The Good Baron Breaking Bad in Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed (1970)
Customers may have advocated the title solution
by 1970 and another of this series now in fifth Hammerincarnation, and who but
most devoted could tell one from another? Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed did
about half of domestic rentals for Warner distribution ($524K) as previous
Hammer Dracula Has Risen From The Grave ($1 million), so we might assume vampires
had twice the draw of man-made monsters. Of course, it was never F's creation that
mattered at Hammer, Peter Cushingthe whole show and rightly so. Without him,
these things would have fizzled long before Destroyed juncture. FMBD seems to
me overlit and less atmospheric than Hammers before, or was that nature of HD
streaming on Warner Instant? A lot rides on presentation, and chances are an
old IB Tech print would look better. Baron Frank is a most ruthless here since
Curse of ... in 1957. He even rapes good girl Veronica Carlson in a scene that
shocked our '70 sensibility far more than whatever trepidations his monster
engaged. As with Revenge Of Frankensteintwelve years before, the monster is more pathetic than frightening. Hammer worked admirably at keeping
concepts fresh, this entry from writing's standpoint an improvement over a last
couple of Frankensteins, and Cushing of course is his usual transcendent.
The rape scene in FMBD was added during shooting, by the producer.Over the objections of director and stars, which is why there's no emotional reference for it following.
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The rape scene in FMBD was added during shooting, by the producer.Over the objections of director and stars, which is why there's no emotional reference for it following.
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