FRANKENSTEIN: 4K UHD Blu-ray re-issue (Universal, 1931) Universal Home Video
The ‘other’ great monster in
Universal’s pantheon of midnight terrors is undeniably James Whale’s Frankenstein
(1931)…or rather, and to be clear, the Frankenstein monster. As with Dracula,
Boris Karloff’s heavy-browed, neck-bolted, thick-booted lumbering mass bears no
resemblance to Mary Shelley’s immortal Gothic freak show, set in a weirdly
timeless middle-European landscape and populated by some genuinely suspicious
pseudo-folklore. In re-conceptualizing the novel for the modern screen, Whale
was to throw out just about everything that made the novel famous, except the
threadbare concept of a scientist probing the secrets of life and death by
stitching together cadavers to ‘make’ a monster. The overwhelming box office
success of Dracula (1931) had afforded Carle Laemmle Jr. the ability to
delve into even more lavish recreations of Gothic horror for this second trip
to the well. Yet, the world manifested in Charles D. Hall’s production design
is a very strange amalgam of 18th century traditions married to decidedly 20th
century technologies. There’s no way of getting around it. This movie’s visual
design, superbly photographed by cinematographers, Arthur Edeson and Paul
Ivano, is perhaps an even more curious oddity than the monster, bringing
together the stylistic elements of Gothic horror and German Expressionism.
In retrospect Shelley’s novel seems
rife for exploitation, the year 1931 at a very strange crossroads between the
scientific advancements taken hold since the 1823 publication of Shelley’s
novel and the Nov. 1918 armistice ending WWI. Indeed, life-saving plastic
surgeries allowed horrifically wounded soldiers from the battlefield to
re-enter society as the commonplace disfigured among the general populace. Such ‘miracles’ had probed the boundaries of
what was possible in this ‘modern age’, the so-called restoration of the
mutilated giving rise to the public’s fascination with tales of the fantastic. Frankenstein,
the novel, is very much a story about man’s driven desire to improve and even
surpass God’s work. The exercise is, of course, not without its repercussions
as the novel’s eccentric scientist, Dr. Victor Frankenstein is to shortly
discover. In the movie, the doctor’s first name is inexplicably changed to
Henry, while the competing love interest played by John Boles is given the name
Victor. Go figure. We won’t even try.
As Universal had done with Bram
Stoker’s blood-sucker, Dracula, virtually all of Shelley’s novel –
except its threadbare plot points – was discarded in favor of an original
screenplay based on Peggy Webling and John Balderston’s Broadway adaptation,
rewritten by Francis Edward Faragoh, Garrett Fort and an unaccredited Robert
Florey and John Russell. Shelley’s novel
is very circumspect in its details about the resurrection of the monster. And
her description is entirely re-envisioned by makeup artist, Jack Pierce who uses
a frightful concoction of noxious spirit gum, cotton, collodion and green
greasepaint to build layers of dense bone and rotting flesh, evolving the look
through trial and error. Boris Karloff spent hours in Pierce’s makeup chair,
enduring the most grotesque and arduous manipulations of his own rather gaunt
physical appearance. To accentuate the monster’s sunken cheeks, Karloff removed
his dental plate. To augment the monster’s physical stiffness, the actor was
weighted down with prosthetic boots.
In the novel, the monster is
disfigured but articulate, pleading and even reasoning with Victor after he has
been shunned and driven out by the local town’s people for his hideous
appearance. The movie chose instead to render the monster mute, perhaps as a
way of heightening his exclusion as ‘the other’ in society. Many today forget
the filmic Frankenstein is more Shakespearean tragedy than classic
horror, the monster with all his angst, willingness to please and abject despair
for having failed to assimilate into society, instead denied and tormented by
it, made a sacrificial parable for the Christ story. James Whale, who perhaps
could share in some of the monster’s rejection (Whale being a closeted
homosexual) perceives the world at large as far more immoral and terrorizing
than any monster. Even Henry Frankenstein (Colin Clive) despises his creation,
in effect denying it his paternal affection and acceptance. Even the death of
Little Maria (Marilyn Harris) – the girl the creature tosses into the lake – is
not an act motivated by the monster’s desire to kill, rather his complete
inability to comprehend her incapability to float similarly to the flower
petals cast upon the water.
