Young Frankenstein is a 1974 American comedy horror film directed by Mel Brooks. The screenplay was co-written by Brooks and Gene Wilder. Wilder also starred in the lead role as the title character, a descendant of the infamous Victor Frankenstein. Peter Boyle portrayed the monster. The film co-stars Teri Garr, Cloris Leachman, Marty Feldman, Madeline Kahn, Kenneth Mars, Richard Haydn, and Gene Hackman.

The film is a parody of the classic horror film genre, in particular the various film adaptations of Mary Shelley's 1818 novel Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus produced by Universal Pictures in the 1930s. Much of the lab equipment used as props was created by Kenneth Strickfaden for the 1931 film Frankenstein. To help evoke the atmosphere of the earlier films, Brooks shot the picture entirely in black and white, a rarity in the 1970s, and employed 1930s-style opening credits and scene transitions such as iris outs, wipes, and fades to black. The film also features a period score by Brooks' longtime composer John Morris.

A critical and commercial success, Young Frankenstein ranks number 28 on Total Film magazine's readers' "List of the 50 Greatest Comedy Films of All Time", No. 56 on Bravo's list of the "100 Funniest Movies", and No. 13 on the American Film Institute's list of the 100 funniest American movies. In 2003, it was deemed "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant" by the United States National Film Preservation Board, and selected for preservation in the Library of Congress National Film Registry. It was later adapted by Brooks and Thomas Meehan as a stage musical. The film was nominated for two Academy Awards: Best Adapted Screenplay (for Wilder and Brooks) and Best Sound.

In 2014, the year of its 40th anniversary, Brooks considered it by far his finest (although not his funniest) film as a writer-director. As of 2026, a prequel television series is in the works at FX.

  • Werewolf
  • Cat Hit by Dart
  • Victor Frankenstein (voice)
  • Lou Cutell as Frightened Villager
  • Ian Abercrombie as Second Villager
  • Clement von Franckenstein as Screaming Villager
  • Berry Kroeger as Village Elder

Background

In a 2010 interview with the Los Angeles Times, Mel Brooks discussed how the film came about:

Brooks and Gene Wilder designed the film as both a parody and homage to the Universal Monsters films of the 1930s and '40s. In a Gene Wilder DVD interview, he says the film is based on Frankenstein (1931), Bride of Frankenstein (1935), Son of Frankenstein (1939), and The Ghost of Frankenstein (1942).

Production

Writing and development

In a 2016 interview with Creative Screenwriting, Brooks elaborated on the writing process. He recalled,

<blockquote>Little by little, every night, Gene and I met at his bungalow at the Bel Air Hotel. We ordered a pot of Earl Grey tea coupled with a container of cream and a small kettle of brown sugar cubes. To go with it, we had a pack of British digestive biscuits. And step-by-step, ever so cautiously, we proceeded on a dark, narrow, twisting path to the eventual screenplay in which good sense and caution are thrown out the window and madness ensues.</blockquote>

Brooks and Wilder disagreed over the sequence where Frankenstein and his creation perform "Puttin' on the Ritz". Brooks felt it was too silly to have the monster sing and dance, but eventually yielded to Wilder's arguments.

Casting

Unlike in many of his other films, Brooks does not appear onscreen in a significant role in Young Frankenstein, though he recorded several voice parts and portrays a Transylvanian villager in one short scene. In 2012, Brooks explained why:<blockquote> I wasn't allowed to be in it. That was the deal Gene Wilder had. He [said], 'If you're not in it, I'll do it.' [Laughs.] He [said], "You have a way of breaking the fourth wall, whether you want to or not. I just want to keep it. I don't want too much to be, you know, a wink at the audience. I love the script.' He wrote the script with me. That was the deal. So I wasn't in it, and he did it.</blockquote>Marty Feldman, who made his American film debut as Igor, added a comic twist to his character by swapping which side the hump on his back was located; when Doctor Frankenstein asks him about it, Igor replies simply: "What hump?" Wilder wrote the role specially for Feldman.

