Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter


1h 22m 1966
Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter

Brief Synopsis

Baron Frankenstein's granddaughter turns the legendary outlaw's partner into a monster.

Film Details

Genre
Horror/Science-Fiction
Horror
Western
Release Date
Jan 1966
Premiere Information
New Haven, Connecticut, opening: 30 Mar 1966
Production Company
Circle Productions
Distribution Company
Embassy Pictures
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 22m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Pathécolor)

Synopsis

While escaping from a posse, Jesse James and Hank Tracy, a wounded member of his gang, seek help from Juanita, a young Mexican who leads them to an ancient mission ruin inhabited by the grandchildren of the infamous Dr. Frankenstein. After sending Jesse away, ostensibly to secure medicine, Frankenstein's granddaughter Maria performs a brain transplant on Hank and transforms him into Igor, a monster similar to the one created by her grandfather. Jesse returns to the mission, and the monster, no longer recognizing his friend, knocks him unconscious; Maria then prepares to perform a similar operation on Jesse. Juanita arrives with Marshal McFee, however, and both Igor and Maria are killed. Jesse is led away by the marshal, and Juanita promises to wait for his return.

Film Details

Genre
Horror/Science-Fiction
Horror
Western
Release Date
Jan 1966
Premiere Information
New Haven, Connecticut, opening: 30 Mar 1966
Production Company
Circle Productions
Distribution Company
Embassy Pictures
Country
United States

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 22m
Sound
Mono
Color
Color (Pathécolor)

Articles

The Gist (Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter) - THE GIST


How could a movie title like Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter (1966) ever live up to the delirious scenario it promises? It's the sort of film that's more fun to imagine than to actually see but that didn't stop the filmmakers from building their creation from spare parts and unleashing it on a public that couldn't resist a wacky premise like that. Roger Corman, king of the quickie exploitation programmer, built a cottage industry on this approach: Create the title first and then make the movie. It's a formula that worked and produced such memorable marquee items as Attack of the Crab Monsters (1957), The Viking Women and the Sea Serpent (1957) and Rock All Night (1957). Some of the films were even unexpectedly good, displaying an oddball charm and knack for black comedy - The Little Shop of Horrors (1960), A Bucket of Blood (1959). Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, however, was not the brainchild of Corman but a gimmick hatched by Joe Levine's Circle Productions. Combining two genres which were in a state of decline in the mid-sixties - the Western and the Horror film - screenwriter Carl K. Hittleman brought together two of the West's most famous outlaws and paired them with some infamous horror royalty. The results, Billy the Kid vs. Dracula (1966) and Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, were designed as a drive-in double feature from the get-go with Carroll Case serving as producer on both and 73-year-old William Beaudine handling the directorial chores.

Neither film was strong enough to warrant a solo release but as a double bill they proved to be an irresistible and profitable combo which quickly recouped their low-budget production costs - both films were shot in eight days on the ranch of former serial star Ray "Crash" Corrigan (Flash Gordon) in Simi Valley, California. While it may be difficult to find an enthusiastic admirer of either film, most trash film aficionados tend to favor Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter over its co-feature, despite John Carradine's presence as Dracula in the latter (Carradine often referred to Billy the Kid vs. Dracula as his worst movie which was quite an admission for a man with more than 200 film credits to his name). The reason for this is simple: Narda Onyx! As Dr. Maria Frankenstein, she gives new meaning to the term "over the top" as she tears into her risible dialogue with wild-eyed abandon. Whenever she in on-camera, you can bet the scenery will be chewed if not swallowed whole.

Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter gets everything wrong from the start beginning with its title. Dr. Marie Frankenstein is not the daughter of Baron Frankenstein but his great-granddaughter and the reason she and her brother Rudolph (Steven Geray) have relocated from Vienna to an unnamed town in the southwest - Transylvania, New Mexico? - is because of its frequent electrical storms. Apparently Europe didn't have those and they are needed to power Maria's brain experiments. After running out of brain donors - mainly children abducted from local families - Maria acquires a new lab rat in the form of Hank Tracy, a sidekick of Jesse James's who has been injured in a gunfight. She transforms Hank into Igor, a mindless slave to her will, but nothing seems to go right for our genius. Her attempts to seduce Jesse fail miserably - he prefers the Mexican villager Juanita (Estelita Rodriguez) - and even her own brother betrays her by intentionally botching almost every experiment. In a climax that prefigures the much more sexually explicit Lady Frankenstein (1971), Maria finally gets the rough treatment she craves from her own creation.

