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Frankenstein '80

From Wikipedia of Horror

Template:Infobox film Frankenstein '80 is a 1972 Italian film directed by Mario Mancini.

Plot summary

By day, Dr. Frankenstein (Gordon Mitchell) works innocuously in his lab. But at night, he works to perfect Mosaic (Xiro Papas), a monstrosity pieced together from dead bodies. Once completed, the behemoth escapes from the lab and embarks on a killing spree. Local beauties begin popping up dead, murdered in a variety of gruesome ways, as authorities attempt to stop Mosaic's rampage.

Cast

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Production

Despite the film's title alluding to Mary Shelley's character, the film has little in common with her creation.Template:Sfn The inspiration of Ferdinando De Leone and Mario Mancini's script was from the adult only comics such as Oltretomba.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Future Academy Awards winner Carlo Rambaldi provided the special effects in the film such as the monster named Mosaic.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Curti referred to the special effects as "crude" and was an "early hint of the tendency towards excess that will characterise Italian genre cinema of the decade"Template:Sfn

Lou Castel was originally going to act in the film but was not allowed after being expelled from Italy in April 1972 due to his political views.Template:Sfn Actor Gordon Mitchell stated that parts of the film were possibly shot in Bavaria, but not any of the scenes he was involved in.Template:Sfn The rest of the film was shot in Munich and Rome.Template:Sfn

Release

Frankenstein '80 was released in Italy on 12 December 1972 where it was distributed by Les Films 2R Roma.Template:Sfn Film historian Roberto Curti stated that the film "passed almost unnoticed in Italy at the time of its release"Template:Sfn A photonovel version of the film was released in the Italian issue of Cinesex in May 1973.Template:Sfn

As of 2017, the film is in the public domain in the United States.Template:Sfn

Reception

Template:Expand section From retrospective reviews, AllMovie called the film "stupid, sickening, and obscene", but "seekers of psychotronic cinema will have a field day with this ridiculous Italian exploitation product."[1] In his book on Italian horror film directors, Louis Paul referred to the film as "strange" and "a lurid sex film dressed as a horror movie."Template:Sfn

References

Footnotes

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Sources

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External links

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This article incorporates text from the Wikipedia article "Frankenstein '80", available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License.Retrieved 2026-03-03.