Teri Garr originally auditioned for the role of Elizabeth. At the time, Franckenstein had adopted the stage name "Clement St. George", fearing his real surname would hurt his acting career. The majority of the film was shot on sets at the 20th Century Fox and MGM studio backlots. The film was then released on DVD for the second time on September 5, 2006. The film was then released on DVD for the third time on September 9, 2014, as a 40th-anniversary edition along with a Blu-ray release.

Reception

Box office

Young Frankenstein was a box-office success upon release. The film grossed $86.2 million on a $2.78 million budget.

Vincent Canby of The New York Times called the film "Mel Brooks' funniest, most cohesive comedy to date," adding, "It would be misleading to describe 'Young Frankenstein,' written by Mr. Wilder and Mr. Brooks, as astoundingly witty, but it's a great deal of low fun of the sort that Mr. Brooks specializes in." Roger Ebert gave the film a full four stars, calling it Brooks' "most disciplined and visually inventive film (it also happens to be very funny)." Gene Siskel gave the film three stars out of four and wrote, "Part homage and part send-up, 'Young Frankenstein' is very funny in its best moments, but they're all too infrequent." Variety declared, "The screen needs one outrageously funny Mel Brooks film each year, and Young Frankenstein is an excellent followup for the enormous audiences that howled for much of 1974 at Blazing Saddles."

Charles Champlin of the Los Angeles Times praised the film as "a likable, unpredictable blending of slapstick and sentiment." Gary Arnold of The Washington Post, who disliked Blazing Saddles, reported being "equally untickled" with Young Frankenstein and wrote that "Wilder and Brooks haven't dreamed up a funny plot. They simply rely on the old movie plots to get them through a rambling collection of scene parodies and a more or less constant stream of puns, double entendres and other verbal rib-pokers and thigh-slappers." Tom Milne of the UK's The Monthly Film Bulletin wrote in a mixed review that "all too often Brooks resorts to the most clichéd sort of Carry On smut" and criticized Marty Feldman's "grotesquely unfunny mugging," but praised a couple of sequences (the flower-throwing scene and the Monster's encounter with the blind man) as "very close to brilliance" and called Peter Boyle as the Monster "one of the undiluted pleasures of the film (and the only actor ever to suggest that he might play the part as well as Karloff)." Leonard Maltin gave it three and a half of four stars: "One of the funniest (and most quotable) movies of all time, a finely tuned parody of old FRANKENSTEIN pictures... " Leslie Halliwell gave it two of four stars: "The most successful of Mel Brooks' parodies, Mad Magazine style; the gleamingly reminiscent photography is the best of it, the script being far from consistently funny, but there are splendid moments."

In his book Comedy-Horror Films: A Chronological History, 1914–2008, Bruce G. Hallenbeck lauded many of Young Frankensteins scenes as classic comedy moments, and also praised the attention to detail the film shows in paying heartfelt homage to the classic horror films it references. He summed up that "Young Frankenstein is a movie for film buffs, but written, directed, and performed in such a way that average Joes and Josephines can enjoy it just as much for its outrageous and wacky humor."

| rowspan="2" |1975

|Best Adapted Screenplay

|Mel Brooks, Gene Wilder

|

|-

|Best Sound

|Richard Portman, Gene Cantamessa

|

|-

| rowspan="2" |Golden Globes

| rowspan="2" |1975

|Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy

|Cloris Leachman

|

|-

|Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture

|Madeline Kahn

|

|-

|Hugo Awards

|1975

|Best Dramatic Presentation

|Mel Brooks, Gene Wilder, Mary Shelley

|

|-

|Nebula Awards

|1976

|Best Script

|Mel Brooks, Gene Wilder

|

|-

|New York Film Critics Circle

|1974

|Best Supporting Actress

|Madeline Kahn

|

|-

| rowspan="5" |Saturn Awards

| rowspan="5" |1976

|Best Horror Film

|Young Frankenstein

|

|-

|Best Director

|Mel Brooks

|

|-

|Best Supporting Actor

|Marty Feldman

|

|-

|Best Make-up

|William Tuttle

|

|-

|Best Production Design

|Robert De Vestel, Dale Hennesy

|

|-

|Writers Guild of America Awards

|1975

|Best Adapted Screenplay

|Mel Brooks, Gene Wilder

|

|}

Other honors

The film is recognized by American Film Institute in these lists:

