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Frankenstein conquiert le monde

Original title: Furankenshutain tai Chitei Kaijû Baragon
  • 1965
  • Unrated
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
2.6K
YOUR RATING
Frankenstein conquiert le monde (1965)
KaijuMonster HorrorSupernatural HorrorHorrorSci-FiThriller

An American scientist and his Japanese colleagues study a feral boy born from the radiated heart of Frankenstein's monster, while a subterranean dinosaur ravages the Japanese countryside.An American scientist and his Japanese colleagues study a feral boy born from the radiated heart of Frankenstein's monster, while a subterranean dinosaur ravages the Japanese countryside.An American scientist and his Japanese colleagues study a feral boy born from the radiated heart of Frankenstein's monster, while a subterranean dinosaur ravages the Japanese countryside.

  • Director
    • Ishirô Honda
  • Writers
    • Reuben Bercovitch
    • Takeshi Kimura
    • John Meredyth Lucas
  • Stars
    • Nick Adams
    • Kumi Mizuno
    • Tadao Takashima
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    2.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ishirô Honda
    • Writers
      • Reuben Bercovitch
      • Takeshi Kimura
      • John Meredyth Lucas
    • Stars
      • Nick Adams
      • Kumi Mizuno
      • Tadao Takashima
    • 70User reviews
    • 49Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos108

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    Top cast51

    Edit
    Nick Adams
    Nick Adams
    • Dr. James Bowen
    • (as Nikku Adamusu)
    Kumi Mizuno
    Kumi Mizuno
    • Dr. Sueko Togami
    Tadao Takashima
    Tadao Takashima
    • Dr. Yuzo Kawaji
    • (as Takao Takashima)
    Yoshio Tsuchiya
    Yoshio Tsuchiya
    • Mr. Kawai
    Kôji Furuhata
    Kôji Furuhata
    • Frankenstein
    Jun Tazaki
    Jun Tazaki
    • Military Advisor
    Susumu Fujita
    Susumu Fujita
    • Osaka Police Chief
    Takashi Shimura
    Takashi Shimura
    • Axis Scientist
    Nobuo Nakamura
    Nobuo Nakamura
    • Skeptical Museum Chief
    Kenji Sahara
    Kenji Sahara
    • Soldier
    Yoshifumi Tajima
    Yoshifumi Tajima
    • Submarine Commander
    Kôzô Nomura
    • Overzealous Reporter
    • (as Terunobu Nomura)
    Haruya Katô
    • TV Director
    Ikio Sawamura
    Ikio Sawamura
    • Man Walking Dog
    Yoshio Kosugi
    • Mountain Soldier
    Keiko Sawai
    Keiko Sawai
    • Kazuko, the dying girl
    Noriko Takahashi
    • Girl in Lodge
    Peter Mann
    Peter Mann
    • Dr. Liesendorf
    • Director
      • Ishirô Honda
    • Writers
      • Reuben Bercovitch
      • Takeshi Kimura
      • John Meredyth Lucas
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews70

    5.52.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7richardbutch69

    Great Movie. Buy The 2 Disc Release

    This is one of my favorite films as a kid. I have always been a big Toho fan. Godzilla of course was/is my favorite "Actor". It would have been nice if Godzilla would have been in this film as originally planned, but Baragon is just fine. Why this film has such a low rating of 3.7 is beyond me.

    I have an original full screen terrible transfer copy of this film on VHS but I still enjoyed it. When I found out that this movie was coming to DVD I bought it as soon as I could. Boy was I surprised when I opened the DVD case. Inside were 2 DVD's. Disc 1 was the original uncut version of the film in Japanese with optional English subtitles and disc 2 was the English dubbed edited version. Both are 2:35 widescreen versions!!! If you want to buy this movie make sure it is the 2 disc release. You will be glad you did.

    Later that night I put disc 1 in my DVD player and watched the movie for the first time in it's original version with subtitles on my big screen TV with popcorn by my side enjoying every minute of it.

    This movie was made for kids and the young at heart. It is a fun movie and nothing more. I give this film a 7.0 rating.
    4Platypuschow

    Frankenstein Conquers The World: Toho does Frankenstein

    The legend of Frankenstein and his various adventures have been covered to a crazy degree over the years but right here we have horror legends Toho take a stab at it. Sadly it appears they weren't told very much before they wrote the screenplay.

    Assisted once again by a US studio (Which has always been to their detriment) this tells the story of a young boy who is discovered and found to be growing at an incredible rate. Before they know it he's grown disastrously large and broken free of his constraints, just at the same time as a giant monster has appeared on a rampage as well.

    You can immediately tell that it's a Toho film, from the sfx to the one bit of score they keep using or mildly remixing. Several of the usual faces are also present including Takashi Shimura who has a blink and you'll miss it role.

    The storyline is actually more competently done than many of these Toho monster films but in its place the sfx are a tad worse. The creature effects and that of our Frankenstein are fine, but every once in a while you'll spot something so bad it should have got someones butt fired (I'm looking at you shifty Boar and awful Horse).

    What drew the most ire from me were certain logistical issues. For example Frankenstein is of course the name of the Scientist who created the monster not the name of the monster itself. As the boy grows the clothes grow (Hulk style) and various other little things that bothered me more than they perhaps should.

    It's more Toho monster cheese, if you like that stuff this will likely appeal otherwise you'll probably scratch your head in amazement just how ridiculous it all is.

