Bride of Frankenstein (1935)

 James Whale's "Bride of Frankenstein"


To me, James Whale's 1935 sequel to his original "Frankenstein" film, "Bride of Frankenstein" feels like a closing of the book on the highly successful Universal monster movies of the early 1930s. The monster movies that came after would only ever be B movie films that were made cheaply and did not receive as much commercial success. In watching it, I found it to be simply another cash-grab from Universal attempting to suck dry the successes of the previous film. That being said, I did notice some thematic interest in certain spots, like questions involving amorality in scientific innovation and humanity's cold indifference to things different than us. However, I still could not get over the mundanity of the plot. Even though the film is called "Bride of Frankenstein," we do not actually get to see the Bride until there is only 10 minutes left in the film. The film was another massive success for Universal, but would be their final one in this monster movie series. 





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