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. [1]
The film is an affectionate parody of the classical horror film genre, in particular the various film adaptations of Mary Shelley's novel Frankenstein
produced by Universal in the 1930s. Most of the pieces of lab equipment used as props are the same ones created by Kenneth Strickfaden for the 1931 film Frankenstein
. To further reflect the atmosphere of the earlier films, Brooks shot the picture entirely in black-and-white, a rare choice at the time, and employed 1930s-style opening credits and period scene transitions such as iris outs, wipes, and fades to black. The film also features a notable period score by Brooks' longtime composer John Morris.
Young Frankenstein
is number 28 on Total Film Magazine's
"List of the 50 Greatest Comedy Films of All Time", number 56 on Bravo television network's list of the "100 Funniest Movies", and number 13 on the American Film Institute's list of the 100 funniest American movies. [2] In 2003, it was deemed "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant" by the United States National Film Preservation Board, and selected for preservation in the Library of Congress National Film Registry.
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YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN TICKETS
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Synopsis
Dr. Frederick Frankenstein (
Gene Wilder) is a respected lecturer at an American
medical school and is more or less happily (though blandly) engaged to the tightly wound Elizabeth (
Madeline Kahn). 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 informs Frederick that he has inherited his family's
estate. Traveling to said estate in
Transylvania, Frankenstein meets his comely new lab assistant Inga (
Teri Garr), along with the household servants Frau Blücher (
Cloris Leachman) and
Igor (
Marty Feldman) (who, after hearing Frederick claim his name is pronounced "Fronkensteen" counter-claims that his is pronounced "Eye'-gor.")
Inga assists Frederick in discovering the secret entrance to his grandfather's laboratory. Upon reading his grandfather's private journals the doctor is inspired to resume his grandfather's experiments in re-animating the dead. He and Igor successfully
exhume and spirit away the enormous corpse of a recently executed criminal, but Igor's attempt to steal the brain of a revered scientist from the local "brain depository" goes awry, and he takes one labeled, "Do Not Use This Brain! Abnormal" instead.
The doctor and reassembled monster (
Peter Boyle) are elevated on a platform to the roof of the laboratory during a
lightning storm. The experimenters are first disappointed when the electrically charged creature fails to come to life, but the reassembled monster eventually revives. The doctor assists the monster in walking but, frightened by Igor lighting a match, it attacks Frederick and must be sedated. Upon being asked by the doctor whose brain was obtained, Igor confesses that he supplied "Abby Normal's" brain and becomes the subject of a strangulation attempt himself.
Meanwhile, the local townspeople are uneasy at the possibility of Frederick continuing his grandfather's work. Most concerned is Inspector Kemp (
Kenneth Mars), who sports an eyepatch, a jointed and extremely creaky wooden arm, and an accent so thick even his own countrymen cannot understand him. Kemp visits the doctor and subsequently demands assurance that he will not create another monster. Upon returning to the lab, Frederick discovers that Frau Blücher is setting the creature free. After she reveals the monster's love of music, and her own romantic relationship with Frederick's grandfather, the creature is enraged by sparks from a thrown switch, and escapes from the Frankenstein castle.
While roaming the countryside, the Monster has frustrating encounters with a young girl and a blind
hermit; these scenes directly parody ones from the original Frankenstein movies. Frederick recaptures the monster, wins him over with flattery, and finally fully acknowledges his heritage. After a period of training, he offers some illustrious guests the sight of "The Creature" following simple commands. The demonstration continues with Frederick and the Monster launching into the musical number "
Puttin' on the Ritz", complete with top hats and tails, which ends disastrously when a stage light explodes and frightens the monster. He becomes enraged and charges into the audience where he is captured and chained by police.
After being tormented by a sadistic jailer, the Monster escapes again, then kidnaps and ravishes the not-unwilling Elizabeth when she arrives unexpectedly for a visit. Elizabeth falls in love with the creature due to his inhuman stamina and his enormous penis (referred to as
Schwanstuker
or
Schwanzstück
—a
Yiddish malapropism from
Schwanz
, "tail" (which also is German
slang for "prick"), and
Stück
, "piece").
The townspeople, led by Inspector Kemp, hunt for the Monster. Desperate to get the creature back and correct his mistakes, Frederick plays music and lures the Monster back to the castle. Just as the Kemp-led mob storms the laboratory, Dr. Frankenstein transfers some of his stabilizing intellect to the creature who, as a result, is able to reason with and placate the mob. The film ends happily, with Elizabeth married to the now erudite and sophisticated Monster, while Inga joyfully learns what her new husband Frederick got in return from the Monster during the transfer procedure (the Monster's
Schwanzstück
).
