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Mary Shelley's Frankenstein
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

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Actors: George Asprey, Alfred Bell, Helena Bonham Carter, Richard Briers, John Cleese
Studio: Sony Pictures
Category: DVD

Buy Used: $2.09



New (79) Used (73) Collectible (3) from $2.09

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 128 reviews
Sales Rank: 4446

Format: Ac-3, Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Subtitled, Ntsc
Languages: English (Original Language), French (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), Spanish (Dubbed)
Rating: R (Restricted)
Number Of Items: 1
Running Time: 123
Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1
DVD Layers: 1
DVD Sides: 2
Picture Format: Pan & Scan
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.1 x 0.6

MPN: COLD78719D
ISBN: 0767811097
UPC: 043396787193
EAN: 9780767811095
ASIN: 0767811097

Theatrical Release Date: November 4, 1994
Release Date: July 29, 1998
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: dvd has minor scuffs, case has slight wear.

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  • Interview with the Vampire

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Let's be honest: this should be titled Wretched Excess' Frankenstein. Swooping, wild, bloody, and energetic, this is bad moviemaking from the best, which makes it all the more lovable. Kenneth Branagh plays Victor Frankenstein, a man so obsessed with conquering death that he decides to create life. What he gets, after a protoplasmic mud wrestle, is a Mean Streets monster (Robert De Niro) that isn't particularly happy to be back from the dead or thrilled about all the stitches. Helena Bonham Carter may, at several points in this film, actually be channeling Ramtha. The supporting cast couldn't be peopled with better performers (Tom Hulce, John Cleese, Ian Holm) but they all look like they're ringside at some Ultimate Fighting competition. A must for any midnight movie collector for the shock factor alone. A hoot. --Keith Simanton

Product Description
When victor frankenstein rejects the artificial man he just created the monster escapes and later swears revenge Studio: Sony Pictures Home Ent Release Date: 04/22/2008 Starring: Robert Deniro Tom Hulce Run time: 123 minutes Rating: R Director: Kenneth Branagh


Customer Reviews:   Read 123 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Monster Mash   June 30, 2002
 55 out of 57 found this review helpful

Maybe I have deplorable tastes, but I liked Branagh's version of "Mary Shelley's Frankenstein." In fact, I watched it twice in a row just to make sure. Yep, despite the generally negative critical reviews of this film, I like this version of Shelley's immortal classic a lot.

What sold me on "Frankenstein" was the relative faithfulness to the spirit of the book. (I say relative, because bringing a novel to the screen involves some necessary alteration. The two media are different.)

Shelley's hastily-written tale pits Man and Science against God and Nature. Surprise, surprise, Man loses. Branagh is believable as the obsessed and arrogant Frankenstein who stops at nothing, risks everything to beat Death. Robert DiNiro is absolutely the most true Frankenstein's monster ever depicted on screen.

The scene where Frankenstein brings the monster to life is thrilling. The set looks right, the scheme of reanimation is brilliant. It's my favorite scene in the film.

There is a lot that is excessive and frankly over the top in the film, but to me that added to the Nineteenth Century feel and pacing. Romantic literature can be huge--because Romanticism exaggerates and dramatizes the heroic and tragic. This film captures that sensibility.

If you look at any of the other attempts to film Shelley's novel, you might agree with me that they don't come close to doing justice to the novel (for example, the old black and white film, which is not one of my favorites, and the more recent flop "The Bride".) This version comes very close, perhaps as close as a film can come to Shelley's masterpiece.


5 out of 5 stars A magnificent adaptation true to the vision of the novel   October 20, 2003
 29 out of 36 found this review helpful

Mary Shelley's Frankenstein is a masterful motion picture. While it does take a few liberties with Shelley's classic novel, it does a wonderful job of capturing the essence of the original story, specifically the humanity of the creature. While a little over-the-top at times and surprisingly gory, this film forcefully echoes Shelley's philosophical, moral, and ethical questions, and by so doing redefines the creature in its original image. What I have always found to be the most crucial scenes in the story are here displayed in all of their troubling glory, and perhaps it is the heightened intellectual nature of this film that explains why a surprisingly large number of people find disappointment where I find stimulating triumph. There are enough horror-laden scenes to capture the attention of the general horror lover, but the real substance of this story, for those who prefer their monster to serve as a complicated, amoral representation of man himself, is ambrosia for those who are more fascinated by the questions Frankenstein raises than by the horrors he unleashes.

The inspiration for young Victor Frankenstein's obsession with conquering death is delineated pretty clearly, given its most intense emotional charge by the death of his doting mother while giving birth to his little brother. His time at university is a little rushed, however, strangely incorporating the influence of a mentor whose work Victor vows to complete; where the older doctor halted his studies out of fear, Victor will push over the brink without hesitation. Victor's lab is a bit overdone, featuring all manner of miscellaneous gizmos, vials, and wossnames that look impressive with blue bolts of electricity (not generated by lightning, by the way) pulsing through them. The monster, as we first meet him, is less than impressive, and a prolonged scene of Victor water-wrestling a guy wearing a patently fake body suit inserts a little unfortunate levity into what should be a most serious scene. Victor's reaction to his creation is probably the weakest spot in an otherwise powerful film, as his sudden repudiation of everything he has ever worked for rings patently false.