This was the last feature film directed by William Beaudine who got his start in the film industry in 1909, doing odd jobs for producer/director D. W. Griffith. You can't exactly say Beaudine went out in a blaze of glory but Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter has a certain loopy charm if encountered in the right frame of mind (drunk, stoned, semi-conscious or on the verge of suicide). Yes, it has long, dull stretches, the sets are pitiful, the action sequences are lame, the acting borders on the somnambulistic except for Ms. Onyx and the basic horror/western gimmick never gels. Then again, it's hard to resist a movie where the mad scientist has a temper tantrum and angrily turns on its troublesome creation, yelling "Igor, go to your room!" If only Narda Onyx could have been in every scene - and with Ed Wood directing instead of William Beaudine!

Producer: Carroll Case
Director: William Beaudine
Screenplay: Carl Hittleman
Cinematography: Lothrop Worth
Film Editing: Roy V. Livingston
Art Direction: Paul Sylos
Music: Raoul Kraushaar
Cast: John Lupton (Jesse James), Narda Onyx (Dr. Maria Frankenstein), Estelita Rodriguez (Juanita Lopez), Cal Bolder (Hank Tracy/Igor), Jim Davis (Marshal MacPhee), Steven Geray (Dr. Rudolph Frankenstein).
C-88m.

by Jeff Stafford
The Gist (Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter) - The Gist

The Gist (Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter) - THE GIST

How could a movie title like Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter (1966) ever live up to the delirious scenario it promises? It's the sort of film that's more fun to imagine than to actually see but that didn't stop the filmmakers from building their creation from spare parts and unleashing it on a public that couldn't resist a wacky premise like that. Roger Corman, king of the quickie exploitation programmer, built a cottage industry on this approach: Create the title first and then make the movie. It's a formula that worked and produced such memorable marquee items as Attack of the Crab Monsters (1957), The Viking Women and the Sea Serpent (1957) and Rock All Night (1957). Some of the films were even unexpectedly good, displaying an oddball charm and knack for black comedy - The Little Shop of Horrors (1960), A Bucket of Blood (1959). Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, however, was not the brainchild of Corman but a gimmick hatched by Joe Levine's Circle Productions. Combining two genres which were in a state of decline in the mid-sixties - the Western and the Horror film - screenwriter Carl K. Hittleman brought together two of the West's most famous outlaws and paired them with some infamous horror royalty. The results, Billy the Kid vs. Dracula (1966) and Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, were designed as a drive-in double feature from the get-go with Carroll Case serving as producer on both and 73-year-old William Beaudine handling the directorial chores. Neither film was strong enough to warrant a solo release but as a double bill they proved to be an irresistible and profitable combo which quickly recouped their low-budget production costs - both films were shot in eight days on the ranch of former serial star Ray "Crash" Corrigan (Flash Gordon) in Simi Valley, California. While it may be difficult to find an enthusiastic admirer of either film, most trash film aficionados tend to favor Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter over its co-feature, despite John Carradine's presence as Dracula in the latter (Carradine often referred to Billy the Kid vs. Dracula as his worst movie which was quite an admission for a man with more than 200 film credits to his name). The reason for this is simple: Narda Onyx! As Dr. Maria Frankenstein, she gives new meaning to the term "over the top" as she tears into her risible dialogue with wild-eyed abandon. Whenever she in on-camera, you can bet the scenery will be chewed if not swallowed whole. Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter gets everything wrong from the start beginning with its title. Dr. Marie Frankenstein is not the daughter of Baron Frankenstein but his great-granddaughter and the reason she and her brother Rudolph (Steven Geray) have relocated from Vienna to an unnamed town in the southwest - Transylvania, New Mexico? - is because of its frequent electrical storms. Apparently Europe didn't have those and they are needed to power Maria's brain experiments. After running out of brain donors - mainly children abducted from local families - Maria acquires a new lab rat in the form of Hank Tracy, a sidekick of Jesse James's who has been injured in a gunfight. She transforms Hank into Igor, a mindless slave to her will, but nothing seems to go right for our genius. Her attempts to seduce Jesse fail miserably - he prefers the Mexican villager Juanita (Estelita Rodriguez) - and even her own brother betrays her by intentionally botching almost every experiment. In a climax that prefigures the much more sexually explicit Lady Frankenstein (1971), Maria finally gets the rough treatment she craves from her own creation. This was the last feature film directed by William Beaudine who got his start in the film industry in 1909, doing odd jobs for producer/director D. W. Griffith. You can't exactly say Beaudine went out in a blaze of glory but Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter has a certain loopy charm if encountered in the right frame of mind (drunk, stoned, semi-conscious or on the verge of suicide). Yes, it has long, dull stretches, the sets are pitiful, the action sequences are lame, the acting borders on the somnambulistic except for Ms. Onyx and the basic horror/western gimmick never gels. Then again, it's hard to resist a movie where the mad scientist has a temper tantrum and angrily turns on its troublesome creation, yelling "Igor, go to your room!" If only Narda Onyx could have been in every scene - and with Ed Wood directing instead of William Beaudine! Producer: Carroll Case Director: William Beaudine Screenplay: Carl Hittleman Cinematography: Lothrop Worth Film Editing: Roy V. Livingston Art Direction: Paul Sylos Music: Raoul Kraushaar Cast: John Lupton (Jesse James), Narda Onyx (Dr. Maria Frankenstein), Estelita Rodriguez (Juanita Lopez), Cal Bolder (Hank Tracy/Igor), Jim Davis (Marshal MacPhee), Steven Geray (Dr. Rudolph Frankenstein). C-88m. by Jeff Stafford

