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Frankenstein

  • 1910
  • Unrated
  • 16m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
5K
YOUR RATING
Frankenstein (1910)
FantasyHorrorSci-FiShort

The first filmed version of Frankenstein. The young doctor discovers the secret of life, which he uses to create a perfect human. Things do not go according to plan.The first filmed version of Frankenstein. The young doctor discovers the secret of life, which he uses to create a perfect human. Things do not go according to plan.The first filmed version of Frankenstein. The young doctor discovers the secret of life, which he uses to create a perfect human. Things do not go according to plan.

  • Director
    • J. Searle Dawley
  • Writers
    • Mary Shelley
    • J. Searle Dawley
  • Stars
    • Mary Fuller
    • Charles Ogle
    • Augustus Phillips
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • J. Searle Dawley
    • Writers
      • Mary Shelley
      • J. Searle Dawley
    • Stars
      • Mary Fuller
      • Charles Ogle
      • Augustus Phillips
    • 75User reviews
    • 44Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos46

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    Top cast3

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    Mary Fuller
    Mary Fuller
    • Elizabeth
    • (uncredited)
    Charles Ogle
    Charles Ogle
    • The Monster
    • (uncredited)
    Augustus Phillips
    Augustus Phillips
    • Frankenstein
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • J. Searle Dawley
    • Writers
      • Mary Shelley
      • J. Searle Dawley
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews75

    6.45K
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    Featured reviews

    Dethcharm

    "The Horror! What I Have Brought Into This World Is An Abomination!"

    Having watched this silent, short version of FRANKENSTEIN several times, it is obviously of both artistic and historic interest / value. It's wonderful to see what was done so long ago on film!

    The special effects are fantastic, taking into account the vintage and what was available at that time. The creation scene is well-realized, getting the point across that a monster is in the making, and the understandably scant story is sufficient.

    Hell, considering some of the lemons that have rolled out of "modern" Hollywood over the years, this movie is quite an achievement!...
    tedg

    The Witch's Lookingglass

    I'm putting this on my list of films you must see. It is short and at first glance completely uninteresting.

    But look again.

    Here's what happens: Young Frankenstein goes to college where he discovers the secret of life. Interesting that the filmmakers would think it cinematic to watch a man think and then have a eureka moment. The rest of the thing is highly cinematic (or so we would judge today) in all its choices, so this is the first remarkable event of the thing.

    Then we get to see him create the creature. No lightning and dials here, instead a MacBethian cauldron in a sealed chamber. He peeks through a hole and as he does, we see the creature form. Its a remarkable effect for the time. I imagine it was done by playing backwards a film of a manikin being dissolved by acid. Here's the second interesting event.

    You know, witchcraft wasn't associated with cauldrons until MacBeth. And this opens up a whole world of possibilities of magic and film along the lines of the magic of Shakespeare. Unfortunately by the 30s this was all but extinguished by the association of magic 9and science) with technological gismos that spark, have dials and gages, the cauldron image relegated to bubbling flasks.

    But then — after some business with the new wife which is a bit confusing if you don't know the story — we have the bit with the mirror. This trick, friends is why I am directing you to this.

    The existence of the mirror is introduced early and is linked to the image of the wife, who we see first as a reflection.

    Then the mirror plays a role as the monster encounters himself and is appalled.

    Then, later, the monster gets depressed ("overcome by love") and decides to kill himself. He does so by standing in front of the mirror and willing himself out of existence. First, he disappears but his image in the mirror remains.

    The scientist comes in and sees the monster in the mirror. Then after the monster's image acknowledges the scientist's presence, it too disappears and is replaced by the normal reflection of the man.

    Now, this requires a pretty sophisticated cinematic logic of about 100 years ago, and of a completely new medium. So radically new. The filmmaker clearly thought this would make sense to the viewer. Think about this a minute. Nowadays effects like this are automatic for most filmmakers because the vocabulary is so solidly settled.

    But then (and with our best visionaries today) the filmmaker had to decide from scratch the cinematic notion to be used.

    Here's the folding notion: the relationship between the scientist and his monster is folded into the notion of us the viewers seeing images in a magical lookingglass. And further into the magical cauldron.

    Wow. Who is being this clever today?

    Ted's Evaluation -- 4 of 3: Every cineliterate person should experience this.
    3Platypuschow

    Frankenstein: Historic but lacking

    Plot

    The first filmed version of Frankenstein. The young doctor discovers the secret of life, which he uses to create a perfect human. Things do not go according to plan

    Cast

    Unfamiliar with those involved.

    Verdict

    I'm somewhat of a completionist and I went through a spate of watching every single Frankenstein adaptation from the loyal to the comedic to the just plain odd and naturally being that this is the first ever filmed version is where I began.

