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Son of Frankenstein / The Ghost of Frankenstein

Son of Frankenstein / The Ghost of Frankenstein

List Price: $29.98
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Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: ONLY BORIS
Review: "SON OF FRANKENSTEIN" Last one for Boris Karloff as The Monster and as good as it gets!! Basil is great, the little boy wont annoy you , the scenes are works of art. The story is great..c'mon do you need any coaxing to own "SON OF FRANKENSTEIN"? GET IT!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: ONLY BORIS
Review: "SON OF FRANKENSTEIN" Last one for Boris Karloff as The Monster and as good as it gets!! Basil is great, the little boy wont annoy you , the scenes are works of art. The story is great..c'mon do you need any coaxing to own "SON OF FRANKENSTEIN"? GET IT!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: lugosi's best performance
Review: forget his dracula. his ygor is a wonderfully nuanced performance. this film, above all, proved how wonderful an actor he truly was. too bad he was never again given as rich an opportunity.
as for the rest of the film; atwill gives a delightfully sardonic performance, karloff has a single decent scene, rathbone over acts terribly and we all that want kid to die. oh, and it has great sets.
p.s.
forget the ghost of.
now, if universal would release the greatest karloff-lugosi teaming, the wonderfully perverse ' the black cat' on dvd. i won't hold my breath.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Universal Classics
Review: I have been a fan of the Universal monsters for as long as I can remember. These movies give us a chance to see some of the greatest actors of the Universal horror era (e.g., Boris Karloff, Bela Lugosi, Lon Chaney Jr., Lionel Atwill, Sir Cedwick Harwicke to mention a few.)

In the Son of Frankenstein (sequel to Bride of Frankenstein), we see Karloff's last performance as the Frankenstein monster but as in Frankenstein and Bride of, he gives a great performance. I wonder how the series may have been if Karloff had continued in the monster's role. Basil Rathbone is the son trying to vindicate his father's name, but Ygor, played by Bela Lugosi, has other plans.

In the Ghost of Frankenstein (sequel to Son of Frankenstein), Lon Chaney Jr. plays the Frankenstein monster and Bela Lugosi again plays Ygor and both are superb in their roles. It picks up where the Frankenstein monster is discovered in the sulphur pits. Sir Cedric Harwicke wants to dissect the monster but is convince by his father's ghost to continue with his work. The sequel is Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man.

It is fanatic to have these movies on DVD.

Try watching these movies on a late stormy night.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Obsessed!
Review: I have owned these films on video for years and occasionally pop them in the VCR to revisit my childhood. I grew up watching these movies and consider them a staple of my childhood. It is nice to own them on DVD because, as we all know, videos can get worn over the years. The picture clarity on the double-feature DVD is a giant step above the video renditions. A lot of the junk on the screen in the video version of Son is cleaned up, but the picture is darker. Overall, the transitions are very good, with the exception of a slight cut in Son. In the part when Basil Rathbone learns from his young son that he was visited by a "giant," the good doctor runs to his laboratory looking for evidence of the monster or Ygor. He goes to the tomb where his father and grandfather are buried during his search and finds nothing. The slight cut occurs when Rathbone climbs up a ladder from the tomb back into the lab. There's not much missing, we just don't see him crawlng through the floor. In the video version, we do see Rathbone climbing onto the floor. I know this is a minor concern, but it doesn't make sense why this is missing when it exists on the video version. Asfor Ghost, it has never looked better.There's something special about the Universal horror films of the 30s and 40s that I believe will endure throughout the 21st century. Regarding these two gems, Bela Lugosi's role as Ygor is unquestionably his finest performance, even more so than Dracula. He dominates both films. I'm certain that if Universal would have kept his dialogue in Frankensten Meets the Wolfman, his performance would have dominated that film, as well. I plan on getting that film on DVD - which is coupled with House of Frankenstein - but I understand it doesn't contain any new scenes where the monster speaks. For those who don't understand what I'm talking about, at the end of The Ghost of Frankenstein, Ygor's brain is placed inside the skull of the monster, played by Lon Chaney Jr., where it continues to function - dangerously. In fact, the monster speaks with Ygor's voice. In the sequel to that film, Frankenstein Meets the Wolfman, Lugosi plays the monster, but comes off as a moronic goon. The reason for this is because Universal heads found the monster's lines unacceptable and had them removed from the film before it was released. During a sneak preview of the film, it is said audience members laughed so much when the monster began relating his story to Lon Chaney it forced the studio's upper brass to cut the dialogue all together. The deleted dialogue and some scenes were never restored to the film. I wonder if the scenes still exist? If they do, it's curious why Universal has never presented a restored version of the film. I bet it would be spectacular. Universal has restored the original Frankenstein film with some deleted dialogue and the controversial scene where the monster throws the little girl into the lake, so I don't think it's outside the realm of possibilities to restore Lugosi's lost footage to Frankenstein Meets the Wolfman.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Last in classic line of Universal horror hits
Review: Like most sequels Son of Frankenstein stands or falls based on the script and direction. Luckily both are top flight in Rowland Lee's third installment of the Monster's saga. Karloff's last performance as the Monster isn't as powerful as Bride (he's given less to do here). Bela Lugosi manages to chew the scenery as Igor and make up for Karloff's dimished role in the film. Basil Rathbone makes a jittery, nervous Frankenstein carefully carrying on the tradition of actor Colin Clive.

