Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Fuseli Imagery in Frankenstein



Last weekend, I traveled to Orlando for "Halloween Horror Nights" at Universal Studios, where I also had the good fortune to find James Whale's FRANKENSTEIN playing on the big screen in City Walk. Naturally, I gobbled up the chance to take in the big screen experience, though the afternoon showing I went to only had six people in attendance--and that included me, along with the two people I talked into tagging along. Still, watching Boris Karloff, Colin Clive, and Dwight Frye in larger-than-life form made the early evening drive back home very much worth it.

The big screen also gave me an opportunity to soak in one of the my favorite moments of the film, specifically when the monster intrudes on Elizabeth as she prepares for her wedding. This sequence has never lost its unsettling impact for me, as we see the monster clearly unhinged after accidently drowning a young girl, and it doesn't seem entirely outside the realm of possibility that he does something unspeakable with Elizabeth. The implication seems all the more evident when we consider the need he feels for a mate in THE BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN.



I love how Whale frames the scene to look like Fuseli's 1781 painting, "The Nightmare," which features an incubus crouching atop a sleeping woman. Perhaps Whale structured the scene this way intentionally, calling upon an association with the painting's metaphor for transgressive sex. Or maybe I just want to view the film in a kinky way . . .

3 comments:

Pierre Fournier said...

Great post, as usual. How’s this for a Fuselli/Frankenstein connection: Mary Shelley’s mom, Mary Wollstonecraft, had a turbulent affair with Fuselli. After he spurned her and married someone else, she offered to move in with them. Fuselli’s wife nixed the idea.

The Headless Werewolf said...

As always, you're a wealth of wonderful information regarding all things Frankenstein! Thanks for adding that.

Anonymous said...

More than the fact that Wollstonecraft had some sort of intimate relationship with Fuseli, this particular painting actually hung in the Wollstonecraft/Godwin household when Mary Shelley was in her teen years.

In her novel Frankenstein: A Modern Prometheus, Shelley very deliberately refers to this painting to create a scene.