Although released in 1990, it’s the 80s spirit of enterprise and a ‘can do’ attitude which leads certain leading men to have a go at science, even though they’ve been outright rejected by the scientific or medical establishments. What cares Herbert West that he’s been shunned? He’s going to uncover the secret of life anyway, and then they’ll all be sorry. Likewise, Frankenhooker’s young protagonist Jeffrey Franken (James Lorinz) hasn’t been dissuaded from trying to master the greatest secrets of human life by the mere fact of being thrown out of several medical schools. (By the way, where the hell does he get that human brain/eyeball combo at the start?) In any case, our ‘bio-electro-technician’ gets his big break when a tragic accident befalls his fiancee, Elizabeth (Patty Mullen).
“A tossed human salad”
Jeffrey has modified the lawnmower which they’ve bought for Elizabeth’s father because of course he has, but a problem with his modifications sends it into fatal collision with Elizabeth, who is brutally dismembered. But rather than think, ‘perhaps I’m not great at this,’ Jeffrey decides he can put Elizabeth back together again using his scientific nous. In fact, if he’s going to achieve this, he decides he might as well make some minor improvements. See, Elizabeth was a little on the large side (the film’s only truly implausible special effect is that unconvincing fat suit) and although Jeffrey had made an attempt to staple her stomach (!) it hadn’t worked. Jeffrey does quite a bit of research on this, if that’s what you can call buying a lot of softcore mags and attaching photos of Elizabeth’s face over the girls’ bodies, but in the end he does what anyone would do: gathers a group of prostitutes for a ‘special party’, where he will choose the nicest bodies ready for Elizabeth v.1.1. This isn’t without precedent, by the way; Victor Frankenstein also scavenges body parts which he considers are aesthetically-pleasing, so Jeffrey Franken is in solid, literary company here. That Jeffrey reaches this conclusion after drilling holes in his own head is neither here nor there. But how will he harvest the body parts he needs?
“If they don’t wanna do it they can…just say no!”
Well, more anon. But the new Elizabeth’s first instinct is linked to her new body parts and not her brain. She follows a kind of homing instinct back to Times Square, where she regurgitates words spoken by all of the women who donated her new limbs. This soon brings her to the attention of the girls’ pimp Zorro (Henenlotter regular Joseph Gonzalez) who has been raging over their loss, and wants to find the mysterious ‘Jersey boy’ who somehow blew them up. As Jeffrey desperately tries to steer Elizabeth back home, he has to throw himself into Zorro’s path once more.
Patty Mullen – once a Penthouse Pet – is outrageously good as the modded Elizabeth, lurching and gurning her way through New York to great comedic effect. The re-use of the script in compromising situations is also great in terms of the comedy of errors aspects, and let’s face it – the purple-clad, stitched-up form of Elizabeth has become a modern horror classic image, thanks to a keen eye for a good look as well as Mullen’s fun performance, which only appears at around the hour mark in any case. Good horror monsters don’t need a lot of screen time, they just make the most of it while they’re there. We should give James Lorinz plenty of credit for his performance too, though, as he carries a great deal of the film via his (deadpan) monologue, as well as looking genuinely put upon, albeit by his own crummy decisions. The crux of the film is Jeffrey desperately trying – and failing – to control a series of increasingly bizarre situations. And it’s when Elizabeth recovers her sense of self that he’s really in trouble…
“What I did may have been a bit unorthodox…”
The denouement in this film is essentially a delicious bit of body horror payback; Jeffrey has after all devoted his efforts to an ‘oestrogen-based serum’, which can only be used to resurrect women, so when his head is sadly and brutally detached from his body, he can only be brought back with a woman’s body. Or, bodies, Calling Dr. Freud: it seems that the guy who was hellbent on choosing the sexiest body parts was happiest looking at them from more of a distance, and bemoans his new lack of his ‘johnson’ once Elizabeth has given him a taste of his own medicine. Oh, my. Well, thanks to the easily-understood blueprints and the stock of component parts, as well as a girlfriend who returns the favour, he and Elizabeth can be together again at the end of the film. In what sort of way, ours not to reason why, but there’s a moral of sorts to this tale.