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Context Trivia / BrideOfFrankenstein

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1* ActingForTwo:
2** Elsa Lanchester plays both Creator/MaryShelley and the Bride. The opening credits play cute by crediting "?" as the Monster's Bride.
3** In addition to her role as Minnie, Una O'Connor also appeared in the prologue, as Shelley's maid who is holding the leash as the dogs go off screen.
4** Creator/DwightFrye plays two roles, Karl and Fritz, though most of the scenes with Karl were cut.
5* CreatorBacklash: TruerToTheText or not, Boris Karloff expressed some unhappiness that the Creature learns to talk and express himself later in life, believing it undermined the tragedy of the original, childlike performance from the first film.
6* DeletedRole: As revealed on ''Series/{{Svengoolie}}'', the late dwarf actor Creator/BillyBarty originally appeared as a baby in Pretorius' collection of little people. His role was cut from the final film, but he can be seen from behind in a wide shot of the collection of little people in jars.
7* DeletedScene: Creator/JamesWhale cut out a few scenes before release, trimming the movie down from 90 minutes to 75.
8** This included a re-shot ending where Dr. Frankenstein survives (he was originally meant to die in the laboratory explosion) and some bits that were excised at the behest of the censors, like a scene where Dwight Frye's character murders his uncle and blames it on the monster, or some shots of Elsa Lanchester that were deemed too revealing. Unlike some of the deleted moments from the first film that survived and were reintegrated into the film decades later, [[MissingEpisode don't expect to ever see these scenes.]]
9** BarrierBustingBlow: An entire courtroom scene was excised in which the Burgomeister called forth anybody who had actually witnessed the murders, but only turned up people who discovered bodies after the fact. After rather scoffingly dismissing the rabble, the Burgomeister himself is attacked by the creature through a window.
10** Dwight Frye was originally cast in a dual role as both Pretorius's henchman ("Fritz") and the village idiot ("Karl"). Karl's entire subplot was removed from the story, although there's a scene or two where we see Dwight Frye playing Karl (most of the time we see him playing Fritz). So Frye's dual roles become conflated, although the only thing left of the Karl character was the name.
11** There was an epilogue to this movie featuring Mary Shelley, but it was cut from the final film.
12** There were numerous other cuts made, including an announcement of Baron Frankenstein's death and Fritz/Karl's discovery of Pretorius's homonculi. There was even some dialogue cut from the Mary Shelley prologue.
13* ExecutiveMeddling: Due to the Hays Code now being fully in effect, they were now more limited on the violence and number of deaths they could show.
14* HostilityOnTheSet: Creator/BorisKarloff and Creator/JamesWhale were no longer on speaking terms during film, due to a personal dispute on the set of ''Film/TheOldDarkHouse1932'', where they ended up speaking via other actors serving as their messengers. This was so monumental, Whale refused to ever work with Karloff again, and Creator/ClaudeRains was instead hired for Whale's next venture, ''Film/TheInvisibleMan1933''. Karloff had been announced in the title role. However, the studio system forced them to work this one last time, and the rest is history.
15* OnSetInjury: Creator/BorisKarloff broke his hip filming his first scene, which required a double.
16* TheOtherDarrin: The actors for Elizabeth, the Burgomaster, and Hans are replaced.[[note]]Elizabeth was played by Creator/MaeClarke in the original ''Frankenstein'' and by Valerie Hobson in ''Bride of Frankenstein'' due in part to Clarke recovering from an automobile accident. This is a bit jarring, since ''Bride'' picks up right where the original leaves off and Elizabeth's hair changes from blonde to brunette, not to mention that Hobson was also considerably younger than Clarke.[[/note]] Made additionally confusing by the fact Hans was named Ludwig in the first film.
17* ReferencedBy: The most recurring villain of ''Westernanimation/TheMask: The Animated Series'' is a MadScientist also named Dr. Pretorius.
18* RefittedForSequel: Frankenstein building the monster a bride and the monster befriending a blind man are taken from the orginal novel.
