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| Blu-ray - Black & White / Wide Screen / DTS | $27.99 |
Closed Caption; Mel Brooks' audio commentary; Documentary: "Making Frankensense of Young Frankenstein"; Interviews with stars Marty Feldman, Gene Wilder & Cloris Leachman; 7 deleted scenes; Outtakes/bloopers; Production stills
Full Product DetailsDisc #1 -- Young Frankenstein
1. The Baron's Coffin (Main Titles) [5:08]
2. Dr. Frankenstein's Class [:40]
3. Elizabeth & Frederick Say Goodbye [6:18]
4. Transylvania Station [:24]
5. The Castle [2:33]
6. Frederick's Nightmare [2:32]
7. The Laboratory and Private Library [1:26]
8. Blueprints for the Monster [4:38]
9. The Body [1:09]
10. The Brain [3:32]
11. The Creation/Failure [3:38]
12. The Town Meeting [1:37]
13. "Dinner, Mmmmmmm" [1:51]
14. It's Alive [3:51]
15. Inspector Kemp's Visit [:11]
16. The Monster Escapes [1:14]
17. The Little Girl [5:25]
18. The Blind Hermit [2:05]
19. Rehabilitating the Monster [2:46]
20. Theatre Show/Puttin' on the Ritz [1:03]
21. Frederick & Inga's Interlude [:15]
22. Elizabeth's Arrival [4:30]
23. The Town Riot [1:19]
24. Elizabeth & Frederick's Chat [3:13]
25. Elizabeth's Abduction [3:21]
26. The Monster Returns [1:39]
27. Final Transformation [4:43]
28. Epilogue/End Titles [:35]
This completely hilarious horror spoof by the master of parody pulls out all the stops. Within the framework of director James Whale's classic film Frankenstein, writer/director Mel Brooks (Blazing Saddles, High Anxiety) and the marvelous Gene Wilder manage to out-camp Whale. Innumerable goofy sex jokes and visual gags exaggerate this already exaggerated tale of science gone very, very wrong. Young Frankenstein is replete with stellar comic performances by Wilder, Teri Garr, Cloris Leachman, Madeline Kahn, and Peter Boyle, as well as a memorable turn by bug-eyed Marty Feldman as Egor (pronounced Eye-gor), who spends much of the movie winking at the camera. Shot in black and white, complete with Transylvanian fog and spooky laboratories, Young Frankenstein proves that low humor, double entendres, and really cheesy accents can add up to high comic art. Regina Raiford, Barnes & Noble
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