Because when the creation saw William, William said that his father was M. Frankenstein. The creation said in response, "Frankenstein! You belong then to my enemy--to him towards whom I have sworn eternal revenge; you shall be my first victim." He then strangles him to death.
He killed him solely because he was Victor's brother.
A small hovel in a snow bank in a village next to a house. Also later in a Cave. Also I have to point out that the Monster is not named Frankenstein, that is the last name of his creator.
The actor John Carradine starred in the movie Bride of Frankenstein in 1935. He only played a small part in the movie as a stranger that led a hermit away.
Dr. Frankenstein had Igor steal the brain from a laboratory. Igor dropped the brain which Dr. Frankenstein had intended on using, and instead, he took another brain, which was labelled as "abnormal". from his brain There is no Igor in the book.
Diglett is a small brown mole-like creature that remains underground as it has no feet.
i domt now
A small hovel in a snow bank in a village next to a house. Also later in a Cave. Also I have to point out that the Monster is not named Frankenstein, that is the last name of his creator.
It, of course, depends on which movie you mean, but I'm assuming you mean the 1931 classic.In the movie the monster never speaks. In the book he has a lot to say.In the movie the monster is burned to death. In the book he leaves 'for the farthest shore.'In the movie Frankenstein's assistant, Fritz (aka Igor), gets an abnormal brian. In the book there is no Igor and no problem with the brain.In the book the doctor's younger brother is killed. In the movie there is no younger brother, only Frankenstein's father the Baron.In the book, Frankenstein's first name was Victor and his friend's name was Henry. In the movie their names are reversed.
The cast of The Small Creature - 2011 includes: Gloria Hunniford as Narrator
There is a Screech owl or a small creature know as a schreech
a small mouse type creature
Goblin?
elf
ant
spider
This answer is from Wikipedia. It's a very good answer & reason why Frankenstein's monster was never really named : Frankenstein's monster (or Frankenstein's creature) is a fictional character that first appeared in Mary Shelley's novel, Frankenstein, or The Modern Prometheus. In the novel, the creature has no name—a symbol of his parentlessness and lack of human sense of self and identity. He does call himself, when speaking to his creator, Victor Frankenstein, the "Adam of your labours". He is also variously referred to as a "creature," "fiend," "the dæmon," "wretch," "zombie," "devil," "being," and "ogre" in the novel.[1] The monster's namelessness became part of the stage tradition as Mary Shelley's story was adapted into serious and comic plays in London, Paris, and France during the decades after the novel's first appearance. Mary Shelley herself attended a performance of Presumption, the first successful stage adaptation of her novel. "The play bill amused me extremely, for in the list of dramatic personae came, _______ by Mr T. Cooke,” she wrote her friend Leigh Hunt. “This nameless mode of naming the unnameable is rather good.”[2] Into this vacuum, it is understandable that the name of the creator—Frankenstein—would soon be used to name the creation. That mistake was made within the first decade after the novel was published, but it became cast in concrete after the story was popularized in the famous 1930s Universal film series starring Boris Karloff. The film was based largely on a play by Peggy Webling, performed in London in 1927.[3] Curiously, Webling's Frankenstein actually does give his creature his name. The Universal film reverted to the empty cypher, however: the film's credits list the character Karloff plays as a series of question marks. Nevertheless, the creature soon enough became best known in the popular imagination as "Frankenstein".
William Small died in 1775.
William Small was born in 1734.