Frankenstein (2004 film)

Frankensteins
Directed by Marcus Nispel
Produced by Martin Scorsese
Marcus Nispel
Screenplay by John Shiban
Story by Dean Koontz
Based on Dean Koontz's Frankenstein by Dean Koontz
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
Starring Parker Posey
Vincent Perez
Thomas Kretschmann
Adam Goldberg
Ivana Miličević
Michael Madsen
Music by Normand Corbeil
Angelo Badalamenti
Cinematography Daniel Pearl
Edited by Jay Friedkin
Distributed by USA Network
Release date
October 10, 2004
Running time
88 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Frankenstein is a 2004 made-for-television USA Network production starring Thomas Kretschmann as Victor Helios (supposedly the man that the fictional character Victor Frankenstein was based on) and Vincent Pérez as his creature. It was produced by Martin Scorsese and based on Dean Koontz's version of Frankenstein. The film was originally intended as the pilot for an ongoing series, but this was not successful. Koontz later developed the concept into a series of five novels: Frankenstein: Prodigal Son, Frankenstein: City of Night, Frankenstein: Dead and Alive, Frankenstein: Lost Souls, and Frankenstein: The Dead Town.

Plot

This is not a direct adaptation of the Mary Shelley novel, but a postmodern gothic reinvention set in present-day New Orleans. It recasts the doctor as the villain and the creature as a tragic hero determined to stop him; the primary action involves two police detectives (Parker Posey and Adam Goldberg) who enlist the aid of the creature ("Deucalion" in this version) to stop a serial killer who is one of Victor's later creations.

Cast

Actor Role
Parker Posey Detective Carson O'Conner
Vincent Perez Deucalion
Thomas Kretschmann Victor Helios
Adam Goldberg Detective Michael Sloane
Ivana Miličević Erika Helios
Michael Madsen Detective Harker
Deborah Duke Angelique
Ann Mahoney Jenna
Deneen Tyler Kathleen Burke
Brett Rice Detective Frye
Stocker Fontelieu Patrick

Reception

Sloan Freer of Radio Times gave the film two stars and said "though the ultra-stylised visuals create an air of brooding menace, they can't compensate for the patchy plotting or the abrupt and hugely unsatisfying finale."[1] Brian Lowry of Variety praised the look saying "Even working on a made-for-TV budget, Nispel provides plenty of striking imagery, giving the film a truly distinctive look" and added "while the climax is somewhat disappointing, the brisk story until then leaves ample room to speculate as to where a series would go with Helios’ creations roaming the Earth."[2]

References

  1. Freer, Sloane. "Frankenstein". Radio Times. Retrieved 2017-11-22.
  2. Lowry, Brian (2004-10-07). "Frankenstein". Variety. Retrieved 2017-11-22.


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