Karloff’s performance as the
monster is truly one of the most prolific and enduring. He manages the
seemingly impossible coup of transforming an outwardly hideous creature into a
genuinely sympathetic lost soul, one with whom the audience can empathize and
yet simultaneously fear. There is inner ballast to Karloff’s monster, the
Pierce makeup allowing the actor’s deeper thoughts and expressions to shine
through. The monster truly comes to life while struggling to discover a place
within our social structure where – alas - there is no place for him.
That he resorts to terrorizing the human world in the third act is more out of
frustration than blind rage, given the complete effrontery of mankind to even
investigative the true metal of his physiological makeup. The screenplay does,
of course, allow for the possibility of absolute madness to overtake the
creature, as the theft of a criminally insane brain perpetrated by Fritz
(Dwight Frye), Henry Frankenstein’s hump-backed assistant, is later implanted
into the monster, giving rise to bouts of uncontrollable mayhem.
Yet Karloff, Pierce and Whale have
conspired to deliver a modulated performance far removed from the clichés of
unrepentant evil run amuck. The monster is neither wicked nor good but a
tragically flawed concoction of these polar opposites. His self-loathing and
dementia are brought on by human-inflicted suffrage. Is any of this the
creature’s fault? Arguably, no, and the implication that mankind might be the
villain of this piece remains rather unsettling and unexpected. Certainly, none
of the horror masterpieces gone before Frankenstein (and none since)
have probed this more explorative analysis of man’s responsibility. The central
focus of the movie may still be on its chills, but its underbelly is a peerless
psychological melodrama. Charles D. Hall’s production design is worth
mentioning, as it begins with a startling reconstitution of some
never-never-land generally associated with Gothic Europe, its ominous and
slightly askew tombstones and barren landscape dominated by Tyrolean
gristmills, windmills, castles and even gallows with a dangling corpse, all
evoking the 17th or possibly 18th centuries. Yet, the university and Henry
Frankenstein’s electrified laboratory suggest the 20th century, perhaps
inspired by the fantastical real-life experimentations of Nikola Tesla with
their shooting sparks and ominously glowing orbs, pulsating and synonymous with
the secrets of the life force. Hall has achieved an even more incredible feat
by blending these seemingly irreconcilable styles into a single believable
topography.
Frankenstein made a star of
Boris Karloff, although he was not the studio’s first choice for the part.
Indeed, Frankenstein had been planned as a follow-up project for Bela
Lugosi, the original poster art with the creature’s eyes perceived as
searchlight beams playing on the hypnotically incandescence Lugosi’s depiction
of Count Dracula. But Lugosi balked at the project and Whale thought him
entirely wrong for the part. Karloff’s wan physicality, his stark, bony
features were much more Whale’s idea of a cadaver brought back to life. It is
rumored Karloff spent nearly six-hours a day in Jack Pierce’s makeup chair.
Pierce was an artist, regrettably not tolerated at Universal after the early
1940’s – his time-consuming applications streamlined by Bud Westmore in later
years as Universal continued to churn out Dracula, Frankenstein, Wolf Man
and Mummy sequels. Like Lugosi, Karloff was a soft-spoken cordial
gentleman quite unlike his monolithic alter ego. And therein lies the enduring
success of the creature as portrayed - sympathetically and with a tragic
underlay of endearing sadness.
As our tale begins, we find Dr.
Henry Frankenstein (Colin Clive), the brilliant, though slightly demented
scientist exercising his ambition to stitch together a human out of body parts
stolen from recently deceased and unearthed cadavers. Henry keeps the secrets
of life and death mostly to himself. On the surface at least, he leads a very
normal life. This includes an engagement to wealthy socialite, Elizabeth
Lavenza (Mae Clarke). Elizabeth confides her genuine concerns about Henry’s
secretive experimentations to friend, Victor Moritz (John Boles), a sympathetic
sort who desires Elizabeth for his own, although seemingly without a jealous
bone in his body. In the meantime, Henry’s humpbacked assistant, Fritz (Dwight
Frye) is instructed to steal a human brain from the nearby university’s science
department. Fritz is a simpleton clod. He accidentally smashes the glass
container housing a normal human brain and decides to make off with another
containing the cerebellum of someone who was criminally insane. On the eve of a
harrowing electrical storm, Elizabeth and Victor, together with Dr. Waldman
(Edward Van Sloan) make an impromptu visit to Henry’s hilltop laboratory,
discovering a vast complex of homemade devices built to harness these violent
energies – in effect, the power of God. The body of Henry’s creation, sheathed
in white linen, is raised on a stretcher into the skies, a strike of electrical
impulses stirring its mass of bone and sinew.