    Now when it comes to films from this period you do of course need to look at them very differently, it's not that you must lower your expectations as that's rather ignorant it's that you must adjust them and respect the limitations of the time and take it for what it is.

    There are plenty of both shorts and features from this period I've enjoyed greatly and amongst the Frankenstein adaptations were some masterworks but this alas is not one of them.

    I'm not a fan of silent cinema at the best of times, I do prefer it when a musical score is placed over them but even then I tend to find their choices very distracting and usually ill fitting.

    Frankenstein here is undeniably historic, unquestionably a pivotal moment in cinema history but let's not create a bias for ourselves and convince one another that means that it's good.

    Frankenstein (1910) is bland, ugly and lacks entertainment value in this age.

    Rants

    I think that's something people need to get past, just because a movie is a "Classic" or even "Cult" doesn't mean it's good by default. People raise such things as if they're untouchable and cannot be criticized, they can and they should be. Nothing should be as such, nothing should be free from subjectivity.

    The Good

    Undeniably a breakthrough for its time

    The Bad

    Boring Questionable score Nothing more than a forgettable stepping stone.
    7AlsExGal

    Creepier in many ways than later filmed versions

    This twelve minute adaptation of Mary Shelley's tale has an element that the later versions don't have. In this version Frankenstein apparently uses some kind of potion to create the monster in a large pot. You then get to see the monster emerge from the pot, first as a skeleton, and then skin and even clothing form over the skeleton. This was filmed by starting with a model of the monster, melting the form, and then filming the reverse of this melting as the creation of the monster.

    The story starts with Frankenstein going to college. Here he never becomes a doctor, but apparently two years into his studies he has discovered the secret of life and death and is ready to create a perfect human being. Instead he forms an extremely mishapened creature. The creature then follows Frankenstein around, even becoming jealous of Frankenstein's bride-to-be. How the monster is eliminated is very odd, and I'll let you see it for yourself to find out how it ends. Just let me say that there are no crowds of villagers with torches and pitchforks in this one. Instead the ending is very Victorian and even magical.

    This is very much worth looking at if you get the chance.
    7TJ1380

    Before Karloff, yet largely forgotten

    Although the 1931 Boris Karloff film is generally remembered as the original "Frankenstein," many people don't know that this film, made by Thomas Edison's production company in 1910, is really the first adaptation of Mary Shelley's novel. This is an interesting film to watch for historical reasons alone, but there are some other elements that caught my attention. First of all, the creation of the monster is handled differently from other versions; in this film the monster is created not through science (or rather science fiction) but through a technique that one could read as almost mystical. Frankenstein mixes a number of ingredients together in a large metal cauldron. The monster grows out of the cauldron in an interesting scene that was achieved by taking footage of a dummy being burned and playing it backwards. As many people know, Mary Shelley never states how the monster is created in her novel, but I'm sure she didn't intend on it being created through magic or alchemy.

    The second thing that I thought was interesting was a pretty big departure from the themes of the original story. In the book, the monster starts off as a benevolent and gentle being who is driven to commit murder by the ill treatment that he receives from his creator (and everyone else, for that matter). The implication is that evil isn't innate but something that is learned from the cruelties that one experiences throughout his or her life. In this film however, it is explicitly stated that the monster is evil. The only time he feels anything other than hatred for his creator is at the end, when he vanishes after apparently being moved by how much Frankenstein loves his wife. We therefore have a transformation of a sad story about an unloved monster who becomes bitter and hateful after being rejected by the world around him into a much more simple story about the dangers of man playing God. Without the complex themes of the novel, the story is far less interesting (then again, one cannot expect any real depth in a twelve-minute film version of this story).

    I guess my one real complaint about this film is that it is visually uninteresting aside from the cool monster creation scene. Most of the scenes consist of one shot from a stationary camera of the actors acting their scenes out as if they were on a stage. The monster really looks quite menacing in this film, but it comes off as far less menacing when he is shown simply walking into the same shot as Frankenstein and Elizabeth before attacking them. The only thing that keeps this film from becoming really boring in that respect is its brief length. Then again, it was made in 1910, and in the end it really is quite impressive for its time. In the end, it's still worth a look for anyone who wants to see the first true "Frankenstein" film.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Since its original release, the film had been listed as missing. No copies of it were known to exist. An original nitrate print finally turned up in Wisconsin in the mid-1970s.
    • Connections
      Edited into I Am Your Father (2015)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • March 18, 1910 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • None
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Frankenstein the First
    • Production company
      • Edison Manufacturing Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 16m
    • Sound mix
      • Silent
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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