Attributes | Values |
---|
rdfs:label
| |
Trivia
| - * First appearance of [[W:C:marvel:Vlad Dracula
|
CustomText
| - * [[W:C:marvel:Frankenstein's Monster /Gallery
|
Letterer1
| |
Inker1
| - John Verpoorten
- Bob Stuart
|
Recommended
| - * Bloodstone #1-4
* Book of the Dead #1-4
* Marvel Classics Comics #9
* Marvel Classics Comics #20
* Monster of Frankenstein #1-18
* Monsters Unleashed #1-11
* Tomb of Dracula (Volume 1) #1-70
* Tomb of Dracula (Volume 2) #1-6
* Tomb of Dracula (Volume 3) #1-4
* Tomb of Dracula (Volume 4) #1-4
|
Inker1
| - John Verpoorten
- Bob Stuart
|
CustomSection
| |
Editor-in-Chief
| |
Writer1
| |
Penciler1
| |
PreviousIssue
| |
Colourist1
| |
Writer1
| |
StoryTitle
| - "The Executioner"
- "The Fury of a Fiend!"
|
Editor1
| |
Penciler1
| |
Appearing
| - Featured Characters:
*
Supporting Characters:
*
Villains:
*
*
*
Other Characters:
*
* Drako
* A constable
* Fritz
Locations:
*
*
Items:
*
Vehicles:
*
- Featured Characters:
* Francis Tourneau
Supporting Characters:
* Joseph-Ignace Guillotin
Villains:
*
Other Characters:
*
Locations:
*
:*
Items:
*
Vehicles:
*
|
Letterer1
| |
Colourist1
| |
Editor1
| |
dbkwik:crossgen-co...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
dbkwik:heykidscomi...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
dbkwik:marvel/prop...iPageUsesTemplate
| |
CoverArtist
| |
Country
| |
Issue
| |
NextIssue
| |
Speaker
| - [[W:C:marvel:Frankenstein's Monster
|
Links
| - * Frankenstein article at Wikipedia
* Frankenstein (Universal movie) article at Wikipedia
* Frankenstein or the Modern Prometheus; Mary Shelly, 1818
* Frankenstein's Monster article at Wikipedia
* Monster of Frankenstein series index at the Grand Comics Database
|
Volume
| |
Title
| |
Month
| |
Synopsis
| - Francis Tourneau is an executioner to King Louis XVI of France in the year 1769. He labors to find a more efficient means of executing prisoners. A physician named Joseph-Ignace Guillotin provides him designs for a mechanized decapitation device. The device is put into use, but a revolution takes place and the prisoners storm the Bastille. They capture Tourneau who subsequently becomes the guillotine’s first victim.
- The Frankenstein Monster arrives in a small Bavarian town. As he nears a lake, he finds an angry hunchback named Drako attacking a gypsy girl – Carmen. The monster leaps out and wrestles with Drako, ultimately breaking his neck. Carmen runs in fear of the monster, into the arms of her grandmother – Madame Marguerita. Marguerita invites the Monster to join the gypsy camp and he accompanies them on a tour of the Bavarian Alps. During this time, he expresses his desire to find the last Frankenstein.
After several weeks, the gypsy caravan arrives in Transylvania. Marguerita tells the Monster that she knows the location of the last Frankenstein. He presses her for more details and she reveals that Frankenstein is dead, but she will take him to his tomb.
That night, Madame Marguerita transforms into a vampire bat and attacks a constable in the nearby village. The villagers learn of the attack and decide to mob the gypsy camp. The gypsies flee into the mountains and Marguerita leads them to a cave blocked by a giant boulder. The Frankenstein Monster pushes the boulder away and rolls it towards the onrushing mob.
With the danger temporarily averted, Madame Marguerita and the Frankenstein Monster enter the cave. She shows him a sealed coffin, which she claims to be the final resting place of the last Frankenstein. The Monster removes the lid revealing a skeleton with a wooden stake sticking out of it. Marguerita rushes past him and pulls the stake free from the body. The body reforms into the shape of the Lord of Vampires – Dracula!
|
Notes
| - * John Buscema becomes the regular series penciler with this issue.
* "The Fury of a Fiend" is reprinted in the Essential Monster of Frankenstein trade paperback.
* "The Executioner" was originally printed in Adventures Into Terror #16.
* This story takes place in the year 1898, several years following the events of Bram Stoker's Dracula.
* [[W:C:marvel:Vlad Dracula
|
quotation
| - Evil radiates from you like warmth from the sun -- and this world will be a better place without you!
|
Publisher
| |
Year
| |
is PreviousIssue
of | |