| Mary Shelley's Frankenhole | |
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Title card |
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| Genre | Animated comedy, Black comedy |
| Created by | Dino Stamatopoulos |
| Starring | Scott Adsit Jeff B. Davis Jay Johnston Britta Phillips Mark Rivers Chris Shearer Dino Stamatopoulos Tigger Stamatopoulos Joe Unger |
| Country of origin | United States |
| No. of seasons | 2 |
| No. of episodes | 20 (1 unaired) (List of episodes) |
| Production | |
| Executive producer(s) | Dino Stamatopoulos Joe Russo II James A Fino Duke Johnson Patrick O'Neill |
| Producer(s) | Rosa Tran |
| Running time | 11 minutes |
| Production company(s) | Fragical Productions ShadowMachine Films (season 1) Starburns Industries (season 2) Williams Street |
| Broadcast | |
| Original channel | Adult Swim |
| Picture format | 16:9 HDTV |
| Original run | June 27, 2010 – Present |
| External links | |
| Website | |
Mary Shelley's Frankenhole is a stop-motion animated TV series by Dino Stamatopoulos, creator of Moral Orel.[1][2]
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Contents
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Dr. Victor Frankenstein has completely mastered immortality and has now also created an infinite number of Einstein-Rosen Bridges (wormholes) or "Frankenholes" between Somewhere in Eastern Europe (which is teeming with monsters and supernatural forces) and every time period from the past and the future. This allows historical figures and celebrities seeking the doctor's services to find him. Although many classic horror monsters are present, the series' main focus is Dr. Frankenstein and his family. Creator Dino Stamatopoulos says "regular human beings are the monsters."[3]
Besides Frankenstein himself, other characters from Frankenstein appear.
Season 1 started June 27, 2010.[4] The second episode, "Mother To Be-Sa" was pulled and never aired.[5] Episodes aired out of order and the broadcasting ended August 22, 2010.
All the episodes of this season were rated : TV-MA.
| # | Title | Original airdate | Prod. code |
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| 1 | "LBJFK" | August 15, 2010 | 101[6] |
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Lyndon Baines Johnson asks Victor Frankenstein to put his brain into the handsome head of the recently deceased John F. Kennedy. Rated: TV-MA |
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| 2 | "Mother To Be-Sa" | Unaired | 102[6] |
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Mother Theresa just can't say "no" to anyone, and ends up becoming the Frankensteins' indentured servant. Note: This episode was banned from airing on television. |
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| 3 | "Attack of the Were-Lawrence" | July 25, 2010 | 103[6] |
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The Wolfman desperately wishes to die, but can only die at the hands of a lover. Rated: TV-MA |
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| 4 | "Heal Hitler" | July 18, 2010 | 104[6] |
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Adolf Hitler wishes that Dr. Frankenstein and Dr. Polidori cure him of his hatred for the Jews - but instead, Hitler finds himself loving the Jews. Rated: TV-MA |
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| 5 | "Death" | July 11, 2010 | 105[6] |
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Death comes for the mortal sons of Victor Frankenstein, after being annoyed by Frankenstein, Polidori and Elizabeth's immortality, but Victor only eggs Death on. Rated: TV-MA |
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| 6 | "(John) Thomas Jefferson" | July 4, 2010 | 106[6] |
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Thomas Jefferson visits Dr. Frankenstein in hopes of pleasing his slaves, requesting Barack Obama's penis. Rated: TV-MA |
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| 7 | "Ronny Ron Ronald" | August 1, 2010 | 107[6] |
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Ron Howard goes back in time in and attempts to kidnap a younger version of himself to transplant his current brain into. Rated: TV-MA |
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| 8 | "Hunger of the Vampire" | August 8, 2010 | 108[6] |
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Gandhi seeks rejuvenation from Victor, but ends up being turned into a vampire. Rated: TV-MA |
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| 9 | "Humanitas" | August, 22, 2010 | 109[6] |
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After Victor Frankenstein forgets his 1000th anniversary with Elizabeth and ruins their dinner by giving her the gift of a fake Wayne Newton impersonator, he embarks on a time-travelling quest to prevent his past self from making Elizabeth immortal. Jesus Christ stops by and asks Frankenstein and Polidori to invent socks to keep his feet warm. Note: Andy Dick provides the voice of Jesus Christ. Rated: TV-MA |
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| 10 | "Yawn of the Dead" | June 27, 2010 | 110[6] |
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Victor re-animates the long dead pop idol Michael Jackson thirty years after his death to reunite with his adult son, Blanket Jackson. However, doing this reawakens Victor's memories of his own father. Rated: TV-MA |
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In 2011 Mary Shelley's Frankenhole was renewed for a second season,[7] which premiered on January 22, 2012,[8] and that contain ten episodes.[2] Season 2's episodes are titled in commemoration of famous writers and poets of classic science fiction.[9]
| # | Title | Original airdate | Prod. code |
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| 11 | "H.G. Wells' Scary Monster Contest!" | January 22, 2012[10] | 201 |
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Victor enters the Creature into the Scary Monster Contest. Rated: TV-14 DLV |
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| 12 | "Robert Louis Stevenson's Belushi!" | January 29, 2012 | 202 |
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John Belushi drinks Dr. Jekyll's potion, which turns him into Jim Belushi. Rated: TV-14 DL |
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| 13 | "H.P. Lovecraft's Vagina!" | February 5, 2012 | 203 |
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Victor and Elizabeth switch roles to prove a point. Rated: TV-14 DLS |
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| 14 | "Bram Stoker's Loudmouths!" | February 12, 2012 | 204 |
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Tired of movie theater disruptions, Victor hatches a plan with Joe to end vampires. Rated: TV-14 LV |
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| 15 | "Jules Verne's Monster Rally Run!" | February 19, 2012 | 205 |
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Victor enters the Monster Rally, a road race across time, in order to impress Elizabeth. Rated: TV-14 DSV |
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| 16 | "Victor Hugo's Identity!" | February 26, 2012 | 206 |
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For his birthday, the Creature asks Victor to bring the people who make up his body back to life. Rated: TV-14 V |
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| 17 | "Edgar Allen Poe's Jesus!" | March 4, 2012 | 207 |
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Death asks Jesus for advice on how to kill better, but because of his enormous ego, Jesus cannot stop talking about himself. Rated: TV-14 DV |
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| 18 | "Franz Kafka's Jealousy!" | March 11, 2012 | 208 |
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To prove he isn't jealous, Victor offers everyone in town with an under-average sized penis to have sex with Elizabeth. Meanwhile, the Invisible Man accidentally exposes himself to a little girl. Rated: TV-14 DLSV |
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| 19 | "Maly Sherrey's Hyralius, Mutant Monster!" | March 18, 2012 | 209 |
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Japan turns to Victor to defeat Hyralius, a Godzilla-like Monster who makes lame jokes about asian stereotypes. But is he really all that bad? (This episode has Ken Jeong providing all character voices.) Rated: TV-14 DLV |
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| 20 | "Gaston Leroux's Je Ne Sais Quoi!" | March 25, 2012 | 210 |
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Victor builds his brain clone, a sensible creature that finds Victor obnoxious, sweaty, and egotistical. Rated: TV-14 SV |
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