A movie whose appeal
begins and ends at the title, Blackenstein
should not be mistaken for as a companion piece to Blacula (1972), which is a sophisticated masterpiece compared to
this low-budget clunker. Alternately titled The
Black Frankenstein—for those too dim to translate the hipper one-word
moniker—Blackenstein literally
features an African-American dude wearing replicas of the makeup and outfit
Boris Karloff wore in old Universal screamfests. Yes, the monster in Blackenstein has the abnormally high
forehead, the head-to-toe black ensemble, the heavy boots, and even the
zombified walking-and-grunting persona one associates with Karloff. Aside from
the presence of an Afro instead of straight hair and dark skin instead of light
skin, the monster in Blackenstein is
a shameless and unimaginative rip-off. Oddly, however, the story of Blackenstein bears little resemblance to
that of Mary Shelley’s classic novel Frankenstein.
In this flick, pretty young scientist Winifred Walker (Ivory Stone) enlists the
help of her mentor, Dr. Stein (John Hart), after Winifred’s boyfriend, Eddie
(Joe De Sue), loses limbs fighting in Vietnam. Dr. Stein uses specially
formulated DNA to repair Eddie’s appendages, but Dr. Stein’s assistant—Malcolmb
(Roosevelt Jackson)—tinkers with the formula because he wants Winifred for
himself. Thus, Eddie becomes a monster, lumbering around Dr. Stein’s castle and
the neighboring area for a nonsensical killing spree until the requisite
showdown with his maker in a laboratory. Written and produced by Frank R.
Saletri, Blackenstein is terrible on
every level. The story is moronic, the editing is choppy, the music features
moments of over the-top silliness (like the gigantic horror cue that
accompanies a nothing scene of Winifred looking at a staircase), and the acting
is excruciatingly bad. Oh, and the movie’s crude gore scenes were obviously
achieved by throwing messy animal guts onto actors. Yuck. Worst of all, every
satirical opportunity suggested by the title is completely missed. Whereas Blacula embraced its blackness to great
effect, telling a story that sprawls from Africa to the inner city, Blackenstein lacks any distinctive
flavor. In fact, the title probably should have been Blandenstein.
Blackenstein; SQUARE
4 comments:
Well, I guess that's THAT!
Just watched this for the first time and have to agree, the music is completely out of control--from the lovely but mismatched opening theme, to the mostly (or all) seemingly lifted horror film music. But I must admit I enjoyed watching this movie!
I only saw the last 30 minutes of this movie on TV once back in the early '80s once as a kid, and the little I saw of it was pure garbage, and just plain awful. Makes you wonder how it even got made in the first place.
I saw this movie featured on a "Top Ten" list of Blaxploitation films and my jaw dropped. It's amateurish and unwatchable. Not even enjoyable garbage. Makes "Blacula" look like "Citizen Kane".
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