~` was only 5'4" but for the role was placed on stilts that made her 7' tall. The bandages were placed so tightly on her that she was unable to move and had to be carried about the studio and fed through a straw. `~2731~` was considered for the role of Doctor Pretorius. `~5234~` screen tested for the role of poet `~Percy Bysshe Shelley~` in the introductory sequence but was passed over. Contrary to popular belief, Henry Frankenstein was not a doctor. He left medical school because he felt they couldn't teach him what he needed to know. In neither !~frankenstein_1931~!~Frankenstein (1931)~! nor !~frank_bride~!~Bride of Frankenstein~! is Henry referred to a doctor. Only Herr, or Baron. The only Frankenstein that was a Doctor was Wolf Frankenstein in @%Son of Frankenstein (1939)%@, as played by `~4654~`. A popular joke among film buffs is that the title "!~frank_bride~!~Bride of Frankenstein~!" is an ambiguous title which could refer to either the `~19748~` or `~7451~` characters, as both the `~3559~` and `~3560~` characters are given the name "Frankenstein" within the movie. The film is included on `~19351~`'s "Great Movies" list. Purists often consider it inaccurate (going by the `~5613~` source novel) to refer to the Monster by the name "Frankenstein" rather than "Frankenstein's Monster," however in the prologue, the character representing Lord Byron actually does attach the name Frankenstein to the monster. He says: "Can you believe that bland and lovely brow conceived of Frankenstein, a monster created from cadavers out of rifled graves? Isn't it astonishing?" Since Mrs. Shelley does not contradict him, we can infer that in this set of films, the Monster IS named Frankenstein, in one of many divergences from the book. SPOILER:In the original !~frankenstein_1931~!~Frankenstein (1931)~!, Henry screams, "It's alive!" when the monster first moves on his own. Here, he says, "She's alive!" when the bride moves.:SPOILER
"Episode -> Actor => Role"
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