Abbott und Costello treffen Frankenstein
Chuck und Wilbur müssen, zu ihrem Entsetzen, feststellen, das Dracula, das Frankenstein Monster und der Wolfsmenschen, sehr lebendig sind.Chuck und Wilbur müssen, zu ihrem Entsetzen, feststellen, das Dracula, das Frankenstein Monster und der Wolfsmenschen, sehr lebendig sind.Chuck und Wilbur müssen, zu ihrem Entsetzen, feststellen, das Dracula, das Frankenstein Monster und der Wolfsmenschen, sehr lebendig sind.
- Auszeichnungen
- 4 Gewinne & 2 Nominierungen insgesamt
- Lawrence Talbot
- (as Lon Chaney)
- …
- Waiter
- (Nicht genannt)
- Man at Costume Party
- (Nicht genannt)
- Photographer
- (Nicht genannt)
- London Policeman
- (Archivfilmmaterial)
- (Nicht genannt)
- Man at Costume Party in Fez
- (Nicht genannt)
- Harris - Insurance Man
- (Nicht genannt)
- The Invisible Man
- (Synchronisation)
- (Nicht genannt)
- Man at Costume Party
- (Nicht genannt)
- Woman at Baggage Counter
- (Nicht genannt)
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They made a very funny film, but in the process killed the horror genre. Please note that there were very few straight horror sequels done after Abbott and Costello finished with these monsters. By becoming the butt of Bud and Lou's burlesque humor, they somehow lost the power to truly frighten. It took the British Hammer Film Studio to revive the genre in the Fifties with some more up to date special effects.
Bud and Lou are a couple of delivery men, working for what I guess was UPS at the time and they lose a couple of crates consigned to Frank Ferguson's Amusement house of horrors. But they didn't exactly lose them. The crates contained the bodies of the real Dracula and real Frankenstein monster played by Bela Lugosi and Glenn Strange. And they walked off on poor Costello and no one will believe him.
Except of course Lon Chaney, Jr. playing Lawrence Talbot, concerned citizen by day and werewolf at night when the moon is full. After that it's a merry chase after these monsters as Dracula decides that Costello has a brain perfect for the Frankenstein monster's body.
Of course it would be another 30 years or so before Mel Brooks realized the full implication of that. I think Costello might have consented to the operation had he realized.
It's reported by Lou Costello's daughter Chris that her dad wasn't totally convinced this film was going to work out for the team. Everyone around him told him he was never funnier, but Costello didn't believe it until Universal started counting the box office receipts.
So a cheaply made comedy, utilizing existing sets makes a mint. Come to think of it, that was what Buck Privates also did.
Bud and Lou's misadventures unloading McDougal's crates is a great mix of laughs & chills where we get to see a variation of the "moving candle" bit, Dracula reviving the monster, and for the first time in any Universal picture the camera doesn't move or cut away as the vampire exits from his coffin. And Glenn Strange, looking rather gruesome in Westmore's best makeup work, seems creakier than ever before as the monster.
I have to mention one of my personal favorite Bud/Lou moments when they make their first trip to the island with Joan Raymond: Lou tells Bud in reference to Joan "she's mine too" then proceeds to dab his mouth with Bud's necktie.
While the mere presence of Abbott and Costello in this picture may turn the stomachs of many "horror purists", it's obvious that great care was taken by the filmmakers not to ridicule the monsters. Without the two comics, you would still have a standard Universal horror film. With them, it remains a movie that shows more skill & thought was put into it than the last "serious" monster film "House of Dracula" and I am personally glad that Universal didn't let the monsters die with that misfire.
Everything worked, the routines, the premise, the sets, the chills and the direction. Bud and Lou are a couple of bumbling railroad porters who end up delivering crates containing Dracula, Frankenstein and the Wolf Man to a certain gothic edifice. In better physical condition than by the time ABBOTT AND COSTELLO MEET DR JEKYLL AND MR HYDE rolled around in '53, it shows in their timing and delivery - Lou especially is spot on throughout.
Some great lines too. Dracula to Lou, addressing him lovingly, "What we need is young blood.....AND brains!"
Many believe this is the quintessential Bud and Lou film to survive! I'd be inclined to agree.
Lugosi truly shows how wrong Universal was to treat him so badly over the years.He gives a wonderful perfomance with nice comedic touches.Chaney is excellent in "his baby" the Wolf Man.Strange is given a bit more to do as the monster rather than just lie around until the last five minutes.
Great fun for everybody!
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesLou Costello didn't want to make the movie, declaring, "No way I'll do that crap. My little girl could write something better than this." A $50,000 advance in salary and the signing of director Charles Barton, the team's good friend and the man some call their best director, convinced him otherwise.
- PatzerAfter Wilbur knocks the bundles containing their masquerade costumes out of Chick's arms and tries to dance with him, Chick say's "Come on, pick up these bundles and get dressed." Wilbur strides out of the frame without his bundle but he has it in his hand as he strides into the next shot.
- Zitate
[last lines]
Wilbur Grey: And another thing Mr. Chick Young! The next time I tell you that I saw something when I saw it, you believe me that I saw it!
Chick Young: Oh relax. Now that we've seen the last of Dracula, the Wolf Man, and the Monster, there's nobody to frighten us anymore.
Invisible Man: Oh, that's too bad. I was hoping to get in on the excitement.
Chick Young: Who said that?
Invisible Man: Allow me to introduce myself. I'm the Invisible Man.
- Crazy CreditsCharles Bradstreet is credited as Dr. Stevens, but his character is never once called "Doctor." He is always referred to as Professor Stevens.
- Alternative VersionenFor its original release, the Australian film board required that almost every scene involving a monster be removed before release.
- VerbindungenEdited from Frankenstein trifft den Wolfsmenschen (1943)
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Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Offizieller Standort
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Abbott y Costello contra los fantasmas
- Drehorte
- Produktionsfirma
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Box Office
- Budget
- 800.000 $ (geschätzt)
- Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
- 4.796.000 $
- Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
- 4.812.444 $
- Laufzeit
- 1 Std. 23 Min.(83 min)
- Farbe
- Seitenverhältnis
- 1.37 : 1