Insider Info (Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter) - BEHIND THE SCENES


In June of 1965, William Beaudine agreed to direct the last two films of his career - Billy the Kid vs. Dracula and Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter. According to biographer Wendy L. Marshall in William Beaudine: From Silents to Television, "...it was loyalty that persuaded him to direct two burlesque horror-westerns for Joe Levine's Circle Productions. Each one was filmed in eight days at the Corrigan Ranch in Simi Valley, and at Paramount Studios. Carroll Case was the producer and Sam Manners the production supervisor. Beaudine had directed television shows for both." Billy the Kid vs. Dracula and Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter were produced specifically for the drive-in circuit.

"They were made for fun," said Manners. "Carroll Case felt Bill would do the best job on them, and I'm sure [Levine and Case] felt they could make money with them. That was part and parcel, and is always part and parcel, of whatever's being done. Levine expected to clear more than $5 million on each film."

Beaudine liked to work with actors he had previously directed in other films or television shows and assembled a supporting cast for Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter that included Jim Davis as Marshal MacPhee (Davis had worked with Beaudine on the TV series Rescue 8), Steven Geray as Dr. Frankenstein (Geray had appeared in Beaudine's Paris Playboys [1954]) and Nestor Paiva as the saloon owner (Paiva had been featured in Beaudine's TV series, The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin).

Cal Bolder, who plays Jesse James' sidekick Hank Tracy and the monster Igor in the film, recalls in an interview with Michael Barnum how he was cast in Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter: "The producer of the film saw me in a television role. I was working pretty steady in TV at that point. He wanted me to come in and read for the part, which I did. It only took about a week to shoot the movie...when you were where I was, and wanted to work and get exposure, then you took just about anything that came along...In fact Jim Davis, who played the sheriff in the film, had been around Hollywood for about 20 years and I managed to get billing above him - and nobody had ever heard of me! Including Jim Davis."

As for his transition from Hank Tracy to Igor in Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, Bolder said, "They really shaved my head. They said to me "We'd like for you to shave your head and for that we will give you an extra $1000. And we will give you a professionally made wig for you to wear to go out on auditions with." So I did half the film bald, except for that rubber tape around my head which was made to look like stitching. As it was I got several more roles later in shows where they wanted me to be bald, such as a couple of The Man from U.N.C.L.E. episodes and a Daniel Boone. So it actually worked out well for me."

Estelita Rodriguez, who billed herself as Estelita for most of her career, hadn't made a feature film since Rio Bravo in 1959 when she accepted this role. It would be her last film. She died of influenza shortly after it was completed.

