Tag: Dwight Frye

  • FRANKENSTEIN

         Frankenstein dates back a
    long time, all the way to the dawn of talking pictures.
    Because so many of its themes have been borrowed or
    expanded on since then, it’s easy to over-rate or under-rate it.
    You sit there thinking, “I’ve seen this before…”

    Although I find parts of it annoying, I still find it
    powerful overall.  I give it credit too; anything which
    has lent so many  themes to works years later (not just
    horror movies and horror fiction, either) is probably  a
    work of great power.

    Where do you begin?  Part of
    Frankenstein’s power comes from it having two
    points of view: that of the scientist, Henry Frankenstein,
    and second, that of the Monster.  The differences are
    staggering.

    Henry is a scientist, obsessed with “pure”
    research, exploring places no one has gone before.  But he
    is not prepared for the being he has brought to life.
    At one point he calls it “just a piece of dead tissue.” The
    experiments by which he creates the Monster excite him, possess
    him, like nothing before in his life.

    But taking care of his creation (a full-sized living
    thing) is way more than he can deal with.  He soon loses
    interest in this monster;  in contemporary terms, he wants to
    “put it behind him,  move on with his life.”
    Period.  He leaves his trusted friend, Professor Waldman, to
    kill his creation.

    This is why it is so important to see the
    Monster’s point of view too.  This creation is far
    more than an “it” you leave behind.
    image More than the beast he seems to be

    In the novel, the Monster slowly becomes
    educated, enlightened, then vengeful.  He (accurately)
    sees Frankenstein’s neglect and lack of foresight as causes
    of his misery.  When he demands that Frankenstein create
    a mate for him and Frankenstein refuses, the Monster promises to
    make his creator suffer– intensely.

    The movie is too short to develop these themes
    fully—by a long shot.  But a few scenes of the Monster’s
    doomed search for companionship will haunt you long afterwards.
    And each is underlined by Boris Karloff’s superb acting as
    the innocent turned savage.

    Many critics point to an early scene where the
    Monster slowly walks alone into the room where Frankenstein
    and Professor Waldman wait for him.  These critics are
    absolutely right.  “Wait until I bring him into the
    light,” Frankenstein says, and turns down the room lights so as
    not to startle him.  The Monster comes in, making no
    sound, but his expression showing a potential for deadly violence.
    Frankenstein tells him to sit and he does.  Then
    Frankenstein opens the skylight a little, and the
    light shines on the Monster.  His face changes in a
    startling way.  The violent potential suddenly gone; he
    shows us an open-ness to the light which is truly touching.
    His expression is more like that of a young child with
    an open heart, wanting to learn, wanting to understand.
    Slowly he reaches up.

    Then Frankenstein closes the skylight.  The
    Monster’s arms make small circles, as if asking his
    creator for answers.  The first of many losses.

    Abruptly, Fritz, Frankenstein’s simpleminded
    assistant, walks straight up to the Monster and
    begins tormenting him with a torch.  Frankenstein tells
    Fritz to stop, but he is too hesitant, too weak in giving the
    orders.  (Up until now, Fritz has always obeyed him, the
    minute he gave an order.)  Frankenstein and Waldman need
    to knock the Monster unconscious, then chain his arms.

    From that point on the Monster feels like an
    unwanted, neglected child.  Fritz continues to threaten
    him with fire and with his whip.   “Oh…leave it alone,”
    Frankenstein says to Fritz, his voice sounding impotent and
    uncaring.  You know that Fritz will make a mistake and wind
    up dead.  When Frankenstein and Waldman find Fritz hanging,
    they treat the Monster like one of the criminally insane,
    shocked at his fury when they lock him up.  image The Monster–Unable to find anything but more darkness

    Henry’s story and the Monster’s story move in
    radically different directions.  Henry goes home
    to recover from overwork at his father’s estate, in the lap
    of luxury.  The Monster is a prisoner in the barest of
    locked rooms; not knowing  yet that he has been sentenced to
    die.  Soon afterward, Waldman sedates the Monster and
    prepares to give him a fatal injection.  Of course, Waldman
    gives him too little sedation and the Monster kills him
    instead, then escapes.