Although the film lacks much of James Whale's wit, the stunning photography, lighting and sets help to offset the general straight forward approach of the film. Although a bit weaker than the previous film (Bride remains the benchmark for all Universal horror films), Son of Frankenstein has its moments and stands as the last strong Universal horror in this series.

Oh, and I love the wool pullover the Monster wears. Didn't catch on as a fashion trend.

Ghost of Frankenstein is little more than a pale imitation of Son. It has its moments. Contrary to the amazon.com review, Lon Chaney,Jnr. gives a good performance for as the Monster; he just isn't given much to do. By this fourth installment the Monster became little more than a prop grafted onto the plot with all the skill of Dr. Frakenstein himself.

The Monster mysterious returns to his old clothes and pre-Bride ways. Lugosi gives another larger than life performance. Lionell Atwill deserves kudos for an interesting performance.

The absurd but fun twist ending made a fitting end to this series. Yes, I know that there were four more films in the series. There shouldn't have been.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great films, great prints, annoying authoring
Review: Little need be said here to convince you to buy this disc if you grew up watching these on TV horror shows like I did (and assembling the model kits, buying the mags, they were called mags then, etc.) If you're new to the Universal classics all I can say is what are you waiting for? Universal is thankfully giving us the lesser titles as two-fors, so it really makes buying them just about irresistable. OK, so Son and Ghost are on the downhill slide after the peak of Bride, but still far more entertaining and well-made (particularly Son) than what typically passes for a movie now. And if you're a fan of Young Frankenstein, Son is an absolute must-see. You can find out all about the movies a million other places so I'm talking about the DVD.
First, the good news. The prints look spectacular, even better than those used on the previous VHS editions. I don't know if it's just the increased resolution of DVD or if they did some additional work on the prints, but they are so much richer and detailed than the pre-records it's just stunning. Not to mention that my VHS copy of Son in particular is riddled with dropouts.
The extras are minimal, including chapter stops, talent bios, and a trailer for Ghost (Son's trailer is mysteriously missing). What annoys me about this DVD though, and keeps it from a five star review, is the irritating and self-serving way Universal has structured the disc. What I mean is that, besides the obligatory WARNING screen that we're now all forced to sit through when we pop in a DVD, on this disc when you press the onscreen "Play the Movie" button, you're also forced to sit through over a minute of Universal's marketing twaddle before the actual movie starts. OK, you can click through it to the opening titles or you can go straight into the movie from the chapter stops screen (an easy enough workaround once you figure it out) but it's still mildly annoying how they constantly try to shove this marketing crap in your face. Don't let this minor gripe stop you from buying, it's just a drag 'cause this disc would be near-perfect otherwise. I am waiting expectantly for all the rest of them. Monolith Monsters on DVD! I can dream can't I?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Exit Boris Karloff, enter Lon Chaney, Jr.
Review: My view of these two films runs counter to that of many Frankenstein fans. I found Son of Frankenstein rather disappointing, while Ghost of Frankenstein actually rather impressed me. I wasn't that impressed with Bela Lugosi's character Ygor in the first film but warmed up to him quite well in the second (this is not to say Bela Lugosi did not do a superb job in both - I just didn't think the character of Ygor worthy of him in Son of Frankenstein). I also found the performance of Lon Chaney, Jr., as the monster in Ghost of Frankenstein more engaging than that of Boris Karloff in Son of Frankenstein - while Karloff will always be the definitive monster, his character really had little opportunity to shine in the last of his three Frankenstein films.