Compiled by Jeff Stafford

SOURCES:
William Beaudine: From Silents to Television by Wendy L. Marshall
"Cal Boulder Meets Frankenstein's Daughter" by Michael Barnum, www.horror-wood.com
IMDB

Insider Info (Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter) - BEHIND THE SCENES

In June of 1965, William Beaudine agreed to direct the last two films of his career - Billy the Kid vs. Dracula and Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter. According to biographer Wendy L. Marshall in William Beaudine: From Silents to Television, "...it was loyalty that persuaded him to direct two burlesque horror-westerns for Joe Levine's Circle Productions. Each one was filmed in eight days at the Corrigan Ranch in Simi Valley, and at Paramount Studios. Carroll Case was the producer and Sam Manners the production supervisor. Beaudine had directed television shows for both." Billy the Kid vs. Dracula and Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter were produced specifically for the drive-in circuit. "They were made for fun," said Manners. "Carroll Case felt Bill would do the best job on them, and I'm sure [Levine and Case] felt they could make money with them. That was part and parcel, and is always part and parcel, of whatever's being done. Levine expected to clear more than $5 million on each film." Beaudine liked to work with actors he had previously directed in other films or television shows and assembled a supporting cast for Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter that included Jim Davis as Marshal MacPhee (Davis had worked with Beaudine on the TV series Rescue 8), Steven Geray as Dr. Frankenstein (Geray had appeared in Beaudine's Paris Playboys [1954]) and Nestor Paiva as the saloon owner (Paiva had been featured in Beaudine's TV series, The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin). Cal Bolder, who plays Jesse James' sidekick Hank Tracy and the monster Igor in the film, recalls in an interview with Michael Barnum how he was cast in Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter: "The producer of the film saw me in a television role. I was working pretty steady in TV at that point. He wanted me to come in and read for the part, which I did. It only took about a week to shoot the movie...when you were where I was, and wanted to work and get exposure, then you took just about anything that came along...In fact Jim Davis, who played the sheriff in the film, had been around Hollywood for about 20 years and I managed to get billing above him - and nobody had ever heard of me! Including Jim Davis." As for his transition from Hank Tracy to Igor in Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, Bolder said, "They really shaved my head. They said to me "We'd like for you to shave your head and for that we will give you an extra $1000. And we will give you a professionally made wig for you to wear to go out on auditions with." So I did half the film bald, except for that rubber tape around my head which was made to look like stitching. As it was I got several more roles later in shows where they wanted me to be bald, such as a couple of The Man from U.N.C.L.E. episodes and a Daniel Boone. So it actually worked out well for me." Estelita Rodriguez, who billed herself as Estelita for most of her career, hadn't made a feature film since Rio Bravo in 1959 when she accepted this role. It would be her last film. She died of influenza shortly after it was completed. Compiled by Jeff Stafford SOURCES: William Beaudine: From Silents to Television by Wendy L. Marshall "Cal Boulder Meets Frankenstein's Daughter" by Michael Barnum, www.horror-wood.com IMDB

In the Know (Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter) - TRIVIA


William Beaudine, often referred to as "One-Shot Beaudine" because of his reputation for only shooting one take of each scene, had one of the longest directing careers in the history of Hollywood. He entered the film industry in 1909, working as a gopher for D.W. Griffith, and reached his artistic peak during the silent era with Little Annie Rooney (1925) and Sparrows (1926), two Mary Pickford films. His real forte was B-movies and by the 1940s he was specializing in programmers in every genre, churning out Monogram westerns, Bowery Boys comedies, and exploitation films such as the notorious Mom and Dad (1945), which was a tawdry melodrama masquerading as a sex education film and made a fortune for producer Kroger Babb.

Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter was the last film shot at the Corrigan Ranch, near Chatsworth, California. It was owned by Ray Corrigan who created a screen alter ego known as Crash Corrigan and appeared in such popular movie serials as Flash Gordon (1936) and Undersea Kingdom (1936). He became a popular western star shortly thereafter and specialized in oaters up until the mid-forties. His final film was It! The Terror from Beyond Space (1958) in which he played the title alien. It was a direct influence on Ridley Scott's 1979 breakout sci-fi thriller Alien.

Ray Corrigan sold his ranch to Bob Hope directly after the completion of Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter.

Mad female scientists are a rarity in the science fiction/horror genre and Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter is one of the first films to capitalize on this. Lady Frankenstein (1971) would exploit this plot angle more prominently with Rosalba Neri's Tania Frankenstein taking a distinctly sexual interest in her creation.

Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter would prove to be the final feature film for Narda Onyx (Dr. Maria Frankenstein), Estelita Rodriguez (Juanita) and Cal Bolder (Hank/Igor).