    You don’t see nearly enough of the Monster’s
    interaction with other people; there is much more of that in
    the excellent sequel,
    The Bride of Frankenstein.  What makes this
    even sadder is that the one scene you do get is intensely
    touching—The Monster and the little girl with the flowers.

    The Monster meets her by a lakeside.  She shows
    him a game with flower blossoms; when she throws them into
    the lake, they float, like beautiful little boats.  Slowly
    the Monster’s expression shows a shy smile, then a look of
    deep satisfaction, as he watches her.  Suddenly he gets an
    idea; that if he throws the girl into the water too, she will
    float, just as beautifully.

    You’ve all heard the story of what comes next.
    Unable to swim, she drowns before his eyes.
    Slowly he realizes what he has done, and his expression
    is one of devastation.  As frightening as
    Karloff’s make-up must have looked in 1931, it still allowed
    you to see his full range of emotions.  You won’t
    soon forget his look of sadness and horror at what he has
    done.

    Sadder still, the studio heads decided the scene was
    too scary; it was partially cut and the missing footage not
    restored for many years.  The version shown on TV and in
    theaters shows the Monster sitting down next to the little
    girl, and her accepting him (the only one in the movie who does).
    Then abruptly it ends–right there.

    A few scenes later, you see her father,
    carrying her soaked body down the main street, putting
    a sudden end to the wedding festivities.  You have to
    believe the Monster killed her.   But you can
    never answer the question… why would he?

    The rest of the movie has some good moments, but
    some missed opportunities too.  Maybe Victor’s father is
    supposed to provide comic relief, but he feels out of place.
    Too much time is wasted talking about Victor’s upcoming
    wedding, and on the pre-wedding celebration.  The scene where
    the Monster enters Elizabeth’s (the bride-to-be) room is
    perhaps the scariest in the movie, but feels
    forced, unlikely.

    But Frankenstein was like a seed
    that gradually grew into a great tree; a tree whose branches
    left a rich harvest of fruit in the years since.
    Frankenstein is a man whose intellect leaves his ability
    to feel somewhere back in the dust.  He never generates
    much sympathy.

    The Monster is another story.  Think back on
    your own life and any of the times you tried to tell someone
    what was in your heart but walked away feeling like a fool.
    That is the essence of the Monster.   He can’t
    even say he means no harm.  He doesn’t have the words.
    Some 40 years after the movie, a song was popular on FM
    hard-rock stations.

    “No one knows what it’s like/to be the bad man/ to
    be the sad man/behind blue eyes” it began.

    No one knows, because the narrator can never explain
    it; like the Monster, he doesn’t have the words.  Like
    the people who encounter the Monster, people will see the bad, and
    remain blind to the sad.

    You get echoes of this movie in other
    unexpected places: the great Ray Charles song,
    You Don’t Know Me, even the Ben E. King
    song, Spanish Harlem.  Listen to the change
    in his voice when he gets to the lines starting with, “With
    eyes as black as coal/that look down in my soul…”

    More feelings that can’t be expressed; people don’t
    know how.

    In The Elephant Man, the title
    character remembers the mother he hasn’t seen for years.
    “I’ve been a great disappointment to her,” he says,
    ignoring the facts of his appearance.  An appearance
    so monstrous that his friend Dr. Treves must ask a woman, as
    a special favor, just to shake the Elephant Man’s hand.

    Such is the power of a parent rejecting you.
    The Monster knows it well.

    It’s not easy to forget the many bad Frankenstein
    sequels, and the wonderful spoof of 1974,
    Young Frankenstein.  For example, as I
    watched Frankenstein for the first time in years,
    my reaction to the mob with their torches was “Not this shit
    again.” At least until I remembered this was the
    original. Universal Pictures, not yet one of the major
    Hollywood studios in the 30’s and 40’s, milked this idea
    for all it was worth, then continued making sequels after it
    had really gone sour.

    But go back to the 80’s, and read some of Clive
    Barker’s brilliant, imaginative fiction.  Again you get
    the images; monsters too hideous to look at…then the stories
    showing you their desire, only to survive, in the world of
    the real monsters—the human beings.

    Almost everyone agrees it would be impossible (then or now)
    to film Mary Shelley’s novel as written.  But director
    James Whale, in the space of about 70 minutes, captured a good
    slug of its essence.  Despite all the sequels, clichés
    and parodies, this is a movie you will remember.