Frankenstein: The True Story Synopsis & Summary

Synopsis

Per its title, Jack Smight's Frankenstein: The True Story, strives for greater faithfulness to Mary Shelley's novel than prior versions. Thus, as in the book, Dr. Frankenstein's (Leonard Whiting) creation is no monster, but a handsome young man of high intelligence (Michael Sarrazin). In fact, the doctor and his creature are the best of friends until the latter's body begins to deteriorate. This sends the creature over the bend into insanity, prompting Frankenstein -- with the help of his evil mentor, Dr. Polidori (James Mason), a character not in the Shelley novel -- to try, try again to create a viable synthetic human. The film ends more or less as the novel does, with the outcast Frankenstein and his creature expiring in the frozen wastes of Antarctica. Adapted for television by Christopher Isherwood, Frankenstein: The True Story was originally telecast in two parts on November 30 and December 1, 1973. - Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Movie Info

DVD Release Date:
09/26/2006
Run Time:
200 min.
Production Co.:
Universal TV
Director(s):
Themes:
Experiments Gone Awry, Mad Scientists, Renegade Body Parts
Tone:
Atmospheric, Creepy, Disturbing, Eerie, Ominous, Stylized
Keywords:
Frankenstein, body-parts, mad-scientist, monster, reanimation
Time Period:
Victorian era
Language:
English
Version of / Remake of:
Status:
DVD