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Lady Frankenstein, cette obsédée sexuelle

Original title: Lady Frankenstein
  • 1971
  • 18
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
2.7K
YOUR RATING
Lady Frankenstein, cette obsédée sexuelle (1971)
Clip: Lady Frankenstein Will Shock You back To Life
Play clip2:33
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2 Videos
62 Photos
Monster HorrorSupernatural HorrorHorror

Baron Frankenstein's daughter and his assistant/her lover continue his experiments in an attempt to rebuild his legacy after he is killed by his psychotic, murderous first monster.Baron Frankenstein's daughter and his assistant/her lover continue his experiments in an attempt to rebuild his legacy after he is killed by his psychotic, murderous first monster.Baron Frankenstein's daughter and his assistant/her lover continue his experiments in an attempt to rebuild his legacy after he is killed by his psychotic, murderous first monster.

  • Directors
    • Mel Welles
    • Aureliano Luppi
  • Writers
    • Umberto Borsato
    • Egidio Gelso
    • Aureliano Luppi
  • Stars
    • Joseph Cotten
    • Rosalba Neri
    • Paul Muller
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.2/10
    2.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Mel Welles
      • Aureliano Luppi
    • Writers
      • Umberto Borsato
      • Egidio Gelso
      • Aureliano Luppi
    • Stars
      • Joseph Cotten
      • Rosalba Neri
      • Paul Muller
    • 89User reviews
    • 67Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:53
    Trailer
    Lady Frankenstein
    Clip 2:33
    Lady Frankenstein
    Lady Frankenstein
    Clip 2:33
    Lady Frankenstein

    Photos62

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    Top cast20

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    Joseph Cotten
    Joseph Cotten
    • Baron Frankenstein
    Rosalba Neri
    Rosalba Neri
    • Tania Frankenstein
    • (as Sara Bay)
    Paul Muller
    Paul Muller
    • Dr. Charles Marshall
    Marino Masé
    Marino Masé
    • Thomas Stack
    • (as Peter Whiteman)
    Renate Kasché
    Renate Kasché
    • Julia Stack
    • (as Renata Kashe, Renata Cash)
    Lorenzo Terzon
    • Peter, Harris assistant
    • (as Lawrence Tilden)
    Ada Pometti
    • Farmer's Wife
    • (as Ada Pomeroy)
    Riccardo Pizzuti
    Riccardo Pizzuti
    • The Creature
    Andrea Aureli
    Andrea Aureli
    • Jim Turner
    Joshua Sinclair
    Joshua Sinclair
    • John
    • (as Gianni Loffredo, Johnny Loffrey)
    Alessandro Perrella
    • Farmer
    Mickey Hargitay
    Mickey Hargitay
    • Captain Harris
    Herbert Fux
    Herbert Fux
    • Tom Lynch
    Petar Martinovitch
    • Jack Morgan
    • (as Peter Martinov)
    Adam Welles
    • Farmer's Son
    Herb Andress
    Herb Andress
    • Hunchback
    • (uncredited)
    Ferruccio Fregonese
    • Priest
    • (uncredited)
    Fulvio Mingozzi
    • Soldier
    • (uncredited)
    • Directors
      • Mel Welles
      • Aureliano Luppi
    • Writers
      • Umberto Borsato
      • Egidio Gelso
      • Aureliano Luppi
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews89

    5.22.7K
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    Featured reviews

    rixrex

    Rosalba Neri as Lady Frankenstein takes the show

    I gave this a 5 because of Rosalba Neri's wonderful performance as the Lady Frankenstein. Actually she's the daughter of Dr. Frankenstein, played by Joseph Cotten in a routine manner, but routine from Cotten is always good regardless. The flick deserves more than 5 based upon Neri, and decent acting all around, good sets and good atmosphere. It also deserves less than 5 due to a pretty crummy monster, both in appearance and mannerisms. Makes one long for the days of Glenn Strange, or even Kiwi Kingston. It's like everyone went to sleep when it came time to design the monster, because everything else is above average. And way above average is the performance of Neri as a really sexy and domineering lady doctor. She's a 10 in this flick and makes it worth watching.
    6bensonmum2

    Better than its reputation suggests

    • The movie begins with Dr. Frankenstein buying a corpse from a grave-robber to use in his experiments. His daughter's arrival puts a kink in his plans, but he forges on in his quest to create life. When his monster does come to life, it immediately attacks and kills the good Doctor. Tania (the daughter) is also a doctor and wants to carry-on with her father's experiments. So, while the original monster terrorizes the community, Tania hatches a plan to take the brain from Marshall, the lab assistant, and place it into the hunky (Did I just use that word?) body of a retarded servant. Will she succeed?


