Lady Frankenstein

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Lady Frankenstein
File:L Frankenstein.jpg
Directed by Mel Welles
Aureliano Luppi
Produced by Umberto Borsato
Hurbert Case
Gioele Centanni
Harry Cushing
Egidio Gelso
Jules Kenton
Mel Welles
Written by Umberto Borsato
Edward Di Lorenzo
Egidio Gelso
Aureliano Luppi
Dick Randall
Mary Shelley
Mel Welles
Starring Joseph Cotten
Rosalba Neri
Music by Alessandro Alessandroni
Cinematography Riccardo Pallottini
Edited by Cleofe Conversi
Distributed by New World Pictures
Release dates
October 22, 1971
Running time
99 mins
Country Italy
Language English
Budget under $200,000[1]

Lady Frankenstein (Italian: La Figlia di Frankenstein) is a 1971 Italian horror film directed by Mel Welles. It stars Joseph Cotten, Rosalba Neri (under the pseudonym Sara Bey), Mickey Hargitay and Paul Müller. The script was written by cult writer Edward di Lorenzo.

Plot

The films opens with a trio of grave robbers (led by a man named Lynch) delivering a corpse to Baron Frankenstein (Cotten) and his assistant Dr. Marshall (Müller), for obvious reanimation purposes.

Baron Frankenstein's daughter Tania (Neri/Bay) arrives from school, having completed her studies in medicine, and is greeted by her father and his servant, the handsome but mildly retarded Thomas. Tania reveals to her father that she has always understood his work with "animal transplants" to be a cover for his work reanimating corpses, and that she intends to follow in his footsteps and help him in his work.

The next day, Frankenstein, Tania, and Marshall witness the execution of a criminal who is hanged down a well, and it is implied that his body will be harvested for their experimentation. Law enforcement agent Captain Harris (Hargitay) arrives to harass Lynch at the hanging. Harris claims to be on to Lynch's grave robbing.

That evening, having harvested salient body parts, Frankenstein and Marshall successfully reanimate a corpse (The Monster) as Tania secretly watches. The Monster, however, bear-hugs Frankenstein to death almost instantly, then walks out of the castle. Tania and Marshall report the murder to Harris, but claim that it was a burglar.

Meanwhile, the narrative is interspersed with shots of the Monster roaming the countryside killing locals, including Lynch.

Tania then goads Marshall into admitting harboring romantic feelings for her. She responds to his affections, but says that while Marshall's body is old, she finds the body of Thomas young and attractive. The "solution" to this situation will be to transplant Marshall's brain into Thomas's body. To accomplish this, Tania seduces Thomas, and Marshall kills him with a pillow during their lovemaking.

Tania then transplants Marshall's brain into Thomas's body. The local villagers, however, have had enough and arrive to destroy the castle, replete with torches and pitchforks and by setting the castle on fire. In the chaos, the Monster arrives and has a fight against Marshall/Thomas and Tania. The Monster is defeated, but Tania's allegiance during the fight is highly suspect.

Harris arrives with Thomas's sister to see Tania and Marshall/Thomas enjoying post-fight sexual intercourse. However, during their lovemaking, Marshall/Thomas strangles Tania to death as the fire consumes them, and the film ends.

Cast

  • Rosalba Neri as Tania Frankenstein (credited as Sara Bay)
  • Joseph Cotten as Baron Frankenstein
  • Paul Muller as Dr. Charles Marshall
  • Peter Whiteman as The Creature
  • Herbert Fux as Tom Lynch, the graverobber
  • Mickey Hargitay as Captain Harris
  • Lorenzo Terzon as Harris' assistant (credited as Lawrence Tilden)
  • Marino Masé as Thomas Stack (uncredited), the mildly retarded servant
  • Renate Kasché, as Julia Stack (credited as Renata Cash), Thomas' Sister

Production

The film was largely financed through Harry Cushing, but just prior to the start of filming a letter of credit from a film company was not accepted by the Italian banks. The final last-minute $90,000 needed to make the film was obtained from Roger Corman's New World Pictures.[2] The suggestion of Rosalba Neri for the lead role was from one of the financers of the film.[2]

The Frankenstein canon

The film is often compared with the Frankenstein cycle made by the Hammer Studios (1957–72), and may also have been an influence on Paul Morrissey's controversial Flesh for Frankenstein (1973).

Feminism

Some have posited that Di Lorenzo intended that this film should present a feminist slant to the mad scientist genre.[3]

See also

References

  1. Koetting, Christopher T. (2009). Mind Warp!: The Fantastic True Story of Roger Corman's New World Pictures, Hemlock Books. p. 33.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links and resources