Narda Onyx worked more frequently in television than in feature films and appeared in episodes of The Adventures of Jim Bowie (1956), 77 Sunset Strip (1959), Have Gun, Will Travel (1960), The Beverly Hillbillies (1963), and The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964). She only made three film appearances, Gaby (1956), Hitler (1962), and, of course, Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, which was her most memorable role.

Estelita Rodriguez was a Cuban actress who specialized in playing Mexican senoritas in a number of Westerns in the forties and fifties, several of which featured Roy Rogers. She never really escaped her stereotyped screen image as a 'spitfire' and died at the young age of 38. She was married four times; one of her husbands, actor Grant Withers, committed suicide shortly after his divorce from her.

Cal Bolder, whose real name is Earl C. Craver, was born in Elkhart, Kansas and later attended Wichita University where he played football. After college, the 6'3", 240 pound Craver served his country in the Korean War and then settled in Southern California.

Bolder was working as a cop for the Los Angeles Police Department when he was discovered by an agent whom he had stopped for speeding. He was encouraged to audition as an actor and almost immediately won small roles in several television productions. Among them were Adventures in Paradise (1960), Gunsmoke (1962), Honey West (1965), The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1966) and, his most famous appearance as Keel in an episode of Star Trek (1967).

Cal Bolder retired from filmmaking in the sixties and became a novelist. His first book, The Last Reunion, was about the investigation of a serial killer stalking the residents of a small town in Washington. He died of cancer in January of 2005.

Carl K. Hittleman, the screenwriter of Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, had been associated with two previous films that featured Jesse James as the main character - I Shot Jesse James (1949) which Hittleman produced for director Sam Fuller and The Return of Jesse James (1950) which was based on a story idea by Hittleman.

Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter and Billy the Kid vs. Dracula weren't actually the first horror westerns ever made despite some claims in the publicity materials. The Beast of Hollow Mountain (1956) featured western star Guy Madison as a rancher who sets a trap for the prehistoric creature that's been feeding on his cattle. And Curse of the Undead (1959) featured a vampire gunslinger (Michael Pate) who challenges the town's preacher (Eric Fleming) to a showdown.

Compiled by Jeff Stafford

SOURCES:
William Beaudine: From Silents to Television by Wendy L. Marshall
"Cal Boulder Meets Frankenstein's Daughter" by Michael Barnum, www.horror-wood.com
IMDB

In the Know (Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter) - TRIVIA

William Beaudine, often referred to as "One-Shot Beaudine" because of his reputation for only shooting one take of each scene, had one of the longest directing careers in the history of Hollywood. He entered the film industry in 1909, working as a gopher for D.W. Griffith, and reached his artistic peak during the silent era with Little Annie Rooney (1925) and Sparrows (1926), two Mary Pickford films. His real forte was B-movies and by the 1940s he was specializing in programmers in every genre, churning out Monogram westerns, Bowery Boys comedies, and exploitation films such as the notorious Mom and Dad (1945), which was a tawdry melodrama masquerading as a sex education film and made a fortune for producer Kroger Babb. Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter was the last film shot at the Corrigan Ranch, near Chatsworth, California. It was owned by Ray Corrigan who created a screen alter ego known as Crash Corrigan and appeared in such popular movie serials as Flash Gordon (1936) and Undersea Kingdom (1936). He became a popular western star shortly thereafter and specialized in oaters up until the mid-forties. His final film was It! The Terror from Beyond Space (1958) in which he played the title alien. It was a direct influence on Ridley Scott's 1979 breakout sci-fi thriller Alien. Ray Corrigan sold his ranch to Bob Hope directly after the completion of Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter. Mad female scientists are a rarity in the science fiction/horror genre and Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter is one of the first films to capitalize on this. Lady Frankenstein (1971) would exploit this plot angle more prominently with Rosalba Neri's Tania Frankenstein taking a distinctly sexual interest in her creation. Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter would prove to be the final feature film for Narda Onyx (Dr. Maria Frankenstein), Estelita Rodriguez (Juanita) and Cal Bolder (Hank/Igor). Narda Onyx worked more frequently in television than in feature films and appeared in episodes of The Adventures of Jim Bowie (1956), 77 Sunset Strip (1959), Have Gun, Will Travel (1960), The Beverly Hillbillies (1963), and The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1964). She only made three film appearances, Gaby (1956), Hitler (1962), and, of course, Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, which was her most memorable role. Estelita Rodriguez was a Cuban actress who specialized in playing Mexican senoritas in a number of Westerns in the forties and fifties, several of which featured Roy Rogers. She never really escaped her stereotyped screen image as a 'spitfire' and died at the young age of 38. She was married four times; one of her husbands, actor Grant Withers, committed suicide shortly after his divorce from her. Cal Bolder, whose real name is Earl C. Craver, was born in Elkhart, Kansas and later attended Wichita University where he played football. After college, the 6'3", 240 pound Craver served his country in the Korean War and then settled in Southern California. Bolder was working as a cop for the Los Angeles Police Department when he was discovered by an agent whom he had stopped for speeding. He was encouraged to audition as an actor and almost immediately won small roles in several television productions. Among them were Adventures in Paradise (1960), Gunsmoke (1962), Honey West (1965), The Man from U.N.C.L.E. (1966) and, his most famous appearance as Keel in an episode of Star Trek (1967). Cal Bolder retired from filmmaking in the sixties and became a novelist. His first book, The Last Reunion, was about the investigation of a serial killer stalking the residents of a small town in Washington. He died of cancer in January of 2005. Carl K. Hittleman, the screenwriter of Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter, had been associated with two previous films that featured Jesse James as the main character - I Shot Jesse James (1949) which Hittleman produced for director Sam Fuller and The Return of Jesse James (1950) which was based on a story idea by Hittleman. Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter and Billy the Kid vs. Dracula weren't actually the first horror westerns ever made despite some claims in the publicity materials. The Beast of Hollow Mountain (1956) featured western star Guy Madison as a rancher who sets a trap for the prehistoric creature that's been feeding on his cattle. And Curse of the Undead (1959) featured a vampire gunslinger (Michael Pate) who challenges the town's preacher (Eric Fleming) to a showdown. Compiled by Jeff Stafford SOURCES: William Beaudine: From Silents to Television by Wendy L. Marshall "Cal Boulder Meets Frankenstein's Daughter" by Michael Barnum, www.horror-wood.com IMDB