Son of Frankenstein has its charms, but what I see here is the beginning of the stereotypical monster. Sure, he has a couple of somewhat emotional scenes, but all such emotions are turned into hatred and manifested in a desire to kill and destroy. This film does have a saving grace, however, in the form of Lionel Atwill, who steals the show time and again as Inspector Krogh. Basil Rathbone starts out quite swimmingly as Baron Wolf von Frankenstein, but the mania that overtakes him in the second half of the film just doesn't ring true to me, especially when the man's sudden desire to justify his father's work takes precedence over the safety of his own wife and child.

Some twenty-five years have passed since the events chronicled in Bride of Frankenstein. Baron Wolf von Frankenstein (Rathbone) has now returned to the family castle, with wife and little boy in tow. The old castle isn't exactly empty, for Ygor of broken-neck fame (Lugosi) has made a place for himself there. The son can hardly wait to see his father's old laboratory - and whom should we find in an underground crypt but the monster (Karloff) himself. He's not quite himself these days, but young Frankenstein immediately sets to work reviving the monster in an attempt to vindicate the family name. Unfortunately, Ygor commands the monster to do his own bidding. When a number of individuals are found murdered in the village, suspicion naturally falls on the house of Frankenstein. Enter Inspector Krogh (Atwill) and his ridiculous yet entertaining artificial arm; without this fascinating character, Son of Frankenstein would be a wholly forgettable movie.

With no lines and few chances to express any real emotion other than murderous fury, Karloff's monster is a shadow of its former self. Even the makeup job appears second-rate and less than imposing. Frankly, I'm really unsure what so many others see in this movie. All it did was turn Frankenstein into a big dumb monster that would be forced to stumble and bumble its way through one film after another for decades to come. It's impossible to feel much sympathy for him in this context, and I eventually found myself hoping they would just kill the monster already and get the film over and done with.

Much to my surprise, I actually enjoyed Ghost of Frankenstein much more than Son of Frankenstein. There's no denying that Lon Chaney, Jr., who took up the role of the creature, pales in comparison with Boris Karloff, but I actually found the monster more sympathetic this time around. You won't see the type of pathos and innocence that Karloff brought to the role, yet Chaney subtly shows a human side to the creature on a couple of occasions (and, to be frank, the script didn't allow him much room to maneuver).

This film could easily have been called The Other Son of Frankenstein. Ygor (Bela Lugosi) despite being shot numerous times by Baron Wolf von Frankenstein in the last film, still lives; in the course of fleeing the villager-besieged castle, he finds his good, monstrous friend (whom we last saw sinking into a pit of boiling sulphur) and decides to take him to the other Frankenstein brother. Ludwig (Sir Cedric Hardwicke), is none too happy to see Ygor or to deal with the creature he believed had finally been killed, yet rather than destroy the monster, he decides to give him a new brain. In this way, he believes, he can resurrect his father's shattered reputation and renew the good name of Frankenstein.

I must say I loved Hardwicke's performance. Ludwig is a serious fellow who never slips into the madness that claimed his father and brother; his desires to substantiate his infamous father's work and to restore the family name are the driving forces behind his decision-making. Everything might have turned out all right, too, if it weren't for Ludwig's assistant Dr. Bohmer (Atwill). It is in the pool of Bohmer's bitterness that the ever-resourceful Ygor finds the leverage he needs to pull one over on Dr. Frankenstein. Ygor, you see, wants his own brain transplanted into the creature's body.

In Ghost of Frankenstein, I found Ygor to be a much more engaging fellow. I still don't believe it is one of Lugosi's better characters, but clearly Lugosi contributed a great deal to the overall success of this movie. Is Ghost of Frankenstein as impressive a film as the first two Frankenstein films? Hardly. It is, though - at least in my opinion - a much better film than Son of Frankenstein. Chaney turns in a very solid performance as the creature; while not in the same league as Boris Karloff, he deserves much credit for his contributions to the evolving Frankenstein storyline.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Exit Boris Karloff, enter Lon Chaney, Jr.
Review: My view of these two films runs counter to that of many Frankenstein fans. I found Son of Frankenstein rather disappointing, while Ghost of Frankenstein actually rather impressed me. I wasn't that impressed with Bela Lugosi's character Ygor in the first film but warmed up to him quite well in the second (this is not to say Bela Lugosi did not do a superb job in both - I just didn't think the character of Ygor worthy of him in Son of Frankenstein). I also found the performance of Lon Chaney, Jr., as the monster in Ghost of Frankenstein more engaging than that of Boris Karloff in Son of Frankenstein - while Karloff will always be the definitive monster, his character really had little opportunity to shine in the last of his three Frankenstein films.

