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Young Frankenstein
The scariest comedy of all time!
( Comedy / Horror )


Young Frankenstein Poster



US Runtime: 108 min

Premiere Date:
Dec 15, 1974   [USA]
 
Director: Mel Brooks
 
Writer: Gene Wilder
 
Producer: Michael Gruskoff   [Producer]
 
Music by John Morris
 
Cinematography: Gerald Hirschfeld
 
Edited by: John C. Howard
 
Production Companys: 20th Century Fox
Crossbow Productions
Gruskoff/Venture Films
Jouer Limited
 


Cast:

Gene Wilder
Dr. Fredrick Frankenstein
Peter Boyle
The Monster
Marty Feldman
Igor
Madeline Kahn
Elizabeth
Cloris Leachman
Frau Blucher
Teri Garr
Inga
Kenneth Mars
Police Inspector Kemp
Liam Dunn
Mr. Hilltop
Oscar Beregi Jr.
Sadistic Jailor
Arthur Malet
Second Village Elder
Richard A. Roth
Insp. Kemp's Aide
Monte Landis
Gravedigger
Rusty Blitz
Gravedigger
Anne Beesley
Little Girl
Gene Hackman
The Blindman
 
Norbert Schiller
Emcee at Frankenstein's show
Rick Norman
A Villager
John Madison
A Villager
Lidia Kristen
Villager's Wife
Michael Fox
Little Girl's Father
Randolph Dobbs
Third Villager
Johnny Dennis
Orderly in Frankenstein's class
Rolfe Sedan
Train conductor
Clement von Franckenstein
(uncredited)
Terence Pushman
A Villager (uncredited)
Berry Kroeger
First Village Elder (uncredited)
Lou Cutell
Frightened villager (uncredited)
Mel Brooks
Little Girl's Father (uncredited)
Ian Abercrombie
Second villager (uncredited)
 

Crew:

Stanford C. Allen
assistant editor
Phyllis Garr
wardrobe: women
Anthony Goldschmidt
title and graphic design
William D. Gordean
assistant editor
Dick James
wardrobe: men
John Morris
conductor
 
James Plannette
gaffer
Ray Quiroz
script supervisor
Ken Strickfaden
special thanks (lab equipment)
Jonathan Tunick
orchestrator
Richard Tim Vanik
camera operator
 

Filming Locations: (Now With Clickable Links To Location On Google Maps)

 

Tech Info:

Camera:
Panavision Cameras and Lenses
Color Info:
B&W
Laboratory:
DeLuxe
Aspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1
Cinematographic Process:
Spherical
Film Negative Format:
35 mm
Printed Film Format:
35 mm

Quotes:

  • Dr. Frankenstein: That music...
    Frau Blucher: Yes! It's in your blood - it's in the blood of ALL Frankensteins! It reaches the soul when words are useless. Your grandfather used to play it to the creature HE vas making!
    Dr. Frankenstein: Then it was you all the time!
    Frau Blucher: Yes!
    Dr. Frankenstein: You played that music in the middle of the night...
    Frau Blucher: Yes!
    Dr. Frankenstein: ...to get us to the laboratory!
    Frau Blucher: Yes!
    Dr. Frankenstein: That was YOUR cigar smoldering in the ashtray!
    Frau Blucher: Yes!
    Dr. Frankenstein: And it was you... who left my grandfather's book out for me to find!
    Frau Blucher: Yes!
    Dr. Frankenstein: So that I would...
    Frau Blucher: Yes!
    Dr. Frankenstein: Then you and Victor were...
    Frau Blucher: YES! YES! Say it! He vas my... BOYFRIEND!
     
  • Dr. Frankenstein: For what we are about to see next, we must enter quietly into the realm of genius!
     
  • Dr. Frankenstein: Hearts and kidneys are tinkertoys! I'm talking about the central nervous system!
     
  • Igor: My grandfather used to work for your grandfather. Of course the rates have gone up.
     
  • Frau Blucher: Would the doctor care for a brandy before retiring?
    Dr. Frankenstein: No. Thank you.
    Frau Blucher: Some varm milk... perhaps?
    Dr. Frankenstein: No, thank you very much.
    Frau Blucher: Ovaltine?
    Dr. Frankenstein: Nothing! Thank you. I'm a little tired.
    Frau Blucher: Then I vill say... goodnight.
    Dr. Frankenstein: Goodnight!
     

Trivia:

  • Teri Garr, who plays Inga, was called in when Madeline Kahn, whom Mel Brooks had originally wanted for the role, turned it down and asked if she could play Elizabeth instead. Garr auditioned for the part of Inga, and added the German accent which won her the role.
     
  • The scene in which the creature contemplates throwing the little girl into the lake ("No more flowers. What shall we throw in now?"), is a homage to a scene in the 1931 film version of Frankenstein. In the 1931 version, this was cut from the film until its video release 50 years later.
     
  • The clock rings 13 times at the beginning of the film.
     
  • The cast and especially Mel Brooks had so much fun and were so upset when principal photography was almost completed, that Mel added scenes to continue shooting.
     
  • A couple who are talking on the train near the beginning of the film are having the same conversation in English, then in German.
     


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