![]()
| ||||||||||
|
[proceeds go toward monthly MRFH upkeep] |





| reviews |
|
I didn't fully appreciate the love and following this movie has! I'm pretty familiar with some of Mel Brooks' modern works (Spaceballs in particular has a place of honour in my home), but somehow I have just never been enough of a Gene Wilder fan to want to see a spoof version of the tale of Doctor Frankenstein. Well, I've thankfully since been able to transfer it to "Movies I Have Seen" from "Movies I Have Not Seen, Which Is Indisputible Proof That I Don't Know Good Film, I'm Such A Fool", but I'm not a card carrying diehard fan for it. It's just fun. Young Frankenstein is the tale of the frustratedly famous grandson of the original Dr Frankenstein. Our hero, Dr Frederick "Fronkensteen" (as he emphatically pronounces it) goes to Transylvania following the death of the old Doctor to settle affairs. While there, he stumbles upon Granddad's old lab, and sure enough, takes on the old man's work of reanimating dead tissue to life. A mistaken brain installation later, Frankenstein's monster is rumbling around just like old times, the local villagers get their torches and pitchforks out, and everyone starts tap dancing. Mel Brooks' affinity for farce goes back a long way (back in 1974, this was just his fourth directorial effort), and it really is fun to watch such a satirical take on the whole Frankenstein tale. Elements Brooks fans would later come to recognize as standard issue are all over the place here, with funny off camera sound effects, well endowed women, odd sidekicks, lots of one liners, and a generally mocking/worshipping sense of the source material. It's somewhat toned down from such fare as Spaceballs and Robin Hood: Men in Tights, but it's still pretty funny. Still, I don't know why this movie's got the following it does... maybe it's just being steeped in tradition as a must-see Halloween movie (saw it Halloween night myself, which was definitely the right time for it). It's light and fun, with just a touch of naughty for heck of it, best enjoyed in the warm glow of a Jack O' Lantern. |
| extras |
|
Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
The film was shot in the same castle and with the same props and lab equipment as the original Frankenstein. The Blind Man's line "I was gonna make espresso" was not in the script, but was ad-libbed by Gene Hackman during shooting. The horse neigh used whenever Frau Blücher's name was spoken has been misinterpreted by fans for years. "Blücher" is German for glue, and since some glues are made from horses, audiences thought that the neigh was an adverse reaction to hearing "Blücher". The reason we hear the horse neigh is a parody of the dramatic chord which is played in other scary movies during a dramatic moment or when they announce someone's name. Instead of music, it's a horse's neigh. Official and Not-So-Official Websites
Dr. Frankenstein: What was that? Igor: "What the hell are you doing in the bathroom all day and night? Why don't you get out of there and give someone else a chance?"
Dr. Frankenstein: Igor, would you give me a hand with the bags?
[in front of the huge castle doors, complete with large brass rings]
[digging up a body in the graveyard]
Dr. Frankenstein: Hearts and kidneys are tinkertoys! I'm talking about the central nervous system!
Frankenstein: Igor, would you mind telling me whose brain I did put in?
Frankenstein: Damn your eyes!
Frankenstein: For the experiment to be a success, all of the body parts must be enlarged.
The Blindman: Wait! Where are you going? I was going to make Espresso!
Frankenstein: Eyegor!
If you liked this movie, try these:
Feedback
|