He wandered through the woods, seeking shelter and food.
He wandered through the woods, seeking shelter and food.
He wandered through the woods, seeking shelter and food.
Few movie writers can resist doing violence to novelists' work. The movie Frankenstein is effectively a completely different story from the one Shelley wrote. Notably, the monster of the book (Frankenstein is the doctor) was articulate, multilingual, a smooth talker; the movie monster was sort of an idiot.
by doing loads of stuff
Frank brings up Mary Shellys 'Frankenstein' in conversation, which is interesting as the story has some relevance in what has happened within the play. Frankenstein's 'monster' starts out as innocent and uneducated as a child, but escapes and experiences the world, further educating himself until he becomes as proficient in the spoken word and cognitive thinking as Frankenstein himself. In a way this has happened with franks 'creation', Rita. She began innocent, and with frank guiding the first part of the journey transformed herself into and educated person in the middle class. However by doing this she distances herself from her initial 'creator'. This also bears relevance to Frankenstein, as Frankensteins monster grows to hate his creator for all the misery he has been placed through in the educating process.
Frankenstein Syndrome is not a disease or condition. More than anything it is a somewhat irrational fear. The terms is literary in its origin, and comes down as a result of the Mary Shelly horror story, Frankenstein: or The ModernPrometheus. Shelly tells the story of Doctor Frankenstein, a scientist who is searching for the secret to life and whose experiments lead to the construction of The Monster (Frankestein is the doctor who builds it), later depictions of the story show Frankenstein doing this from the disparate parts of several cadavers, but Shelly never discusses how the doctor accomplishes this. In the story, the Monster, driven by alienation and betrayal, murders the friend of Frankenstein, Henry Clerval, Victor's new bride Elizabeth, and perhaps earlier Victor's brother William.The obvious moral of the story here is that if you build a monster, it will become what you build. The whole story becomes a common theme in Science Fiction, and is repeated time and time again from the publishing of Mary Shelly's little tale. Essentially, we fear what we do not know, and what we may do with that in our ignorance. One of the best modern examples of Frankenstein Syndrome is the Terminator movies. Skynet is a construction of man, once brought to life, it takes on a life of its own and systematically begins destroying its creator.
By doing something
by doing x to the power of the sqrt of the log of 72
They are similar because Jekyll, a great scientist, accidentally drinks the liquids he created, then transforms into the terrible monster inside of him (Hyde). Where as Frankenstein was created by a scientist who wanted him to be the most handsomest man in the world, but turned out to be one of the ugliest so the scientist ran out the door in fear. Hyde started doing terrible crimes all around the city, doing them on purpose and just for the heck of it. But Frankenstein went around his town trying to make friends, or see if anybody loved him, but no one did, so he had to turn to crime. I apologize if this doesn't answer your question very well, but there's more differences to these two stories than similarities.
Yes, nothing stops you from doing it unless the effect removed the monster from the field.
Victor grew up with a loving family who cared for him while the monster was deserted by victor to fight for himself, victor acts as more of monster than the creation, the monster is self educated/learned from watching DeLacey's (p 99 "My days were spent in close attention, that I might more speedily master the language…") and Victor was taught in school (p 28 "When I had attained the age of seventeen my parents resolved that I should become a student at the university of Ingolstadt"), Victor loved and was loved but the monster never experienced anything but societies hatred toward him.
I'm not sure yet, but I'm doing the same thing!i was thinking of doing something about the concept of Life and death, seeing as it has to be questionable motives, Why Frankenstein wanted to create life and why there were murders in 'in cold blood'..Have you any good idea's yet?