  • 2000: AFI's 100 Years...100 Laughs – #13
  • 2004: AFI's 100 Years...100 Songs:
  • "Puttin' on the Ritz" – #89
  • 2005: AFI's 100 Years...100 Movie Quotes:
  • Igor: "What hump?" – Nominated
  • 2005: AFI's 100 Years of Film Scores – Nominated
  • 2007: AFI's 100 Years...100 Movies (10th Anniversary Edition) – Nominated

In 2003, Young Frankenstein was deemed "culturally, historically or aesthetically significant" by the United States National Film Preservation Board, and selected for preservation in the Library of Congress National Film Registry. The musical opened on Broadway at the Lyric Theatre (then the Hilton Theatre) on November 8, 2007, and closed on January 4, 2009. It was nominated for three Tony Awards, and starred Roger Bart, Sutton Foster, Shuler Hensley, Megan Mullally, Christopher Fitzgerald, and Andrea Martin.

The musical version was to be used as the basis of a live-broadcast event on the ABC network in the last quarter of 2020, with Brooks producing, but it was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Television series spin-off

In June 2025, it was announced that a continuation spin-off television series titled Very Young Frankenstein was in the works at FX. Stefani Robinson will serve as the writer and will also be an executive producer along with Taika Waititi and Garrett Basch with Waititi directing the pilot episode. All three were alumni from the FX series What We Do in the Shadows. Mel Brooks will also serve as an executive producer along with his producing partner Kevin Salter and Michael Gruskoff who produced the original film.

In September 2025, it was confirmed that Zach Galifianakis will play Dr. Frankenstein while Cary Elwes has signed on to play the President of the United States. Kumail Nanjiani, Dolly Wells, Nikki Crawford and Spencer House have also been confirmed to appear in the pilot episode in unknown roles. It is intended that upon a series order, it would air on Hulu.

In May 2026, FX and Hulu ordered the pilot to series.

Legacy

Influence on music

Igor's line "Walk this way" in the film inspired the song of the same name by Aerosmith. According to Gene Wilder, the joke was added while shooting the scene by Mel Brooks, inspired by the old "talcum powder" joke. A partially contradictory account appears in eyE Marty, Feldman's posthumously published autobiography: Feldman recalls spontaneously doing the "walk this way" shtick to make his colleagues laugh, with Brooks then insisting, despite Wilder and Feldman's reservations, that it stay in the film. On the 2006 DVD, in the extras feature "Making FrankenSense of Young Frankenstein" (section 9, "Fine Tuning"), assistant editors Bill Gordean and Stan Allen offer additional information about its final inclusion, saying that just before the preview Brooks himself wanted to remove it (calling it a "cheap joke," as Feldman in his book says he and Wilder did), but Allen convinced him to keep it in for the preview. Because the preview audience gave it a big laugh it stayed.

One of the most popular Finnish rock bands Eppu Normaali took their name from the movie. It is a translation of the name "Abby Normal" Igor uses to describe the abnormal brain he stole for the monster.

See also

  • List of American films of 1974
  • List of films featuring Frankenstein's monster

Notes

References

Further reading

  • James Van Hise. "Films Fantastique presents Young Frankenstein". Rocket's Blast Comicollector #146 (Nov. 1978), pp.&nbsp;6–14. On the writing, pre-production and filming of the picture.
  • Young Frankenstein essay [https://www.loc.gov/static/programs/national-film-preservation-board/documents/young_frankenstein.pdf] by Brian Scott Mednick at National Film Registry
  • "Young Frankenstein" essay by Daniel Eagan in America's Film Legacy: The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry, A&C Black, 2010 , pp.&nbsp;713–714 America's Film Legacy: The Authoritative Guide to the Landmark Movies in the National Film Registry