Yea or Nay (Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter) - CRITIC REVIEWS OF "JESSE JAMES MEETS FRANKENSTEIN'S DAUGHTER"


"Bad acting and dialogue make this a joy to watch."
- Michael Weldon, The Psychotronic Encyclopedia of Film

"With script and direction proving equally frail, the film is only prevented from becoming the camper's delight promised by the title by the fact that the cast plod through it all with gravity hardly befitting the occasion."
- Tom Milne, MFB [Monthly Film Bulletin]

"Low-budget nonsense, played and directed with little sense of style or purpose."
- Halliwell's Film & Video Guide.

"If Ed Wood hadn't existed, it would not have been necessary to invent him: the world could have lived happily in the knowledge that in William Beaudine we had the next best/worst thing....This was Beaudine's 199th movie and, even though he never reshot a scene, you can sense exhaustion setting in. The fantastic comic/horror/western possibilities of a charismatic outlaw coming into conflict with a girl whose birthright was a bolt through the back of her neck were never really explored. Bizarrely, Beaudine plays this one straight."
- The Rough Guide to Cult Movies.

"...a crude attempt to marry the horror and western genres....it would be unbearable but for [Narda] Onyx, who makes a richly overripe, querulously kinky prima donna out of the mad scientist. Beaudine's last film, it makes a not entirely inappropriate coda to a prolific career down among the Bs."
- Phil Hardy, The Encyclopedia of Horror Movies.

"Outre oater with monster motifs, a blend of cowboys and mad doctor. Result: A laughable disaster that bites the dust. This abomination depicts a pardner of fast-drawing Jesse transmutated into a cactus-chewing Monster dubbed "Igor"....."
- John Stanley, Creature Features.

"...the great, the under-appreciated, the colossally inventive Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter. The finest horror western ever made - which I realize is like saying the best Mexican wine, but still...Fortunately, this resume-killer of a movie didn't affect the future work of the great Rayford Barnes, as the hothead turncoat outlaw, and Jim Davis, who would become internationally famous as Jock Ewing in "Dallas." William Beaudine, 73 years old when he made this movie, completed more than 500 films in his career, and I can definitely say that this is one of them."
- Joe Bob Briggs

"A companion piece to the simultaneously shot Billy the Kid vs. Dracula, this silly horror-oater needs the bravura of a Carradine to put it over, something this dull cast never does."
- James O'Neill, Terror on Tape

"This, sadly, is an ineptly made gimmick Western...Like its companion piece, Billy the Kid vs. Dracula, this has achieved cult status."
- The Encyclopedia of Western Movies.

