For most of its running time, the Italian-made
horror flick Lady Frankenstein seems
like a pointless retelling of the classic Mary Shelley narrative about a mad
doctor, Baron Frankenstein (Joseph Cotten), assembling a creature from parts of
corpses and then animating the thing with electricity. The only noteworthy
wrinkle is the presence in Castle Frankenstein of the doctor’s beautiful
daughter, Tania (Rosalba Neri, billed as “Sara Bay”). Yet even her presence
doesn’t make much of a difference until about halfway through the running time,
when (spoiler alert!) the creature kills the doctor. Then Tania unveils her own
special brand of madness by seducing her father’s partner in crime, Charles
(Paul Muller), into participating with a grotesque scheme—Tania wants to plant
Charles’ brain into the handsome body of a servant, thus creating her perfect
man. Had this perversely psychosexual plot been the driving force of the entire
movie, Lady Frankenstein might have
been more palatable. But then again, the movie has so many rough edges—abrupt
editing, bored acting, nonsensical plot twists—that it’s likely nothing could
have lifted Lady Frankenstein into
the realm of worthwhile cinema. After all, this movie’s version of the Creature
(Peter Whiteman) sports silly makeup including an oversized head that looks
like a mushroom. On the plus side, for those who simply must see every
Franken-flick and/or those whose appetite for low-budget horror in general is
insatiable, Neri’s quite sexy with her raven-black hair, intense eyes, and
graceful figure—it’s easy to accept her as both madwoman and seductress. (She also
benefits from better dubbing than some of her costars receive, since Lady Frankenstein—like most Italian
films of the period—includes only post-production sound.) It should also be
mentioned that Lady Frankenstein
features a smattering of gore and nudity, so the movie is not without its low
pleasures. As for ostensible leading man Cotten, by the way, he delivers the
sort of somnambulistic performance that characterized the twilight of his
career, not even bothering to conceal the East Coast lilt in his voice despite
the fact that he’s playing a European.
Lady
Frankenstein: LAME
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