Il Mostro di Frankenstein (lost silent horror film; 1920): Difference between revisions

From The Lost Media Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
 
(6 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown)
Line 5: Line 5:
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
}}
}}
'''''Il Mostro di Frankenstein''''' (''Frankenstein's Monster'') was the third (known) film adaptation of Mary Shelley's ''Frankenstein'' novel, released in Italy in 1920.<ref>[http://frankensteinia.blogspot.fr/2012/03/il-mostro-di-frankenstein-1920.html Frankensteinia blog post.] Retrieved 19 Mar '16</ref>


'''''Il Mostro di Frankenstein''''' (''Frankenstein's Monster'') was the third (known) film adaptation of Mary Shelley's ''Frankenstein'' novel, released in Italy in 1920.<ref>[http://frankensteinia.blogspot.fr/2012/03/il-mostro-di-frankenstein-1920.html Frankensteinia blog post.] Retrieved 19 Mar '16.</ref> The film was directed by Eugenio Testa and starred Luciano Albertini as Dr. Frankenstein and strongman Umberto Guarracino as Frankenstein's Monster.
The film was directed by Eugenio Testa; it starred Luciano Albertini as Dr. Frankenstein and strongman Umberto Guarracino as Frankenstein's Monster.


Several pamphlets and posters remain from the 1920's mentioning the movie, and it was screened at locations as far as Belgium and Egypt. A French-language version of the film was also released, called ''Le Monstre'' (''The Monster'') or ''Le Monstre de Frankenstein'' (the original title, in French).
Several pamphlets and posters remain from the 1920s, mentioning the movie. It was screened at locations as far as Belgium and Egypt. A French-language version of the film was also released, called ''Le Monstre'' (''The Monster'') or ''Le Monstre de Frankenstein'' (the original title, in French).


No copies in any language are known to exist. Even at the time of its existence, many scenes of were cut by censors, with one version reportedly being cut down to 39 minutes.
No copies in any language are known to exist. Even at the time of its existence, many of its scenes were deleted by censors, with one version reportedly being cut down to 39 minutes.


==References==
==See Also==
<references/>
*[[Frankenstein (lost Bela Lugosi test reel footage for Universal sci-fi horror film; 1931)]]
*[[Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man (lost Bela Lugosi monster dialogue of Universal horror film; 1943)]]
*[[Frankie Stein (lost production materials for unreleased Spark Plug animated film; 2008)]]
*[[Life Without Soul (lost silent film adaptation of "Frankenstein"; 1915)]]
*[[The Curse of Frankenstein (lost acid bath scene footage of Hammer horror film; 1957)]]
 
==Reference==
{{reflist}}


[[Category:Lost films]]
[[Category:Lost films]]
[[Category:Completely lost media]]
[[Category:Historic]]

Latest revision as of 13:55, 30 October 2021

Mostro.jpg

Umberto Guarracino as the Monster.

Status: Lost

Il Mostro di Frankenstein (Frankenstein's Monster) was the third (known) film adaptation of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein novel, released in Italy in 1920.[1]

The film was directed by Eugenio Testa; it starred Luciano Albertini as Dr. Frankenstein and strongman Umberto Guarracino as Frankenstein's Monster.

Several pamphlets and posters remain from the 1920s, mentioning the movie. It was screened at locations as far as Belgium and Egypt. A French-language version of the film was also released, called Le Monstre (The Monster) or Le Monstre de Frankenstein (the original title, in French).

No copies in any language are known to exist. Even at the time of its existence, many of its scenes were deleted by censors, with one version reportedly being cut down to 39 minutes.

See Also

Reference

  1. Frankensteinia blog post. Retrieved 19 Mar '16