Carrying the leading lady is a time-honored tradition among monsters.
Most of Universal's monsters got their chance, but not all.
Neither the Invisible Man nor the Wolf Man had the temperament for it.
The opportunity never presented itself to Karloff's "The Mummy" (1932).
Quasimodo (Lon Chaney, Sr.) carried Esmerelda in "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" (1923).
Bela Lugosi carried Helen Chandler in "Dracula" (1931).
Carlos VillarĂas carried Lupita Tovar in the Spanish version.
Kharis the Mummy carried Peggy Moran in "The Mummy's Hand" (1940)...
...and Elyse Knox in "The Mummy's Tomb" (1942)...
...and Ramsay Ames in "The Mummy's Ghost" (1944)...
...and Virginia Christine in "The Mummy's Curse" (1944).
The "Creature From the Black Lagoon" carried Julie Adams in 1954...
...and later Lori Nelson in "Revenge of the Creature."
Out of all his films, the Frankenstein Monster only got to do it once...
...when Bela Lugosi's stand-in Gil Perkins carried Ilona Massey in "Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man" (1943).
I neither own nor claim any rights to this material. Just having some fun with it. Thanks for watching!
What about Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein?
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=19q6jSWFPCo
But he does the same thing to J. Carrol Naish in HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN. There has to be romantic intent in order for it to count as a classic "monster carries girl" situation.
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