Bride of Frankenstein (1935) - Monster & the blind hermit
Uploader Comments (StefPhoenixOoORising)
Top Comments
-
This is a beautiful scene. I do not consider Bride of Frankenstein much of a horror movie. It is a sad drama about a misunderstood creature, a product of man, that has life of its own - incompatible with society.
The old man's openness and hospitality is heart touching... And the endinf of "Bride of F." is simply amazing. "you, go! Live! -- You, STAY. We belong dead". And then he cries as he pulls the lever. Magnificent.
-
I love this scene .It surely must rate as one of the most moving ,touching and powerful moments in the whole history of cinema !
All Comments (57)
-
Used to watch this as a kid with my sister- taped it and the original on VHS. Hours and hours of fun. Fwend!
-
Watched this yet again, and still get the same old lump in my throat. One of the most touching scenes in film history.
-
jaja looks like
-
@CaptainScarlet2006 Really? How juvenile.
-
This scene is surely one of the finest examples of true virtuosity in film making. The acting of the genius Karloff and the brilliant O.P. Heggie as the blind hermit, James Whale's operatic direction, Franz Waxman's brilliant score and lovely use of Schubert's "Ave Maria", John Mescall's rich, warm photography, Jack Pierce's iconic makeup, Charles Hall's gorgeous art direction. All these combine to make one of the most profoundly powerful, beautiful, and poignant scenes in the history of film.
-
look at his face at 8:25 look like hes on drugs as he snarls at people. Priceless!
-
"This is wood, for the fire. Wood! Ha! Ha! And this is fire! ggrrrrrr!! Fire, no good!! Love those parts
-
I like the part. "Alone, bad. Friend, good. Frriiend Good!! Good,bad (pauses as he looks the violin), GOOD!!
-
i can't watch any of this without thinking of Young Frankenstein, in which i start to laugh :(
I love Karloff in those scenes. "Friend good!"
StefPhoenixOoORising 3 years ago 7
Så otroligt vackert. Blir alltid lika rörd.
anton1990 3 years ago
Jag håller med. Jag tror att för Frankenstein kändes det som om han äntligen hade hittat det han kan referera till som "hem".
StefPhoenixOoORising 3 years ago