19* ScienceMarchesOn: "The human heart is more complex than any other part of the body". Apparently growing brains in a vat is easier than we think.
20* ScullyBox: Elsa Lanchester was only 5'4" but for the role was placed on stilts that made her 7' tall. The bandages were placed so tightly on her that she was unable to move and had to be carried about the studio and fed through a straw.
21* SparedByTheCut: One of the film's deleted sequences included the Monster murdering the Burgomaster.
22* TroubledProduction: The response to ''Frankenstein'' during its original preview screenings had been so favorable that Universal [[SequelHook shot a new ending in which the monster lived]]. Director James Whale followed it up with ''Film/TheInvisibleMan1933'', which convinced ''Frankenstein'' producer Carl Daemmle that only Whale could direct a sequel. But Whale didn't want to, feeling that the original had exhausted the story's potential. Eventually, after Universal let him direct ''One More River'', he gave in.
23** However, he decided that since the sequel couldn't just be a retread of the first film, a ToneShift was necessary. The sequel, he declared, would have to be "[[DenserAndWackier a hoot]]". He went through three different story ideas, and more sets of writers, before eventually settling on a story built around a scene in the novel where the monster demands Frankenstein create a mate for him.
24** The sequel would have the monster actually talk. Although his vocabulary would be limited to 43 words, Creator/BorisKarloff thought this was a stupid decision that robbed the monster of his charm. He and Whale were clashing over this as filming began. Colin Clive, who returned as Frankenstein, was for his part plagued by his alcoholism having become worse in the intervening four years. Whale declined to recast the part as he felt that it gave Clive's performance the right over-the-top quality.
25** Principal photography ran into problems. On the first day, the rubber suit Karloff was wearing beneath his costume filled up with air as he waded into the castle moat. Later that day, he broke his hip, requiring that a stunt double be hired for the rest of the shoot. Clive also broke his leg. The dress that Elsa Lanchester wore to play Mary Shelley in the prologue reportedly took a dozen seamstresses over four months to complete.
26** Whale shut down production for ten days to wait for the actor he wanted as the Hermit to be available, putting the film behind schedule by that amount of time. It also went $100,000 over budget, a not inconsiderable amount for the time. He finished the final cut only days before the premiere, and had to reshoot the ending. Fortunately for everyone involved, the film made money and is remembered as as much of a classic as the original, if not more.
27* WhatCouldHaveBeen:
28** Original plans for a sequel to ''Frankenstein'' were very different. Two other possible plots were conceived, one being the Monster continuing Dr. Frankenstein's research and the other one being Dr. Frankenstein inventing a death ray in the eve of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI.
29** The role of Dr. Pretorius was offered to Creator/ClaudeRains, but he was attached to another project at the time and couldn't participate. They also offered it to Creator/BelaLugosi, but he turned it down.
30** In the film's original ending, Elizabeth was supposed to be killed and have her heart placed in the Bride (hence why the Bride seems so drawn to Henry during the scene) and Henry was supposed to die in the explosion as well (he can still be seen pinned against the wall in the final cut).
31** Creator/LouiseBrooks was considered for The Bride.
32** Creator/DavidNiven screen tested for the role of Creator/PercyByssheShelley in the introductory sequence but was passed over.
33* WorkingTitle: ''The Return of Frankenstein''.
34* WrittenInInfirmity: Not long before filming began, Colin Clive broke a leg in a horse riding accident. Consequently, most of Henry Frankenstein's scenes were shot with him sitting.
35* YouLookFamiliar:
36** Creator/DwightFrye, who played Frankenstein's [[TheIgor hunchbacked assistant]] Fritz in the original film, appears here as Karl, a non-hunchbacked toady to Pretorius. The Monster ''also'' kills him.
37** Marilyn Harris, who played Maria, the girl The Monster accidentally kills in the original, appears uncredited as another young girl. She is the leader of the group of young schoolgirls who encounter the Monster as he runs away from the blind man's burning house. Director James Whale deliberately gave her a one-word line ("Look!"), so she would be paid more by the studio as an actor with a speaking role, instead of as an extra.

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