Review House of Frankenstein (1944)

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
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Your thoughts on this movie......

An evil scientist and his hunchbacked assistant escape from prison and encounter Dracula, the Wolf Man and Frankenstein's Monster.






On to the next DRACULA, FRANKENSTEIN and WOLF MAN movie.......

HOUSE OF DRACULA.....

https://www.imdforums.com/threads/house-of-dracula-1945.2102/



Back to the previous FRANKENSTEIN and WOLF MAN movie.....

FRANKENSTEIN MEETS THE WOLFMAN......

https://www.imdforums.com/threads/frankenstein-meets-the-wolf-man-1943.927/#post-6333



Back to the previous DRACULA movie.....

SON OF DRACULA.......

https://www.imdforums.com/threads/son-of-dracula-1943.3789/
 
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chainsaw_metal1

Member: Rank 8
This is one of those films that is remembered more highly than it probably should be. It's not terrible in any way, but it's not a good movie. The promise of a multi-monster story is grossly exaggerated. We get acting legend John Carradine taking over as Dracula, giving us a completely different take on the character, but heinously underused, and effectively participating in a separate storyline, until his untimely demise. Karloff is wonderful as always, this time playing the mad scientist who escapes from prison to continue the work of Dr. Frankenstein, with his hunchbacked assistant, the closest we get to the legendary Hunchback. Lon Chaney, Jr. is back as Lyle Talbot, the Wolf Man, who wants Karloff's doctor (and saying that, how great would it have been to have seen Karloff as The Doctor, flying the TARDIS) to cure his lycanthropy. And Strange does a good job as the Creature, if he is merely shambling around and breaking things.

This movie is still one I love to watch, and enjoy thoroughly. But it's more ambitious than executed. It would have been so great to see all of the great Universal monsters in one film and have it a coherent story with everyone getting a decent story. Alas, it just ended up being a fun film with little substance.
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
how great would it have been to have seen Karloff as The Doctor, flying the TARDIS

At one point, that was in the offing....

You just wouldn't have seen him though, as it would have been on radio....


http://www.cultbox.co.uk/features/lists/actors-who-nearly-played-doctor-who


Boris Karloff as The Radio Doctor


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Moving away from the official Doctors, back in 1965 the BBC put the wheels in motion for a Doctor Who radio serial, recording a pilot titled ‘Journey Into Time’ set largely during the American Revolution. So the question of the hour was who could be the Doctor.

A UK resident for much of his retirement; horror movie legend and many people’s definitive Frankenstein’s Monster Boris Karloff was approached by the BBC but declined the role, which was eventually filled by Peter Cushing. Had Karloff accepted the part; he would have remained the oldest Doctor to this day, being seventy-eight years old when the pilot was recorded.

No full radio series starring Peter Cushing was ever made and, like so much of 1960s Doctor Who, the recordings of the pilot are lost in time. The jury’s out on whether or not the Doctor threw the episode into a supernova because he disagreed with it.
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
Early drafts of the story reportedly involved more characters from the Universal stable, including the Mummy, the Ape Woman, the Mad Ghoul, and possibly the Invisible Man.

Working titles—which included Chamber of Horrors (a reference to Lampini's travelling horror show) and The Devil's Brood—emphasized the multi-monster nature of the story.

The multi-monster approach, which emphasized box office appeal over continuity, was used in House of Dracula the following year and later in Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein.

House of Frankenstein
marked Glenn Strange's debut as the monster.

Strange, a former cowboy, had been a minor supporting player in dozens of low-budget Westerns over the preceding 15 years.

He reprised the role in House of Dracula and Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein, and cemented the popular image of the monster as shambling, clumsy, and inarticulate.

Boris Karloff, who had moved on from playing the monster to playing the mad scientist, reportedly coached Strange on how to play the role.

The scream that accompanies Daniel's fall from the roof is actually the voice of Karloff, recycled from the scene in Son of Frankenstein where the monster howls in anguish at finding Ygor dead.

The face on the monster dummy used in the ice and laboratory scenes was a mask of Lon Chaney Jr., who had played the monster himself in The Ghost of Frankenstein.

Strange did his own stunt work on the film, notably in the climax where he flees across a field of burning grass and sinks into a pool of quicksand.

The grass was actually tumbleweeds, which nearly scorched him when they burned more quickly than expected.

Stuntman Cary Loftin doubled for Boris Karloff in the fire scenes, but Karloff returned for the final scene in the quicksand.

Some continuity errors are evident in the finished film.

After Dracula is thrown from the carriage, he looks over to where his coffin has landed; in a close-up, part of his mustache is gone.

Also, when Talbot transforms into the Wolf Man for the final time, his hands lack fur.

Karloff's performance in this film is his last in Universal's classic horror cycle.


Reception
A. H. Weiler of The New York Times compared the film's collection of monsters to "a baseball team with nine Babe Ruths, only this grisly congress doesn't hit hard; it merely has speed and a change of pace. As such, then, it is bound to garner as many chuckles as it does chills. However, lampoon or no, put this item down as a bargain for the bogie hunters."


Variety called it "a solid entry for the attention of the horror addicts" and called Naish "particularly well cast".

Harrison's Reports called it "only a mild horror picture, more ludicrous than terrifying. The whole thing is a rehash of the fantastic doings of these characters in previous pictures and, since they do exactly what is expected of them, the spectator is neither shocked nor chilled."
 

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
Glenn Strange Biography


Glenn Strange star of The Black Raven (August 16, 1899-September 20, 1973) Glenn Strange was born in Weed, New Mexico and grew up in Cross-Cut, Texas. Before becoming and actor he held many jobs including rancher,rodeo performer, and singer. His big break came when he and fellow "Arizona Wranglers" singing group member began getting bit parts as singing cowboys in western movies in the 1930s. He appeared in hundreds of films, usually as a henchman, sidekick, or monster. He was best know for his role as Sam Noonan in the hit TV show "Gunsmoke".


 
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