Young Frankenstein is a 1974 comedy film directed by Mel Brooks, starring Gene Wilder as the title character. Teri Garr, Cloris Leachman, Marty Feldman, Peter Boyle, Madeline Kahn, Kenneth Mars, and Gene Hackman also star. The screenplay was written by Brooks and Wilder.
The film is a parody of the horror film genre, in particular the various film versions of Mary Shelley's novel Frankenstein, mainly those made by Universal in the 1930s and 1940s, to which the film is best seen as an affectionate homage. Because of the reference to the earlier films, Brooks shot the film entirely in black-and-white, a rare choice for a comedy of that era. A large portion of the initial budget was spent by Brooks as he chose to hire the sets from the original Frankenstein movie.
As of early April 2006, Brooks had begun composing the score to a Broadway musical adaptation of Young Frankenstein, "which he says is perhaps the best movie he ever made." No deadline has been set for the work's completion, but after it is finished Brooks will begin fundraising and production. *
Frederick Frankenstein, full name Doctor Baron Frederick von Frankenstein, is a respected lecturer at an American medical school and is more or less happily (though blandly) engaged to the tightly-wound Elizabeth. Frederick becomes exasperated when anyone brings up the subject of his grandfather, the famous mad scientist, to the point of insisting that his name is pronounced "Fronk-en-steen".
A solicitor approaches the doctor after a lecture and informs Frederick that he has inherited his family's estate. Travelling to said estate in Transylvania, Frankenstein meets his comely new lab assistant Inga, along with the household servants Frau Blücher and Igor (who, after hearing Frederick claim his name is pronounced "Fronk-en-steen," counter-claims that his is pronounced "EYE-gor"). The three of them help Frederick discover his grandfather's private journals and, inspired by their contents, the doctor finally acknowledges his heritage ("My name is Frank-en-shtein!") and resumes his grandfather's work of re-animating the dead using the body of an executed criminal. Unfortunately, Igor manages to steal the wrong brain from the local "brain depository". ("Abby someone... Abby... Normal!"). This mistake is revealed when the revived monster rampages and eventually escapes from the Frankenstein castle. While roaming the countryside, the monster has encounters with a young girl and a blind hermit (Hackman) which directly parody scenes from the original Frankenstein movies. He also ravishes the not unwilling Elizabeth, who has arrived unexpectedly for a visit.
Meanwhile, the local townspeople are concerned and are willing to riot because of Frederick's continuation of his grandfather's work. The most concerned is Chief Inspector Hans Wilhelm Frederick Kemp, whose accent is so thick even his own countrymen cannot understand him and whose right arm was pulled off by the monster Frederick's grandfather created, since replaced it with a jointed wooden replica (which creaks very loudly). Just as the Kemp-led mob storms the castle, Dr. Frankenstein is able to transfer some of his stabilizing intellect to the re-captured monster. The film ends happily, with Elizabeth married to the (ex-)monster, and Inga joyfully learning what her new husband Frederick got in return from the monster during the transfer experiment...
The success of Young Frankenstein led to another horror spoof, 1974's Vampira starring David Niven and Teresa Graves. It was renamed Old Dracula for North American release in order to cash in on the name recognition of Young Frankenstein. In many locations, the two films were shown back-to-back as a double bill.
1974 films | Comedy films | Frankenstein films | Parody films | American films | United States National Film Registry | Hugo Award winning works
Frankenstein Junior | Frankenstein Junior | Frankenstein Junior | Frankenstein Junior | Young Frankenstein | Молодой Франкенштейн (фильм) | Det våras för Frankenstein
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"Young Frankenstein".
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