    The Good:

    Fairly well made stuff

    The Bad:

    Takashi Shimura is wasted

    Frequent logistical flaws

    Some really poor sfx
    Bulldog-5

    Cheezy, but What's so wrong with Cheeze every once in a while?

    I have seen this movie before and right away you know that it is a large man rampaging through a miniature city. But....who says the imagination has to florish on common every day stuff. I thought it was really funny and compared the flik to Attack of the 50 foot woman. It also borrowed some orchestration chords from my all time favorite child hood monster flik WAR OF THE GARGANTUAS. Every once in a while we all feel the need to see something cheezy and not common. This movie is that type of movie. We know it is not real and just a dream, but why knock it? I wish it would come to DVD. I am a collector of Cheezy horror movies from the 50's, 60's and other eras. Die hard Gozilla fans will get a kick out of this movie. I personally thought War of the Gargantuas really represented what a real hideous beast should look like. If the Studios in Japan ever read this comment, please put War of the Gargantuas on DVD!!!!
    7ferbs54

    Several Cuts Above The Usual Kaiju Eiga

    Well, he may not exactly conquer the world in this picture, but at least he gets off his usual home turf! In the very imaginative opening of "Frankenstein Conquers the World" (1965), you see, the living heart of the Frankenstein monster is taken from Germany at the end of World War II and transported by submarine to Japan, where it is promptly exposed to A-bomb radiation at Hiroshima and eventually grows, to become a giant, gap-toothed male waif. This lumbering doofus (who ultimately reveals himself to be the nimblest, most energetic Frankenstein ever shown on film) soon has a dukeout royale with Baragon, a sort of giant, spiny-backed, (heat?) ray-spewing, burrowing armadillo dinosaur, with no holds barred and no quarter given. Anyway, this picture strikes me as being several cuts above the usual kaiju eiga. It has been fairly handsomely produced, features very adequate FX (despite the Maltin book's claim to the contrary; well, that bucking horse excepted), and makes excellent use of its CinemaScope frame. Director Ishiro Honda, composer Akira Ifukube and the great actor Takashi Shimura, who all contributed so much to the original "Gojira" film in 1954, here bring their talents together again, with highly entertaining results, and American actor Nick Adams does his best playing Dr. James Bowen, a scientist working at the Hiroshima International Institute of Radiotherapentics (sic). The picture offers several striking visuals, none perhaps as impressive as the awesome spectacle of Franky and Baragon going at it with a flaming forest as a backdrop. The pristine-looking DVD from Media Blasters that I just watched offers both the "international" and the "theatrical" versions of the film, which differ only in the final five minutes. I much prefer the "international," if only because we get to see Franky (ridiculously) battle yet another monster in it. Either version, however, should provide an evening's worth of good mindless fun.
    6Boba_Fett1138

    Silly but fun.

    This movie seems like a silly project on paper but the eventual movie is nevertheless still quite fun to watch.

    This movie is a Japanese attempt to blend in the Frankenstein creature with the Japanese monster movie-genre. It's like Frankenstein meets Gojira, only the creature in this movie is named Baragon, who looks like a giant armadillo, or of course better said a guy in a rubber suits that looks like a giant armadillo.

    It's all quite silly of course but yet the movie works on a certain level of entertainment. You could basically say that this movie is just as good and fun to watch as basically any other Japanese monster movie from about the same time period.

    You could tell that in the first halve of the movie they somewhat tried to remain faithful to the Frankenstein movie. They also tried to give the character a heart and let him struggle with the same emotions and difficulties the character has always struggled with in the Mary Shelley novel and all of the Frankenstein movies and tried to make the movie somewhat intelligent and scientific. It's not like it ever works out well enough or becomes believable but this is mostly because they did not go all the way with it. After all, it seemed more important for them to make a monster movie, so here we have a Frankenstein creature that suddenly starts to grow 4 times his normal size and battles Baragon, a prehistoric creature from the depths of the Earth, who has been awakened by oil drillers.

    Therefore the lovers of these Japanese monster movies will be the ones to most likely enjoy this movie. It all builds up to its obvious ending, in which the Frankenstein creature battles the man in the rubber suit. The fight is literally laughable to watch but this is of course also part of the charm of movies such as this one.

    It's all pretty silly but it was fun to watch!

    6/10

    http://bobafett1138.blogspot.com/

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When filming, the special effects crew was unaware which tree would be uprooted. Therefore, every single miniature tree seen on set was built with miniature roots and individually planted one by one.
    • Goofs
      When Frankenstein tries to capture the wild boar, in the last shot of the boar running off, the tracks that the model is running on are visible.
    • Quotes

      Dr. James Bowen: We must work to turn tragedy into eternal peace and happiness in the future.

    • Crazy credits
      In the version being distributed by U.P.A., the opening credits lists producer Tomoyuki Tanaka as "Tomoyuka Tanaka."
    • Alternate versions
      For Media Blaster's 2007 DVD release, a new copy of the American version was constructed using materials from Toho's original Japanese version. In 1966, American producer Henry Saperstein asked Toho for several new effects sequences following Frankenstein's initial escape. Since these scenes only appeared in AIP's theatrical release, the new DVD doesn't feature them.
    • Connections
      Edited into Adiyug (1978)

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Frankenstein vs. Baragon?Powered by Alexa
    • Why was that horse prop used?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 8, 1965 (Japan)
    • Country of origin
      • Japan
    • Language
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Frankenstein Conquers the World
    • Filming locations
      • Tokyo, Japan
    • Production companies
      • Henry G. Saperstein Enterprises Inc.
      • Toho
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 30 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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