Vote up the best Frankenstein's Monster portrayals. We all know that, actually, the doctor's name is Frankenstein, but that doesn't really stop most of us from calling the monster by his creator's name. Whether called The Monster, The Creation, or simply Frankenstein,...
Frankenstein was a book by Mary Shelly—it's been adapted for the screen dozens of times. The story of Frankenstein is told through a series of letters written by Captain Robert Walton to his sister, as he leads an expedition to the North Pole. On the way, he meets...
Lon Chaney, Jr. - famous for playing the Wolf Man, the Mummy, and Frankenstein's Monster - portrayed Count Alucard/Dracula in the 1943 film,Son of Dracula. The movie was noteworthy for its cutting-edge effects at the time. Age:Dec. at 67 (1906-1973) ...
just ahead ofHow to Dungeon Master Parenting, which itself was a hair in front ofLooking through the Speculum: Examining the Women’s Health Movement. With just five percentage points separating the top three, it is the closest Diagram race since the selection of the winner for ...
The Man Who Never Was: Created by John Newland. With Dana Wynter, Robert Lansing, Murray Hamilton, Alexander Davion. American agent Peter Murphy is trying to escape from East Berlin when he encounters his exact double, millionaire playboy Mark Wainwright
edited together to come up with a new story for U.S. audiences. One of those shows was "Super Dimension Fortress Macross," one of the most influential anime of all time. Aside from being one of the shows that made the Frankenstein's Monster that is "Robotech" a reality, 1982's "Supe...
a Frankenstein's monster outright horrified at his own miserable existence. Think Cronenberg'sThe Fly,only with Marvel IP. On one hand, it's fascinating to think about a group of producers having fundamentally no concept whatsoever of who Spider-Man actually is. On another, it's arguably even...
Milne didn’t like that he was considered a children’s writer. As sad a sit might sound, his works for kids tuned out to be like Frankenstein’s monster the creature that swallowed its creator. The Catcher in the Rye In the 1940s, Salinger gained a reputation of a skillful novelist. ...
Frankensteins instead! There are those, lusting after immortality, who fancy human experience as something that can one day be transplanted into some man-human hybrid form or transhumanist man-machine so they can supposedly live forever!
(from being in the control of someone or something else) evolved first in French and was in English by late 14c. For this, Old English had pleoh; in early Middle English this sense is found in peril. For sound changes, compare dungeon, which is from the same source....