It is with the entrance of the monster, however, that this film truly begins to shine. Mary Shelley's monster is not evil, nor is he a monster in the stereotypical sense by which he has come to be viewed by modern audiences. He is most definitely a victim and a creature deserving of much sympathy. Abandoned by his creator, his first interaction with mankind finds him fleeing a mob intent on hurting him for no reason apart from his ugliness. He takes shelter in a pigsty adjoined to a simple house in the country, and through a crack in the wall he not only learns to read and write, he gets to experience vicariously the joys and travails of family life. He becomes a guardian angel of sorts, secretly helping the family survive and prosper. At Christmas, in a truly touching scene, he finds a gift the family has left outside for their secret helper. One day, he gets a chance to actually interact with the blind old man of the house, sitting and conversing with another human for the first time in his wretched life, but all too quickly the family he had come to think of as his own, chases him away with blows and curses. If your heart does not break at the sight of the creature sobbing in the forest after this ultimate betrayal by mankind, you are the true monster. This whole scene is absolutely critical in terms of explaining who the monster is and why he does what he goes on to do, yet most film adaptations skip this scene entirely. Only now does the creature vow to seek revenge on the creator who abandoned him; only now has this ultimate victim become a monster in the form of amoral man.

The rest of the film is handled quite well, and Helena Bonham Carter is simply wonderful in her role as Victor's significant other. The ending goes beyond the scope of the original novel, and it does so in a strikingly grisly way, but the overall effect of this film is true to Shelley's original vision. Robert De Niro gives a particularly compelling performance as Frankenstein's monster, the look and feel of the late eighteenth-century setting is spot on, and the musical soundtrack complements the plot extraordinarily well. While I would prefer to see a movie strictly faithful to Shelley's novel, this exemplary albeit somewhat effusive adaptation hits the core messages of the story dead on and stands, in my opinion, as a truly impressive cinematic accomplishment.


4 out of 5 stars Film Does Novel Justice   June 10, 2003
 13 out of 16 found this review helpful

If you rent or buy this movie expecting to see a tall, big, green ugly monster with bolts on the side of his head that staggers around, then you might be disappointed. This is the real version of Frankenstien, which is based on the novel by Mary Shelley. I realize how hard it is to make a movie completely accurate to a book, but this film covers the crucial moments of the story while still keeping a good horror movie flavor intact.

What made this movie were the scenes with Frankenstein's monster lurking in the shadows of society, waiting for the right time to try to take a chance on being accepted despite who or what he is. We get to see the progression of an ugly and relatively innocent "creation" to the "fiend" he becomes when people show hatred towards him. The monster's rejection from civilization is one of the main premises of the story, making him the "monster" that he is, and this element of the tale is often left unexplained in other versions of Frankenstein (including the very popular 30s version).

I also thought the background of this movie and scenery where accurate for this film's story.The crew aboard the cold icy seas looking for a chance at a better existence. The confronation between Frankenstein and his creation in an cold, icy setting. Frankenstein's monster lurking in a forest, watching a typicial family in an attempt to comprehend how people and society operate. These settings highlight the dreariness and isolation that both Frankenstein and his creation feel.

In my opinion, this is one of the best horror movies out there. This movie deals with the wrongs that are created when one tries to "correct" a problem with technology. Kenneth Branaugh and Robert De Niro do excellent jobs in this depiction of the Frankenstein story. An overall very good horror movie that I recommend for anyone.


5 out of 5 stars Outstanding Version Of The Immortal Tale   June 18, 2006
 11 out of 11 found this review helpful

Both one of the most horror-oriented and one of the most thought-provoking versions of the often-filmed tale, "Mary Shelley's Frankenstein" brings together a great cast - spearheaded by Robert DeNiro as the Monster and Kenneth Brannagh as Victor Von Frankenstein - for a big, epic production. It features stunning visual imagery and grand atmosphere, and some truly haunting quotes from the Monster. The Monster is perhaps the best developed here of all his screen appearances, a brilliant and sensitive soul being consumed by the rage and darkness inside his artificial being. Rarely has the picture of a monster's brutality being shaped by the world it's found itself thrust into been handled so brilliantly, and the overall attributes of the creature this brutality grows in - superhuman strength, a slowly emerging genius intellect, powerful emotions the creature has never had the chance to learn to control (having been 'born' fully grown), unnatural resistance to injury and heightened endurance, etc. - makes for a frightening force. Victor Von Frankenstein's portrayal is not one of a man who conciously chose to ignore the moral considerations and responsibilities of what he's doing, but a man upon whom such concerns simply never dawned for a second, until he's face to face with the consequences of his actions and it's too late for second thoughts. This has been said of the Frankenstein tale time and time again, but it continues to hold up: this story gets more eerily relevant to the modern world with each passing year.

It's among the career highlights for everyone involved, and with not only heavyweights DeNiro and Brannagh onboard but also such excellent talent as Helena Bonham Carter, John Cleese (in a rare non-comedic role), Francis Ford Coppola and Frank Darabont (director of "The Green Mile" and "Buried Alive", among others), that's saying a lot. Excellnt movie; one of 1994's best



5 out of 5 stars Faithful and frightening   October 12, 2004
 10 out of 11 found this review helpful

Frankenstein is one of my all time favorite novels. Everytime I see it in the bookstore, I feel compelled to buy it again. I currently own more than half a dozen copies. This film version is very faithful to the original story. That is what makes this version so good. The tale itself is masterfully told, being equally disturbing, terrifying, and heartbreaking. This adaptation is passionately told, and worthy of having the name of the great Mary Shelley in the title.

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