The plight of Richard E. Cunah’s 1958 follow up to the classic mad scientist film Frankenstein, can be summed up in a scene that comes toward the end of this not completely painful movie. Having developed his own living, breathing, made from scratch man - Dr. Frankenstein’s grandson, Oliver (Donald Murphy), drops in a female brain. And so this squarely, manly, burly figure slowly stalking its way through town is, for no other reason than that gender specific organ, referred to delicately as “she.”
Frankenstein’s Daughter (1958)
Frankenstein’s Daughter (1958)
Frankenstein’s Daughter (1958)
The plight of Richard E. Cunah’s 1958 follow up to the classic mad scientist film Frankenstein, can be summed up in a scene that comes toward the end of this not completely painful movie. Having developed his own living, breathing, made from scratch man - Dr. Frankenstein’s grandson, Oliver (Donald Murphy), drops in a female brain. And so this squarely, manly, burly figure slowly stalking its way through town is, for no other reason than that gender specific organ, referred to delicately as “she.”