Frankenstein: Legacy (2024)

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Frankenstein: Legacy (2024)

Post by bunniefuu »

- Captain Walton.

How's our visitor?

- I've never seen a man in

so wretched a condition.

He's dreadfully emaciated

by fatigue and suffering.

Lord knows how long

he was on the ice.

- Has he said anything?

- Only nonsense, in rare

moments of consciousness,

about a creature, a

demon, and a pursuit.

All we can offer him

now is rest and warmth

and hope by slow

degrees he will recover.

- Elizabeth?

- Do you

have it with you?

- That depends.

Have you got the payment?

- The diary.

- It's in me bag.

- Show it to me.

- Ah, knew you'd be keen

as soon as I saw it.

- Remarkable.

The author, this Frankenstein.

- Dead.

He won't mind it gone.

- You said you saw the

creature, his creation.

- Come on board after

I acquired the diary.

Big brute of a thing.

Tall as a man and

half, inhuman and foul.

Ugly as sin.

- You told no one

about our meeting.

- Man like me knows

how to be discreet.

Knows how to cover his tracks.

- Yeah.

- Yeah.

- As do I.

- Hmm.

- Breakfast, ma'am.

- You didn't need to

ring twice, Martha.

There's nothing wrong

with my hearing.

My love you, you've got

yourself up and dressed.

- It seemed the

thing to do, my dear,

with you working all night.

- I'm sorry I completely

lost track, my darling.

But you must take

care, you know, you,

you could do yourself an injury.

- God, there's nothing wrong

with the old boy really.

I firmly believe his

body's giving up on him

because you spend so much

time running around after him,

he's got nothing to do.

It's Mr. Darwin's theory

of evolution, you know.

- What are you

doing here, William?

Have you no food at your rooms?

- Actually I have, Mother.

I came to say goodbye to Clara.

She's your daughter.

She's, what is it

you're doing again?

A week in the sticks

with Aunt Mabel.

- We haven't got

an old Aunt Mabel.

I am taking a month in the

country with cousin Jane.

- And what pray are you

going to do for a month

in the country with

dear cousin Jane?

- Take long walks in the garden.

Discuss single men in

possession of good fortunes.

- Sounds wonderful.

- I'm looking forward to it.

- That's even worse.

- Perhaps you should give

some thought, William,

to your, your own romantic life.

I hear the Hardy girl

has returned from Paris.

Quite a pretty young

thing she is too.

- Hmm.

Perhaps I could marry

that lamp, Mother.

It's just as

pleasing to the eye,

but slightly more skilled

in the art of conversation.

- If only you would attend

the Montgomery Ball.

There are any number

of eligible debutantes.

- So you can hang a

number around their necks

and parade them like cattle.

- I would like to see

a grandchild on my knee

at some point in my life.

- Mother, when you

become a grandmother,

you'll hire a governess, put

her knee to work on your behalf

and see the child twice a

year like you did with us.

Kipper sandwich on the

bicycle, I'm afraid.

I'm late for work.

- Oh, that infernal contraption.

And let us not even start

on the subject of work.

A man in your position, it

really is quite beneath you,

you know, my darling.

- Do you know, I do so

enjoy our little talks.

Funny how you remember

them word for word.

Bye old girl.

Try not to have too much fun.

Father.

- I suppose you think

I said the wrong thing?

- No, not the wrong thing.

Just the same thing

over and over again.

Do you not wish for him the

happiness that we have had?

Oh, let him find a

love match as we did.

- My only wish is to restore

you to health, my darling.

And so I will.

- No, no, no no.

She will not listen to

reason, Dr. Browning.

Time and time again she

does only what she wants,

regardless of my clearly

stated preferences.

- Mr. Haddle, as I keep

trying to tell you,

we are not a training

ground for errant wives.

- She needs to be locked up.

She's absconded twice

from sanatoriums

and convalescent homes.

I mean, what do you call

that if not hysteria?

- I call it rather sensible,

if you try to have her

locked up for writing-

- What, poetry?

It's a nonsense!

- Your wife's frustrations

at the bounds you put on her

appear to me to be the

very definition of sanity.

Now if you will

excuse me, Mr. Haddle,

I have patients to attend to.

I fear in the hour

you've been here,

one of them might have

written a limerick.

- And sedate him, hmm.

Haddle.

Trouble, Browning?

- For some poor woman,

Mr. Brammings, yes.

- There's been another

complaint about conditions here.