    • What's not to like about a Frankenstein movie where the basis of creating life is sex? Tania doesn't get all philosophical on us and start babbling about discovering the origins of life and the secrets of God. Sure, Tania wants to see her father's reputation restored by proving his theories, but she also wants to create the ultimate lover and isn't afraid to say so. It's as good a reason as any I've heard in a movie for creating a monster.


    • I've always thought that Lady Frankenstein was better than its reputation suggests. Oh, it's got problems, but I always have fun watching it. Lady Frankenstein comes across to me as an Italian Hammer-style film - rich, vibrant colors, nice Gothic touches, attention to details, and a lot of fake looking blood. The cast consists of a who's who of Euro regulars. Joseph Cotten, Rosalba Neri, Paul Muller, and even Mickey Hargitay give performances that are as good as most any other Italian horror film of the period. I also like the references to the old Universal film that can be found in Lady Frankenstein. For example, Dr. Frankenstein's line about man being God on earth takes Colin Clive's speech from the original Frankenstein to a whole new level.
    lazarillo

    Sexiest Frankenstein Movie Ever!

    This Italian-made Gothic horror movie often gets the short shrift from fans of the overrated Hammer films of the time. Sure, it has much lower production values and, sure, Rosalba Neri (aka "Sara Bay")is no Peter Cushing, but there's no doubt which one of them I'd rather see naked. Seriously though, Neri shed her clothes so graciously on screen and looked so appealing doing it that no one ever gave her credit for being the great actress that she was. She carries this movie pretty much by herself--Joseph Cotton is good as her father but he is killed off early, and Mickey Hargitay isn't bad but is horribly miscast as a 19th century police detective. Probably more than in any other of her movies, Neri stays dressed here. But the two scenes in which she does shed her Victorian garments are VERY memorable, and not for the usual reasons. In one scene she helps her would-be lover kill a handsome but idiotic handyman by having sex with the guy while her accomplice smothers him with a pillow, but her evil and lustful character doesn't let the guy's untimely death interruptus the coitus. The look on her face as she has "the little death" well after her sex partner has had the big one (and her poor would-be lover can only watch) is amazing and very perverse. There's probably not another actress that could have (or would have) pulled it off. The final scene, if anything, is even more warped, so much so that it was censored from many prints. Let's just say that this nymphomaniacal Frankenstein just can't resist Frankenstein's monster, and the sight of the two of them on the operating table stops even the rampaging villagers with torches dead in their tracks.

    Is this is a classic Frankenstein movie? Well, no. It resembles the Mel Brooks comedy "Young Frankenstein" more than the Hammer films or the Universal classics, but it is reasonably well-made, definitely pretty entertaining and it is, if nothing else, the sexiest Frankenstein movie ever.
    4BaronBl00d

    A Daughter's Vision

    Mel Welles, you might remember him as Mr. Mushnick in Roger Corman's Little Shop of Horrors, directs this somewhat interesting yet wholly twisted tale of Dr. Frankenstein's daughter carrying on her father's work after his death and creating a creature not for its intellectual ability or its likelihood to be/do good but rather for its sex appeal. You see, Tania Frankenstein, though a doctor and scientist in her own right, is concerned with really nothing more than satiating her primal desires for the stable boy and making some super sex slave by using his body with the excellent brain of a man she does not love. The story is tissue-thin here, and one gets what one might expect: lots of leering and suggestive comments(surprisingly most from the female lead), special effects that are not so special, acting that lacks depth of characterization, and not really much action or suspense. And while this film is almost barren in regards to good storytelling, Lady Frankenstein does oddly have some aspects which make it watchable - not highly watchable but watchable nonetheless. Italian actress Rosalba Neri AKA Sara Bay/Bey plays the Baron's daughter with some aplomb and lots and lots of sex appeal. She oozes desire and seduction quite well. Her performance is pretty one-dimensional, but she is quite lovely and plays over-the-top a little too well. She is also very open with her performance if you catch my drift. Poor Joseph Cotten, now regulated to European horror films for money, plays the father in a brief yet competent performance. He is the star attraction but gone before the film really kicks into a gear. As for the rest of the cast, Paul Muller is somewhat effective as Dr. Charles Marshall, the baron's assistant and an admirer of the daughter for some time. As crimes and missing persons begin to unfold in the village, policeman(I wasn't buying this)Mickey Hargitay starts to pump Tania for answers - despite what you might think not to her satisfaction. Where the movie really loses credibility is in the final third of the film where the suspect script, weak performances, and lackluster direction all head further South. The creature is revealed and looks quite ridiculous. The film ends somewhat abruptly with one of the hasty resolutions very common in the 1970s. While not nearly as bad and repulsive as some might want you to think, Lady Frankenstein is indeed a very flawed film with some perverse albeit intriguing overtones.
    6lost-in-limbo

