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.
- Thomas Stack
- (as Peter Whiteman)
- Julia Stack
- (as Renata Kashe)
- Peter, Harris assistant
- (as Lawrence Tilden)
- John
- (as Gianni Loffredo)
- Hunchback
- (uncredited)
- Priest
- (uncredited)
- Tom Lynch
- (uncredited)
- Jack Morgan
- (uncredited)
- Soldier
- (uncredited)
- Zack
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe 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.
- GoofsThe 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 creditsThe movie ends abruptly after the main character dies, without any credits.
- Alternate versionsThe 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.
- ConnectionsEdited into Rob Zombie: Living Dead Girl (1999)
"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.
- lost-in-limbo
- Sep 1, 2006
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Daughter of Frankenstein
- Filming locations
- Incir De Paolis Studios, Rome, Lazio, Italy(interiors)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 39 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1