Son of Frankenstein has its charms, but what I see here is the beginning of the stereotypical monster. Sure, he has a couple of somewhat emotional scenes, but all such emotions are turned into hatred and manifested in a desire to kill and destroy. This film does have a saving grace, however, in the form of Lionel Atwill, who steals the show time and again as Inspector Krogh. Basil Rathbone starts out quite swimmingly as Baron Wolf von Frankenstein, but the mania that overtakes him in the second half of the film just doesn't ring true to me, especially when the man's sudden desire to justify his father's work takes precedence over the safety of his own wife and child.

Some twenty-five years have passed since the events chronicled in Bride of Frankenstein. Baron Wolf von Frankenstein (Rathbone) has now returned to the family castle, with wife and little boy in tow. The old castle isn't exactly empty, for Ygor of broken-neck fame (Lugosi) has made a place for himself there. The son can hardly wait to see his father's old laboratory - and whom should we find in an underground crypt but the monster (Karloff) himself. He's not quite himself these days, but young Frankenstein immediately sets to work reviving the monster in an attempt to vindicate the family name. Unfortunately, Ygor commands the monster to do his own bidding. When a number of individuals are found murdered in the village, suspicion naturally falls on the house of Frankenstein. Enter Inspector Krogh (Atwill) and his ridiculous yet entertaining artificial arm; without this fascinating character, Son of Frankenstein would be a wholly forgettable movie.

With no lines and few chances to express any real emotion other than murderous fury, Karloff's monster is a shadow of its former self. Even the makeup job appears second-rate and less than imposing. Frankly, I'm really unsure what so many others see in this movie. All it did was turn Frankenstein into a big dumb monster that would be forced to stumble and bumble its way through one film after another for decades to come. It's impossible to feel much sympathy for him in this context, and I eventually found myself hoping they would just kill the monster already and get the film over and done with.

Much to my surprise, I actually enjoyed Ghost of Frankenstein much more than Son of Frankenstein. There's no denying that Lon Chaney, Jr., who took up the role of the creature, pales in comparison with Boris Karloff, but I actually found the monster more sympathetic this time around. You won't see the type of pathos and innocence that Karloff brought to the role, yet Chaney subtly shows a human side to the creature on a couple of occasions (and, to be frank, the script didn't allow him much room to maneuver).

This film could easily have been called The Other Son of Frankenstein. Ygor (Bela Lugosi) despite being shot numerous times by Baron Wolf von Frankenstein in the last film, still lives; in the course of fleeing the villager-besieged castle, he finds his good, monstrous friend (whom we last saw sinking into a pit of boiling sulphur) and decides to take him to the other Frankenstein brother. Ludwig (Sir Cedric Hardwicke), is none too happy to see Ygor or to deal with the creature he believed had finally been killed, yet rather than destroy the monster, he decides to give him a new brain. In this way, he believes, he can resurrect his father's shattered reputation and renew the good name of Frankenstein.

I must say I loved Hardwicke's performance. Ludwig is a serious fellow who never slips into the madness that claimed his father and brother; his desires to substantiate his infamous father's work and to restore the family name are the driving forces behind his decision-making. Everything might have turned out all right, too, if it weren't for Ludwig's assistant Dr. Bohmer (Atwill). It is in the pool of Bohmer's bitterness that the ever-resourceful Ygor finds the leverage he needs to pull one over on Dr. Frankenstein. Ygor, you see, wants his own brain transplanted into the creature's body.

In Ghost of Frankenstein, I found Ygor to be a much more engaging fellow. I still don't believe it is one of Lugosi's better characters, but clearly Lugosi contributed a great deal to the overall success of this movie. Is Ghost of Frankenstein as impressive a film as the first two Frankenstein films? Hardly. It is, though - at least in my opinion - a much better film than Son of Frankenstein. Chaney turns in a very solid performance as the creature; while not in the same league as Boris Karloff, he deserves much credit for his contributions to the evolving Frankenstein storyline.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Two vintage Frankenstein movies of differing quality
Review: Son of Frankenstein is an impressive horror in which Karloff plays the Monster for the third and final time. Very stylish, with German cinematic expressionism an obvious influence on the film's stunning visuals.

Ghost of Frankenstein stars Lon Chaney, Jr, as the Monster, and he isn't a patch on Karloff, but it's an entertaining installment in the series nevertheless.


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