    She's no longer just daddy's little girl!

    After creating life, Baron Frankenstein is murdered by his hideous creation that heads off to kill those people who were involved in its resurrection, or who are simply in the way. The baron's daughter, Tania, who has just arrived from university with the help of his lab assistant, decides to go on and continue with her father's work. To keep the high reputation of the family name and to satisfy her lustful needs. Tania seductively plans to create a perfect being with the brains of her fellow assistant and the body of the slow-witted servant.

    "I am, my father's daughter". She sure is! And a whole lot more! This sleazy Frankenstein imitation (of Hammer's "The Horror of Frankenstein") is beyond warped with its kinky fixations with seedy sex and red paint jobs (gore, of course) within its highly Gothic surroundings, inspires this cheap Italian exploitation picture. Albeit at times quite nonsensical and melodramatic, at least it gave the mad doctor theme a huge revamp with its lewd nature and having a female protagonist who was in supreme control with her manipulative prowess. This refreshing twist was one of the few neat additions to this rough around the edges, but above-average production. Director Mel Welles shuffles around some assured moments of suspense, array of blinding images and builds upon the morbidly vivid atmosphere. Although the creeping sound effects and nagging music score really did give me an almighty headache. The make-up effects were simply okay with the ghastly looking monster going on to aimlessly cause havoc like they mostly do in these stories.

    When it came to the performances, one can only say they were quite laboured, despite a few decent turns. The very appealing Rosalba Neri grafts away with her conniving and forcefully voluptuous personality. She was quite hypnotic in the role and looked the part of Tania Frankenstein. Joseph Cotten gives the flick a steady head for the short time he's in it and Herbert Fux makes a more than a good impression as Tom Lynch the grave robber. The raw to-the-bone story and script aren't typically the best with their telegraphed patterns, but it lifted when it needed to by showing how much Tania has taken a shine to her father's aspiring work and there were hardly any dull spots.

    "Lady Frankenstein" is an entertainingly tainted exercise on someone who cherishes what they do.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The film was largely financed through Harry Cushing, but just prior to the start of filming a letter of credit from a film company was not accepted by the Italian banks. The final last-minute $90,000 needed to make the film was obtained from Roger Corman's New World Pictures. The financiers of the film chose Rosalba Neri as the lead role of Tania Frankenstein in the film.
    • Goofs
      The head of a crew member can be seen in the mirror behind Dr Frankenstein and colleague whilst they try to bring the monster to life.
    • Quotes

      Tania Frankenstein: My dear man, you are obnoxious, extremely vulgar - and while I am certain that what you are thinking is merely fantasy on your part, I would say you spend too much time alone in your fantasies; be careful: it will soften your brain far quicker than can whisky.

      Jack Morgan: How can someone so beautiful be such a bitch?

      Tania Frankenstein: Depends on the company I'm with.

    • Crazy credits
      The movie ends abruptly after the main character dies, without any credits.
    • Alternate versions
      The US release through New World was cut by 15 minutes. The complete film was available on a Swedish VHS (long OOP) and there is a forthcoming (2005) dvd release of the restored feature from a German company.
    • Connections
      Edited into Rob Zombie: Living Dead Girl (1999)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • August 16, 1973 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Languages
      • English
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Lady Frankenstein
    • Filming locations
      • Incir De Paolis Studios, Rome, Lazio, Italy(interiors)
    • Production companies
      • New World Pictures
      • Condor International Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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