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Bezig met laden... Frankenstein [1931 film]door James Whale (Director)
Bezig met laden...
Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. A travers ce film expressionniste aux décors gothiques, James Whale propose une adaptation du roman fantastique de Mary Shelley. L'interprétation de Karloff (le monstre au maquillage particulièrement soigné pour l'époque), créature à l'allure à la fois impressionnante et enfantine, est la véritable réussite du film.
Looks like a “Dracula” plus, touching a new peak in horror plays and handled in production with supreme craftsmanship. Exploitation, which dwells upon the shock angle, is also a punchful asset with hair-raising lobby and newspaper trumpeting....Maximum of stimulating shock is there, but the thing is handled with subtle change of pace and shift of tempo that keeps attention absorbed to a high voltage climax, tricked out with spectacle and dramatic crescendo, after holding the smash shivver on a hair trigger for more than an hour....Subtle handling of the subject comes in the balance that has been maintained between the real and the supernatural, contrast that heightens the horror punches. The figure of the monster is a triumph of effect. It has a face and head of exactly the right distortions to convey a sense of the diabolical, but not enough to destroy the essential touch of monstrous human evil. Out of John L. Balderston's stage conception of the Mary Shelley classic, "Frankenstein," James Whale, producer of "Journey's End" as a play and as a film, has wrought a stirring grand-guignol type of picture, one that aroused so much excitement at the Mayfair yesterday that many in the audience laughed to cover their true feelings.... It is naturally a morbid, gruesome affair, but it is something to keep the spectator awake, for during its most spine-chilling periods it exacts attention. You’ll never tell anything about this one from a preview. A preview can only determine the continuity, the photography, the sound — the acting and the direction. All of these Frankenstein has — in perfection. It is the story itself, its effect on a paying audience, the word-of-mouth that will go out that will determine whether or not Universal has the greatest shocker of all time — or a dud. It can be one or the other; there will be no in-between measures.... Is it entertainment? Only theatre-goers can give that answer. We venture the opinion that this production of Frankenstein will cause more talk, no matter how that talk points, than any picture that has been made in years.... James Whale has done a great job in his direction. This is not an easy thing to direct — just how far to go in playing upon an audience’s credulity, it’s sympathy, it’s nerves. Whale seems to have gone far enough, but not too far. The chances are the director will win the good opinion of the critics for this job.... As a story Frankenstein dates back to 1831 — for one hundred years it has remained alive in the interest of those book readers who go in for ghost stories. Now we’ll see if these same people go to motion picture theatres. Is opgenomen inIs een bewerking vanFrankenstein door Mary Shelley Wordt geparodieerd inHeeft een supplement
Dr. Frankenstein dares to tamper with life and death by creating a human monster in his laboratory but his dreams of perfection are thwarted when the monster becomes an uncontrollable beast. Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresGeen genres Dewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)823.7Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Early 19th century 1800-37LC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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4/4 (Great).
Re-watching this for the second time in over a decade, it has a lot more awkward acting and bad dialog than I remembered. It's easy to forget that stuff when the great parts of the movie are so extremely memorable.
(Apr. 2021) ( )