Kuwait Times

Museum explores spooky science behind 'Frankenste­in', 'The Mummy'

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What is the spookiest thing about “Frankenste­in,” “The Mummy” and “Dracula”? The hideous monster? The ancient curse? The sharp fangs? Or the fact that these classic horror films were all rooted in real-life scientific experiment­s and discoverie­s? That is the premise of a new exhibition at Los Angeles’ Natural History Museum, showcasing movie props from Hollywood’s golden age of horror alongside scientific artifacts that inspired them.

The “Natural History of Horror”-opening Thursday, as Halloween looms-displays the cloth wrappings used to mummify Boris Karloff in the 1932 classic movie alongside real ancient Egyptian corpse bindings from the museum’s archeology collection. Visitors can pull a lever to recreate Luigi Galvani’s 18th-century electrical experiment on twitching frog legs-which inspired Mary Shelley’s “Frankenste­in”-while examining the metal shackles used to bind The Monster on-screen in 1931.

“The early electrical work that was done to see if you can re-energize animals and bring them to life was the beginning of ‘Frankenste­in’,” said museum director Lori Bettison-Varga, who moved frog specimens from the institute’s herpetolog­y collection to the new exhibition. “These films are essentiall­y inspired by the natural and physical world, and the imaginatio­n that people had to create stories based on real things,” she added.

The exhibition explains how 19th-century diseases such as cholera inspired the Dracula from Bram Stoker’s vampire novel we know today. It also features a silicon copy of the monster suit worn in 1954’s “Creature from the Black Lagoon.” According to curators, the monster was inspired by the discovery of a living coelacanth-an ancient fish once thought to be extinct, which scientists then believed was the common ancestor of all land animals.

“We have a real one on display in a tank out on the hallway on this floor,” said Bettison-Varga. Created as the Museum of History, Science and Art in 1913, the institutio­n’s early collection of motion picture props was boosted in the 1930s by a large donation from Universal Picturesin­cluding a pitchfork from “Bride of Frankenste­in.” “Because we began so early, and before it was considered a real industry worthy of collecting, we were the first through the door,” said curator Beth Werling.

While science’s astounding progress since the 1930s makes the discoverie­s that inspired these horror movies seem quaint-or obsolete-today, the same canon of legendary characters continue to resonate with modern audiences. “Something that I really love about the monsters is that they’re continuall­y reinterpre­ted over and over again,” said NBC Universal archivist Jeff Pirtle. “Universal has so many sequels to Frankenste­in. The Son of Frankenste­in. Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenste­in! Every time they’re reimagined you still see this common theme.”

 ??  ?? In this file photo a piece from the movie ‘Frankenste­in’ is displayed during the exhibition ‘Guillermo del Toro, At Home with My Monsters’ -a collection of personal items and some that he used in his movies- in Guadalajar­a, State of Jalisco, Mexico. — AFP
In this file photo a piece from the movie ‘Frankenste­in’ is displayed during the exhibition ‘Guillermo del Toro, At Home with My Monsters’ -a collection of personal items and some that he used in his movies- in Guadalajar­a, State of Jalisco, Mexico. — AFP

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