Jump to content

Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed
Theatrical release poster by Tom Chantrell
Directed byTerence Fisher
Screenplay byBert Batt
Story byAnthony Nelson Keys
Bert Batt
Based onVictor Frankenstein
by Mary Shelley
Produced byAnthony Nelson Keys
StarringPeter Cushing
Simon Ward
Veronica Carlson
Freddie Jones
CinematographyArthur Grant
Edited byGordon Hales
Music byJames Bernard
Production
company
Distributed byWarner-Pathé Distributors (United Kingdom)
Warner Bros.-Seven Arts (United States)
Release dates
  • May 22, 1969 (1969-05-22) (UK)
  • February 11, 1970 (1970-02-11)
Running time
98 minutes (UK)
101 minutes (U.S.)
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Box office586,439 admissions (France)[1]

Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed is a 1969 British horror film directed by Terence Fisher for Hammer Films, starring Peter Cushing, Freddie Jones, Veronica Carlson and Simon Ward.[2][3] The film is the fifth in a series of Hammer films focusing on Baron Frankenstein, who, in this entry, terrorises those around him in a bid to uncover the secrets of a former associate confined to a lunatic asylum.

It marked the final movie by Warner Bros.-Seven Arts to be released under Warner Bros. when the company was acquired by Kinney National Company.

Plot

[edit]

A doctor is decapitated by a masked man while a thief breaks into an underground lab. The masked man enters the lab, carrying the severed head, and fights the thief, who escapes in horror. The man unmasks himself and is revealed to be Baron Victor Frankenstein. The thief goes to the police station to report the severed head to Inspector Frisch. Victor, under the alias Mr Fenner, rents a room at a boarding house run by landlady Anna Spengler. Anna's fiancé Karl Holst is a doctor at the asylum where Victor's former assistant, Dr Frederick Brandt, was committed after going insane.

After discovering Karl has been stealing narcotics in order to support Anna's ailing mother, Victor reveals his true identity and blackmails Karl into helping him kidnap Brandt so he can get the secret formula of his experiment. While stealing equipment from a warehouse for Victor's new lab, Karl and the Baron are caught by the guard. Karl panics and stabs him. Victor, now with a further hold on Karl, uses him and Anna to kidnap Brandt. They take him back to the house and build a lab in the basement. Karl confides to Anna about killing the guard and begs her to leave, fearing she may go to prison for being an accessory to a murderer, but she refuses.

Meanwhile, Brandt has a heart attack, prompting Victor and Karl to kidnap the asylum's administrator, Professor Richter, to transplant Brandt's brain into his body. That night, while Anna is getting ready for bed, Victor enters her room and rapes her. The next day, Victor and Karl succeed in transplanting Brandt's brain into Richter's body and bury Brandt's body in the garden. Brandt's wife Ella recognises Victor in the street and confronts him about her husband's kidnapping. Victor assures her he has cured her husband's mental illness but does not let her see him. She refuses to believe him and goes to Frisch.

While the creature recovers, Victor and the lovers relocate to a deserted manor house when the police begin to close in. In the lab, the creature awakes and is horrified by his appearance. He scares Anna, who stabs him, causing him to escape. Victor returns and finds the creature gone. In a rage, he fatally stabs Anna and goes after the creature. The creature makes it to his former home, but his wife refuses to accept him as her husband. Wanting revenge on Victor and knowing the Baron will eventually track him there, he allows his wife to go free and pours paraffin around the house.

Victor soon arrives, with Karl following. Inside the house, the creature makes fires to trap him. Victor finds the papers of discovery and flees, but is ambushed by Karl, and they fight. The creature emerges, knocks Karl out and carries a screaming Victor into the burning house, where they both presumably die.

Cast

[edit]

Production

[edit]

The scene where Frankenstein rapes Anna was filmed over the objections of both Peter Cushing and Veronica Carlson, and director Terence Fisher, who halted it when he felt enough was enough.[4] It was not in the original script, but the scene was added at the insistence of Hammer executive James Carreras, who was under pressure to keep the American distributors happy.[4]

The scenes featuring Thorley Walters as Inspector Frisch were also late additions to the original script; they have been described as unnecessary, adding an unwelcome element of comedy into the suspenseful story and also making the film too long.[5][6][7]

Welsh version

[edit]

In 1978, the Welsh television station HTV Cymru/Wales broadcast a version dubbed into the Welsh language called Rhaid Dinistrio Frankenstein, a more-or-less literal translation of the English title. It was rebroadcast on the new Welsh language channel S4C on its launch in 1982.[8]

Reception

[edit]

Variety called the film "a good-enough example of its low-key type, with artwork rather better than usual (less obvious backcloths, etc.) a minimum of artless dialogue, good lensing by Arthur Grant and a solid all round cast."[9]

The Monthly Film Bulletin called it "the most spirited Hammer horror in some time. The crudities still remain, of course, but the talk of transplants and drugs seem to have injected new life into the continuing story of Baron Frankenstein."[10]

The Radio Times Guide to Films gave the film 3/5 stars, writing that the film: "is graced by an incisive performance from Peter Cushing, up to his old tricks as the Baron performing brain transplants. Freddie Jones is astonishing as the anguished victim of the transplant, whose wife fails to recognise him and rejects him, prompting a revenge plan. The gothic gore is once more directed with spirited skill and economy by Terence Fisher (his fourth in the series)."[11]

Leslie Halliwell said: "Spirited but decidely unpleasant addition to the cycle, made more so by a genuine note of pathos."[12]

Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed currently holds an average 70% on Rotten Tomatoes.[13]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Box office information for Terence Fisher films in France at Box office Story
  2. ^ "Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed". British Film Institute Collections Search. Retrieved 25 June 2024.
  3. ^ "Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed | BFI | BFI". Explore.bfi.org.uk. Archived from the original on 4 August 2012. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  4. ^ a b Hallenbeck, Bruce G. (2013). The Hammer Frankenstein: British Cult Cinema. Parkville, Maryland: Midnight Marquee Press. pp. 167, 170. ISBN 978-1936168330.
  5. ^ "Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed - Terence Fisher, Peter Cushing, Hammer Studios 1969". Members.aon.at. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  6. ^ "Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed (1969) - Trivia". TCM.com. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  7. ^ "Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed 1969 | Britmovie | Home of British Films". Britmovie. Archived from the original on 13 April 2014. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  8. ^ "Frankenstein Film Dubbed In Welsh". Sarasota Herald-Tribune. Associated Press. 14 September 1978. Retrieved 24 January 2017.
  9. ^ "Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed". Variety: 40. 11 June 1969.
  10. ^ "Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed". The Monthly Film Bulletin. 36 (426): 146. July 1969.
  11. ^ Radio Times Guide to Films (18th ed.). London: Immediate Media Company. 2017. p. 342. ISBN 9780992936440.
  12. ^ Halliwell, Leslie (1989). Halliwell's Film Guide (7th ed.). London: Paladin. p. 375. ISBN 0586088946.
  13. ^ "Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
[edit]