Declaring himself ‘to be God,’
Henry is driven near mad with excitement. But his elation turns sour when the
creature exhibits the first signs of becoming violent and eventually escapes
from his dungeon chains. The monster, however, has been tortured by Fritz with
fire. On his own, he makes several attempts to befriend mankind – all of them
ending in tragedy. Finding Little Maria playing near the lake, the monster is
shown kindness and reciprocates it. Regrettably, the monster’s inability to
fathom death causes him to throw Maria into the waters before deducing she
cannot swim. The child drowns and the monster’s sheer terror over her loss is
heartbreaking. Discovering the body, Maria’s father raises a posse to hunt down
the creature. In the meantime, Henry is preparing for his wedding to Elizabeth.
But as Elizabeth awaits her bridegroom in her upstairs bedroom she is
terrorized by the creature, snuck in through a window. Her screams bring Henry
and Victor to her rescue. The creature stalks Henry to a nearby windmill,
Henry’s attempted escape seemingly thwarted when the town’s folk – torches and
pitchforks in hand – decide to set fire to the windmill, thus destroying the
monster, but also Henry in the process.
Ninety-two years after its
premiere, Frankenstein still packs a wallop. Part – if not all - of the
film’s genuinely understated beauty remains in Karloff’s central performance as
the monster - fearful, tragic and ultimately doomed to remain misunderstood and
unloved. From the moment the monster comes to life he is mistreated rather
appallingly by Henry and Fritz (Dwight Frye), who chain him in a dungeon and
terrorize with flames. Karloff’s ability to convey so many varied emotions
beneath the stifling amount of makeup affords the monster a level of
responsiveness the audience can immediately identify with and appreciate. The
first appearance of the creature is undeniably shocking. Karloff emerges from
the shadows with heavy brow, stitched scalp and neck bolts photographed in
extreme close-up. It’s enough to send even the bravest toppling from their
theater seats. But this initial fright is compounded by a subtler display of
the monster as mute wretch, the unwilling participant in a grand
social/scientific experiment gone wrong. Frankenstein endures as a
cinema masterpiece because of Karloff – billed as ‘the uncanny’ – an
unconventional and unlikely star who became something of the arbitrator of
freakish thrills throughout the 1930’s and 40’s.
Another 4K re-re-reissue from
Universal Home Video, Frankenstein yields a reference quality transfer
derived from original nitrate elements. Even minor imperfections have been
eradicated. The image exhibits phenomenal clarity, with superb rendering of
fine detail and excellent contrast. The inherent audio shortcomings are not
quite as pronounced on Frankenstein despite the fact it was shot the
same year as Dracula. Restored in DTS-HD 2.0 mono, Frankenstein’s
audio is an exemplary mastering of vintage sound elements. The clarity in these
monaural tracks made just a few scant years after the advent of sound-recording
technologies is, frankly, astounding. Extras abound: two independent commentaries
- one from Rudy Behlmer, the other from Christopher Frayling. Personally, I
preferred Frayling’s for its arc of cultural perspective. But both are
definitely worthy of your time. We also get the 45 min. DVD documentary ‘How
Hollywood Made A Monster’, a 38 min. biography on Karloff with fond
recollections from his daughter, the 1 ½ hr. documentary ‘Universal Horror’
hosted by Kenneth Branagh. This latter doc provides a fantastic retrospective
on the studio’s many monster franchises, Boo! - a short film from 1932, and,
another bumper crop of poster art, production stills and other archival photos,
monster tracks (trivia at a glance), trailers and an HD short on how Universal
undertook its restoration effort, round out the goodies. Bottom line: highly recommended, but only if
you do not already own this classic in 4K. Otherwise, there is nothing new
here.
FILM RATING (out
of 5 – 5 being the best)
4.5
VIDEO/AUDIO
4
EXTRAS
5+
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