Cast
- Gene Wilder as Dr. Frederick Frankenstein
- Peter Boyle as the Monster
- Marty Feldman as Igor
- Teri Garr as Inga
- Cloris Leachman as Frau Blücher
- Madeline Kahn as Elizabeth
- Kenneth Mars as Inspector Kemp
- Richard Haydn as Herr Falkstein
- Liam Dunn as Mr. Hilltop
- Danny Goldman as Medical Student
- Leon Askin as Herr Walman (scenes deleted)
- Gene Hackman as The Blind Man [3]
- Mel Brooks (uncredited) as Werewolf / Cat Hit by Dart / Victor Frankenstein (voice)
Leon Askin was cast to play a lawyer (reading the last will) but was cut out.
The British actor
Clement von Franckenstein had an uncredited role in the film.
Production
During his pilot episode commentary on the
Get Smart
DVD Season One set,
Mel Brooks said
Columbia Pictures would not greenlight
Young Frankenstein
to be made in black and white. Brooks refused to compromise and took the film to
20th Century Fox, where executives agreed that the film should be made
sans
color. The theatrical trailer described the film as "presented in black and white - no offense" as a pun on
segregation (cf.
separate but equal), which had been mostly outlawed in preceding decades.
While shooting, the cast ad-libbed several of the jokes in the film: Cloris Leachman improvised the scene with Frau Blucher offering "varm milk" and
Ovaltine to Dr. Frankenstein, while Marty Feldman surreptitiously moved his character's hump from shoulder to shoulder until someone noticed it, and the gag was added to the film ("What hump?"). It is rumored that Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder were reluctant to wrap filming because the cast and crew enjoyed the filming so much, and extra scenes were filmed not originally in the script. Brooks declared
Young Frankenstein
his favorite among his own films.
Deleted scenes
When the solicitor speaks with Frederick Frankenstein, he presents him with the will of his great grandfather, Baron Beaufort Von Frankenstein. This can cause confusion, as the movie makes reference from this point on only of Frederick's grandfather, and clearly indicates that it was his grandfather, not his great-grandfather, who was the "mad scientist" in the family. Also, there is no further mention of the will; this is cleared up in a deleted scene, in which it is revealed that Baron Frankenstein is indeed meant to be the father of the mad scientist and not the scientist himself. It is also revealed in a gathering of all the surviving family heirs that the details of the will (not surprisingly) have Frederick inherit everything, which is why he travels to his ancestral home. The will was delayed by order of the Baron himself, instructing that its details not be revealed until his 100th birthday.
Soundtrack
On
April 29,
1997, One-Way Records released a CD soundtrack for the movie. There are pieces of dialogue by the actors as well as background and incidental music on the disc. The disc is now out of print and commands a very high price on Internet auction sites when available.
Track listing
# Main Title (Theme From "Young Frankenstein")
# That's Fron-Kon-Steen!
# Train Ride To Transylvania / The Doctor Meets Igor
# Frau Blucher
# Grandfather's Private Library
# It's Alive!
# He Was My Boyfriend
# My Name Is Frankenstein!
# Introduction /
Puttin' On The Ritz
# A Riot Is An Ugly Thing
# He's Broken Loose
# Monster Talks, The
# Wedding Night / End Title
# Theme From "Young Frankenstein"
Cultural references
- The brain which Igor is sent to steal is labeled as belonging to "Hans Delbrück, scientist and saint." A real-life Hans Delbrück was a nineteenth-century military historian; his son Max Delbrück was a twentieth-century biochemist and Nobel laureate.
- Every time Frau Blücher's name is mentioned, horses are heard whinnying as if afraid of her name. Many viewers mistakenly believe that Blücher
means "glue" in German; however, Blücher is a well-known German surname. [4] The German term for glue is der Kleber
, or tierischer Leim
for animal glue. Brooks suggested in a 2000 interview that he had based the joke on the erroneous translation, which he had heard from someone else. [5] In an interview, Cloris Leachman said that Mel had told her that that is why he named her character Blücher. [6]
- When Dr. Frankenstein asks Igor, "Would you give me a hand with the bags?", Igor's punning response (referencing the female characters) "Certainly. You take the blonde, I'll take the one in the turban." is delivered in the style of Groucho Marx.
- The US AMC cable network broadcast a 2007 "DVD_TV" version of the film with commentary in subtitles. Among other information, it stated that Inga was based on Ulla from Brooks' earlier film The Producers
.
Cultural legacy
- Raiders of the Lost Ark
features a line very similar to Igor's comment to Dr. Frankenstein: "It looks dangerous. You go first."
- When the film was in theaters, the band Aerosmith was working on its third studio album, Toys in the Attic
. The members of the band had written the music for a song but couldn't come up with any lyrics to go with it. After a while, they decided to take a break and see a late night showing of Young Frankenstein
, where the "Walk This Way" gag provided the basis (or phrase) for the Aerosmith hit "Walk This Way". [7]
- The scene with Frankenstein and Inga trying to get through the revolving bookcase is shown in the film Big Daddy
.
