Frankenstein's monster goes blind because the blood that was in Ygor’s brain is incompatible with the Monster’s blood and won’t feed his senses. Yet this is overlooked in "Frankenstein Meets the Wolfman" where there is no reference to Ygor's brain or the blindness it brought to the monster's body.It's Ygor's brain, but it's like his thoughts have become fused with the monster's thoughts. It gives it a nice mysterious touch, making a bit more creepy.
i never understood why the doctor guy makes the monster strong again, wasnt he supposed to drain energy from both of them? or did the guy become crazed where he wanted to see the monster as powerful? never got this. he didnt seem like the "mad scientist" type.
Dr. Frank Mannering (Patric Knowles) was a man of science himself and apprieciated the work and the creation by Dr. Frankenstein. The monster was a creation that had never occured before in the history of man. Dr. Mannering couldn't simple destroy the creature. He had to see it at it full power in interest of science. Unlike the "mad scienist" syndrome, Dr. Mannering only want to do this in the interest of science. He was not mad by any means. Hope this helps.
yes that explained alot, i never understood why he didnt just kill the wolfman and the monster. but seeing the monster at full power, he wasnt helping talbot at all right?
In the sequel to this movie, "House of Frankenstein" (1944) Dr. Niemann (Boris Karloff) frees the monster and Talbot from the frozen ice, and he too becomes more interested in working on the monster than helping the Wolf Man first. Dr. Niemann loses time and Talbot goes on killing as the Wolf Man. It seems like in both movies, the scientists always more interested in the Monster than Mr. Talbot, and they put him on the side-lines to help later, but they never get the chance.
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Frankenstein's monster goes blind because the blood that was in Ygor’s brain is incompatible with the Monster’s blood and won’t feed his senses. Yet this is overlooked in "Frankenstein Meets the Wolfman" where there is no reference to Ygor's brain or the blindness it brought to the monster's body.It's Ygor's brain, but it's like his thoughts have become fused with the monster's thoughts. It gives it a nice mysterious touch, making a bit more creepy.
MrGoodweedindeed 4 days ago
they lead us to believe he was cured, his soul still belongs the damned
hulkwillsmash48 4 months ago
@hulkwillsmash48 BEWARE OF SATAN!!!!
cstoczyn 4 months ago
BOO!!!!
cstoczyn 4 months ago
Happy Halloween!!!!
cstoczyn 4 months ago
the wolfman was not cured, he came back in abbot and costello meet frankenstein
hulkwillsmash48 4 months ago
@hulkwillsmash48 But He WAS Cured In "The House Of Count Dracula"
cstoczyn 4 months ago
You can't just kill the monster! D: He's a person and he just needs an understanding friend to be a nice person. *hugs the monster*
powergirl07 1 year ago
@powergirl07 Frankenstein: Oh, I Understand.
cstoczyn 4 months ago
"The Wolfman"/"Lawrence Talbot"was finally cured of his lycanthropic curse by"Dr.Aldeman"in"The House Of Dracula".
143AC 1 year ago
@143AC HUZZAH!!!!
cstoczyn 4 months ago
NEVER TRUST DOCTORS! THEY ALL LOVE MONSTERS!
richardshort2001 1 year ago
@richardshort2001 Just right.
"No, I can't do it.. I can't destroy Frankenstein's creation!"
yourVeiledLodger 1 year ago
@yourVeiledLodger LOL
cstoczyn 4 months ago
i never understood why the doctor guy makes the monster strong again, wasnt he supposed to drain energy from both of them? or did the guy become crazed where he wanted to see the monster as powerful? never got this. he didnt seem like the "mad scientist" type.
burtonrules123 2 years ago 2
Dr. Frank Mannering (Patric Knowles) was a man of science himself and apprieciated the work and the creation by Dr. Frankenstein. The monster was a creation that had never occured before in the history of man. Dr. Mannering couldn't simple destroy the creature. He had to see it at it full power in interest of science. Unlike the "mad scienist" syndrome, Dr. Mannering only want to do this in the interest of science. He was not mad by any means. Hope this helps.
silkmann 2 years ago
yes that explained alot, i never understood why he didnt just kill the wolfman and the monster. but seeing the monster at full power, he wasnt helping talbot at all right?
burtonrules123 2 years ago
In the sequel to this movie, "House of Frankenstein" (1944) Dr. Niemann (Boris Karloff) frees the monster and Talbot from the frozen ice, and he too becomes more interested in working on the monster than helping the Wolf Man first. Dr. Niemann loses time and Talbot goes on killing as the Wolf Man. It seems like in both movies, the scientists always more interested in the Monster than Mr. Talbot, and they put him on the side-lines to help later, but they never get the chance.
silkmann 2 years ago
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@silkmann No
cstoczyn 4 months ago
@burtonrules123 Right
cstoczyn 4 months ago
@silkmann Me 2
cstoczyn 4 months ago
@burtonrules123 I Agree
cstoczyn 4 months ago