Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed
Baron Frankenstein fulfills his experiments on the border between life and death because of his crazy idea. He does not that it can lead to a tragedy which he never could has imagined.
May 23, 1915 in Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, England, UK
1937, Glasgow, Scotland, UK
January 9, 1901 in Kensington, London, England, UK
February 7, 1930 in Llanelli, Wales, UK
18 September 1944, Yorkshire, England, UK
9 November 1933, Lille, Nord, France
29 April 1923, London, England, UK
31 December 1924, Liverpool, England, UK
28 May 1919, Eaglescliffe, Durham, England, UK
28 August 1930, Canning Town, London, England, UK
19 June 1918, Prague, Bohemia, Austria-Hungary [now Prague, Czech Republic]
August 27, 1909 in Casal Paola, Malta
26 April 1940, Islington, London, England, UK
January 5, 1920 in Wandsworth, London, England, UK
26 May 1913, Kenley, Surrey [now in Croydon, London], England, UK
12 September 1927, Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England, UK
7 January 1924, Leeds, Yorkshire, England, UK
16 February 1903, Chelsea, London, England, UK
20 May 1915, Bushey, Hertfordshire, England, UK
22 October 1917, Wombwell, Barnsley, Yorkshire, England, UK
12 May 1913, Teigngrace, Devon, England, UK
1927, UK
9 January 1941, London, England, UK
19 October 1941, Beckenham, Kent, England, UK
31 August 1913, Copenhagen, Denmark
November 01, 2010
Hammer's fifth of seven Frankenstein films might be the best one in the series.
November 03, 2010
For those of us who love Hammer horror, this is an unmarred example of all the reasons why.
May 23, 2004
Perhaps the most deadly dull in a series that had run out of steam.
April 28, 2004
One of the finest of the seven entries in Hammer's Frankenstein cycle.