- The scene with Frankenstein and the Monster performing "Puttin' on the Ritz" is briefly parodied in the Family Guy
episode "The Story on Page One" - where Stewie notes, "Not my bit, but still funny." The scene in the film is itself a parody of Fred Astaire in Blue Skies
.
- Peter Boyle reprised his role (after a fashion) in the TV sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond
, when his character costumed himself as the monster for Halloween.
- Eppu Normaali, one of Finland's most successful bands, was named after a translation in the Finnish subtitles of Young Frankenstein
(character Abby Normal [abnormal] was translated to Eppu Normaali [epänormaali]).
- Clicking repeatedly on the Valkyrie unit in StarCraft: Brood War
(which is piloted by a woman with a strong German accent), causes it to say "Blücher!"
, followed by the whinny of a horse.
- In The Simpsons
episode "Homer vs. Patty & Selma", Homer takes up a job as a limo driver. One of his passengers is Mel Brooks. Homer says to Mel, "Mel Brooks! I loved that movie Young Frankenstein
. Scared the hell out of me!", to which Brooks replies confused, "Umm...thanks."
- In a Reno 911!
episode, Deputy Wiegal (Kerry Kenny-Silver) says to Deputy Williams (Niecy Nash): "put the candle back" in homage to the revolving wall scene with Gene Wilder and Teri Garr.
- The dramatic sting heard from John Morris' score early in the picture serves the background music from the viral video "Dramatic Chipmunk" (or "Dramatic Gopher").
- In the Amazing Stories
episode "Mummy Daddy", the man mistaken for a real mummy wanders into a blind hermit's hut with violin music playing in the distance. At the end of the episode, the torch carrying mob realizes that the monster is friendly.
- In the Sick Of It All song "Shit Sandwich," the song starts out with the line from the movie when Dr. Frankenstein says, "You are talking about the nonsensical ravings of a lunatic mind."
Inspired works
A low-budget
Turkish remake
Sevimli Frankestayn
was released in 1975. The success of
Young Frankenstein
worldwide inspired another horror spoof, 1974's
Vampira
starring
David Niven and
Teresa Graves. It was renamed
Old Dracula
for
North American release 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.
The 1979 television special
The Halloween That Almost Wasn't
was partly inspired by the cultural impact of
Young Frankenstein
. Focusing on the prospect of
Halloween coming to an end, the special has
Dracula summoning the monsters of the world to his
castle to discuss the situation; he specifically names Frankenstein as one of those at fault: "And you! Letting that movie influence you so much that now, instead of terrorizing the countryside, what are you doing? You're
tap dancing!"
Musical adaptation
Brooks has adapted the film into a
musical of the same name. The musical premiered in Seattle at the
Paramount Theatre and ran from
August 7–
September 1 2007.
[8] The musical opened on
Broadway at the
Hilton Theatre on
November 8,
2007 and closed on
January 4,
2009.
[9]
Awards
Nominated
- Academy Award for Sound, Richard Portman and Gene S. Cantamessa (1975)
- Academy Award for Writing Adapted Screenplay, Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder (1975)
- Golden Globe Award for Best Actress - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, Cloris Leachman (1975)
- Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress - Motion Picture, Madeline Kahn (1975)
- WGA Award for Best Comedy Adapted from Another Medium, Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder (1975)
Won
- Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, Young Frankenstein
(1975)
- Nebula Award for Best Dramatic Writing, Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder (1976)
- Golden Scroll Award for Best Horror Film, Young Frankenstein
(1976)
- Golden Scroll Award for Best Direction, Mel Brooks (1976)
- Golden Scroll Award for Best Supporting Actor, Marty Feldman (1976)
- Golden Scroll Award for Best Make-up, William Tuttle (1976)
- Saturn Award Golden Scroll Award for Best Set Decoration, Robert De Vestel and Dale Hennesy (1976)
- Golden Screen Award, Young Frankenstein
(1977)
- Toronto Film Festival Award for Best Comedic Film, Mel Brooks (1976)
Other Honors
American Film Institute recognition
- AFI's 100 Years... 100 Laughs #13
- AFI's 100 Years... 100 Songs #89
- *"Puttin' on the Ritz
References
- Director & leading actors
- AFI's 100 YEARS...100 LAUGHS
- According to Leonard Maltin's annual directory of movies, Gene Hackman was uncredited in the original theatrical run.
- http://www.snopes.com/movies/films/blucher.htm
- Amazon.com Message
- The O'Reilly Factor, April 3, 2009
- Walk their way | Aerosmith News | AeroForceOne
- The Paramount official site
- http://www.playbill.com/news/article/112585.html playbill article, 11/8/07