"Certainly Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter has one or two Z-budget howlers - the monster is revived by having a coloured motorcycle helmet placed on his head, or the moment when Maria invites Jesse to come into her library and the resulting room contains no books. It should also be noted that despite the title Narda Onyx plays Frankenstein's granddaughter, not his daughter. But for all its Z-movie reputation, Jesse James is never really any worse than a B western. It doesn't look all that cheap and is in colour. There are certainly a lot of genre films worse than this. Narda Onyx gives a wonderfully breathy and overwrought performance as Maria and John Lupton is quite good as Jesse, as is Estelita as the good-hearted Juanita."
- Richard Scheib, The SF, Horror and Fantasy Film Review.

"That bare outline of the plot doesn't begin to get at just how aimless and silly the movie really is. There are moments of utter nonsense, yet too much of the movie involves long, seemingly endless sequences of characters talking and talking and talking, as if plot points are really crucial...The western elements are never very exciting, and the horror elements are certainly never scary, although they do have a genuinely enjoyable kitsch value, particularly when Maria Frankenstein starts espousing her fervent dreams and desires of creation. Narda Onyx turns Maria into a memorably campy screen villainess, one that deserves a much better movie than this one."
- James Kendrick, www.qnetwork.com

"Are there worse films than Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter? Of course there are, but you have to really dive deep to find them. This piece of entertainment goes horribly bad even before you reach the end of reading the title, as the character in the film is not even Dr. Frankenstein's daughter but his grand-daughter. And as you begin viewing, you'll notice her brother Rudolph is played by an actor 30 years her elder. And just seconds later you see that a key piece of her lab equipment in transplanting brains is a World War II army helmet painted in rainbow stripes – and well, there but for the grace of God, go your great expectations."
- Alameda TV, www.alamedatv.org

Compiled by Jeff Stafford

Yea or Nay (Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter) - CRITIC REVIEWS OF "JESSE JAMES MEETS FRANKENSTEIN'S DAUGHTER"

"Bad acting and dialogue make this a joy to watch." - Michael Weldon, The Psychotronic Encyclopedia of Film "With script and direction proving equally frail, the film is only prevented from becoming the camper's delight promised by the title by the fact that the cast plod through it all with gravity hardly befitting the occasion." - Tom Milne, MFB [Monthly Film Bulletin] "Low-budget nonsense, played and directed with little sense of style or purpose." - Halliwell's Film & Video Guide. "If Ed Wood hadn't existed, it would not have been necessary to invent him: the world could have lived happily in the knowledge that in William Beaudine we had the next best/worst thing....This was Beaudine's 199th movie and, even though he never reshot a scene, you can sense exhaustion setting in. The fantastic comic/horror/western possibilities of a charismatic outlaw coming into conflict with a girl whose birthright was a bolt through the back of her neck were never really explored. Bizarrely, Beaudine plays this one straight." - The Rough Guide to Cult Movies. "...a crude attempt to marry the horror and western genres....it would be unbearable but for [Narda] Onyx, who makes a richly overripe, querulously kinky prima donna out of the mad scientist. Beaudine's last film, it makes a not entirely inappropriate coda to a prolific career down among the Bs." - Phil Hardy, The Encyclopedia of Horror Movies. "Outre oater with monster motifs, a blend of cowboys and mad doctor. Result: A laughable disaster that bites the dust. This abomination depicts a pardner of fast-drawing Jesse transmutated into a cactus-chewing Monster dubbed "Igor"....." - John Stanley, Creature Features. "...the great, the under-appreciated, the colossally inventive Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter. The finest horror western ever made - which I realize is like saying the best Mexican wine, but still...Fortunately, this resume-killer of a movie didn't affect the future work of the great Rayford Barnes, as the hothead turncoat outlaw, and Jim Davis, who would become internationally famous as Jock Ewing in "Dallas." William Beaudine, 73 years old when he made this movie, completed more than 500 films in his career, and I can definitely say that this is one of them." - Joe Bob Briggs "A companion piece to the simultaneously shot Billy the Kid vs. Dracula, this silly horror-oater needs the bravura of a Carradine to put it over, something this dull cast never does." - James O'Neill, Terror on Tape "This, sadly, is an ineptly made gimmick Western...Like its companion piece, Billy the Kid vs. Dracula, this has achieved cult status." - The Encyclopedia of Western Movies. "Certainly Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter has one or two Z-budget howlers - the monster is revived by having a coloured motorcycle helmet placed on his head, or the moment when Maria invites Jesse to come into her library and the resulting room contains no books. It should also be noted that despite the title Narda Onyx plays Frankenstein's granddaughter, not his daughter. But for all its Z-movie reputation, Jesse James is never really any worse than a B western. It doesn't look all that cheap and is in colour. There are certainly a lot of genre films worse than this. Narda Onyx gives a wonderfully breathy and overwrought performance as Maria and John Lupton is quite good as Jesse, as is Estelita as the good-hearted Juanita." - Richard Scheib, The SF, Horror and Fantasy Film Review. "That bare outline of the plot doesn't begin to get at just how aimless and silly the movie really is. There are moments of utter nonsense, yet too much of the movie involves long, seemingly endless sequences of characters talking and talking and talking, as if plot points are really crucial...The western elements are never very exciting, and the horror elements are certainly never scary, although they do have a genuinely enjoyable kitsch value, particularly when Maria Frankenstein starts espousing her fervent dreams and desires of creation. Narda Onyx turns Maria into a memorably campy screen villainess, one that deserves a much better movie than this one." - James Kendrick, www.qnetwork.com "Are there worse films than Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter? Of course there are, but you have to really dive deep to find them. This piece of entertainment goes horribly bad even before you reach the end of reading the title, as the character in the film is not even Dr. Frankenstein's daughter but his grand-daughter. And as you begin viewing, you'll notice her brother Rudolph is played by an actor 30 years her elder. And just seconds later you see that a key piece of her lab equipment in transplanting brains is a World War II army helmet painted in rainbow stripes – and well, there but for the grace of God, go your great expectations." - Alameda TV, www.alamedatv.org Compiled by Jeff Stafford

