Never struck me as funny, but it's well put together.
Young Frankenstein (1974)
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Reviews Counted:45
Fresh:42
Rotten:3
Average Rating:8.5/10
Consensus: Made with obvious affection for the original, Young Frankenstein is a riotously silly spoof featuring a fantastic performance by Gene Wilder.
Runtime: 2 hrs 10 mins
Genre: Comedies
Synopsis: An affectionate parody that pays homage to the FRANKENSTEIN films (from the novel FRANKENSTEIN by Mary Shelley) directed by James Whale in the 1930s, YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN is both a zany comedy and a... An affectionate parody that pays homage to the FRANKENSTEIN films (from the novel FRANKENSTEIN by Mary Shelley) directed by James Whale in the 1930s, YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN is both a zany comedy and a cinematic tour de force. Written by director Mel Brooks and the film's star, Gene Wilder, YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN has all the usual--and in this case slightly unusual--suspects: the reluctant scientist Frederick Frankenstein, who is actually the grandson of the infamous creature-creator (pronounced "Fronken-steen" and played by Wilder), his spoiled fiancée (Madeline Kahn), Igor the pop-eyed hunchback (Marty Feldman), his dizzy assistant (Teri Garr), the castle's hideous head housekeeper (Cloris Leachman), and, of course, the Monster (Peter Boyle). Highlights include the sets, which are the original ones used in the Whale films; the beautiful black-and-white cinematography; and the fine screenplay. Combining noirish elegance with uproarious sight gags and double entendres is a feat Brooks pulls off fabulously, directing the wonderful ensemble to act with sensitivity and humanistic feelings as well as with lunatic abandon. YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN is a treat from beginning to end. [More]
Starring: Gene Wilder, Peter Boyle, Marty Feldman, Teri Garr
Starring: Gene Wilder, Peter Boyle, Marty Feldman, Teri Garr, Madeline Kahn, Cloris Leachman, Kenneth Mars, Gene Hackman
Director: Mel Brooks
Director: Mel Brooks
Screenwriter: Gene Wilder
Producer: Michael Gruskoff
Composer: John Morris
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Reviews for Young Frankenstein
Young Frankenstein emerges as a reverently satirical salute to the 1930s horror film genre.
Brooks's most accomplished work, combining his well-known brand of comedy with stylish direction and a uniformly excellent cast.
...the comedy here is refreshingly restrained. Sure, it’s silly, but there’s little call for bathroom humour, excessive violence or other staples of more recent comedies.
Wilder and Peter Boyle (as the monster) are hysterical, but it's Teri Garr who steals the show as Frankenstein's buxom and considerably vapid assistant.
Bug-eyed Marty Feldman steals the show as Igor, pronounced 'Eye-gor'.
Mel Brooks caught comic lightning in a bottle in 1974 with his appropriately black-and-white spoof of James Whale's 1931 classic horror film.
More about the myth of Karloff than the monster, this Mel Brooks pastiche is probably his best early film.
For a really delightful parody, James Whale's own Bride of Frankenstein is far better value.
Say this for Brooks - he saw women as comedic equals, and they continually proved him right.
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