Quote It! (Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter) - QUOTES FROM "JESSE JAMES MEETS FRANKENSTEIN'S DAUGHTER"


Dr. Maria Frankenstein (Narda Onyx): "You have refused me, Maria Von Frankenstein granddaughter of the count."

Dr. Maria Frankenstein: "You are no longer Hank Tracy! You are Igor!

Dr. Maria Frankenstein (to Igor): "As I think, you will think!"

Juanita (Estelita Rodriguez): "I'd rather see you dead than what happened to Hank."

Dr. Maria Frankenstein (to Dr. Rudolph Frankenstein): "My you're a humanitarian. You should have stayed in Europe and given pink pills to sweet old ladies."

Dr. Maria Frankenstein: "What a fool I've been! I've allowed the duothermic pulsator to be attached only to the body!"

Dr. Rudolph Frankenstein (Steven Geray): "The wound is bad. It's festering."
Dr. Maria Frankenstein: "It is nothing. He is strong as a giant. What a brute he'll make!"

Dr. Maria Frankenstein: "That dog! He always senses when we operate. Muzzle him."

Dr. Maria Frankenstein: "Igor, go to your room!"

Compiled by Jeff Stafford

Quote It! (Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter) - QUOTES FROM "JESSE JAMES MEETS FRANKENSTEIN'S DAUGHTER"

Dr. Maria Frankenstein (Narda Onyx): "You have refused me, Maria Von Frankenstein granddaughter of the count." Dr. Maria Frankenstein: "You are no longer Hank Tracy! You are Igor! Dr. Maria Frankenstein (to Igor): "As I think, you will think!" Juanita (Estelita Rodriguez): "I'd rather see you dead than what happened to Hank." Dr. Maria Frankenstein (to Dr. Rudolph Frankenstein): "My you're a humanitarian. You should have stayed in Europe and given pink pills to sweet old ladies." Dr. Maria Frankenstein: "What a fool I've been! I've allowed the duothermic pulsator to be attached only to the body!" Dr. Rudolph Frankenstein (Steven Geray): "The wound is bad. It's festering." Dr. Maria Frankenstein: "It is nothing. He is strong as a giant. What a brute he'll make!" Dr. Maria Frankenstein: "That dog! He always senses when we operate. Muzzle him." Dr. Maria Frankenstein: "Igor, go to your room!" Compiled by Jeff Stafford

Quotes

Trivia

Produced as part of a double feature with Billy the Kid versus Dracula (1966) which was also directed by William Beaudine.