A member of parliament

has taken an interest.

- What is it this time?

The food, the cold,

the general conditions.

- Do stop trying to guess.

They should be grateful

to be here at all.

They get bed and board.

- They get tied to a

bed and bored stiff.

We do nothing for them and

give them nothing to do.

Sir, right now, in Paris,

Pierre Janet is doing-

- Spare me another of

your theories, Browning.

We require no

newfangled nonsense,

we are in the business of

bed pans and sedatives,

babysitting cast outs

and ne'er do wells.

If you require an asylum

run by a more fanciful

superintendent,

there are many to choose from.

Though none, I believe,

that count your mother

among its trustees.

Perhaps you wouldn't

like your chances there.

- Ow!

- No you don't.

- Get off me.

- Lie down.

Settle down.

- Get, get off me.

- What's going on in here?

- Ah, here's a

young flap doodle.

- What does it look like?

He's as drunk as ever.

We come upon him with two

empty bottles in his arms.

- Well where the devil

did he get those from?

- One of the orderlies

would've brought them in.

On a bribe or a favor,

it shouldn't be allowed.

- Tell you all the ways!

- Keep the noise

down, you old fool.

- You can't speak to your old-

- Quiet!

You'll have Brammings down here.

- What's he in for?

- For his drinking.

He's supposed to be drying out,

and look what

you've done to him.

- I may have had one

or two little nips.

- I'll give you a little nip.

- Oh!

Liza.

- Now get to bed.

I hope your hangover blows

the top of your head off.

- Now look here, nurse.

We can't have you

assaulting patients.

- What good are

you doing him, eh?

I'd like to know.

He come in here to get well

and he's as drunk as ever.

- I'll have a word

with the orderlies.

Perhaps I should

just set you on them.

Might have a rather

greater effect.

- I'm sorry.

But is this supposed to

be a hospital or isn't it?

- That's what some of us

are aiming for, certainly.

- We're supposed

to be helping them.

- Indeed we are.

I say, are you new here, I don't

think I've seen you before.

- I started 10 days ago.

I'm Liza.

- I'm William.

Pleased to meet you.

- Yes.

I know who you

are, Dr. Browning.

It don't take 10 days for

our type to notice people.

- Ah, it's awfully quiet

here without old Clara.

- Yeah.

She's a bright young thing

and of course your mother

is hard at work downstairs.

- God only knows what

she's got planned for you.

You know, I half expect to see

you stretched out on a rack

every time I come home.

- She is a remarkable

woman, your mother.

If there is a cure for

me, she will find it.

Had she been permitted

to sit examinations,

she would've become an expert

renowned on the world stage.

- Yes, while I do agree with

the woman question in general,

Father, I fear in

my mother's case

the world is rather

the safer for it.

- Lady Charlotte North, sir.

- Colonel Browning, thank you

for seeing me unannounced.

I had hoped to see you alone,

this is rather a

delicate matter.

- May I introduce

my son William?

Do let him stay.

He may be of some use, I

am rather limited you know.

- Very well.

- Well this is

rather unexpected.

How may I help you,

Lady Charlotte?

- I shall get

straight to the point.

You have in your

possession a diary,

I wish to have it in mine.

- A diary?

- It is of little value really,

full of scientific fantasies,

but there's some novelty

to the PT Barnum crowd.

- Scientific fantasies.

Perhaps Milicent can-

- I represent a small group of

collectors of such novelties.

- I can't help you.

May I ask how you came to

believe it was in my possession.

- We have ways of getting

information, Colonel.

The group would be willing

to make you an offer,

a very generous offer, far

in excess of its value.

An offer unlikely

to be repeated.

- You seem very keen for

something of so little value.

- Well, you've been misinformed,

I'm afraid, Lady Charlotte.

I have no such diary and no

interest in any such diary.

Perhaps my wife-

- Your wife is unlikely

to be interested, Colonel.

It is not concerned with lace

making and letter writing.

- Oh, how little

you know my wife.

- I must say, the nobility

seem rather less noble

than we've been led to believe.

- That rather settles it.

I'm unable to help you.

- I shall have that

diary, Colonel Browning.

One way or another.

- What

was that about?

- Hmm?

Oh, haven't the foggiest.

I say, dear, you

haven't by any chance-

- Are you sure

you'll be all right

by yourself tonight, my love?

I really do feel most

dreadfully guilty.

William, could you

not stay the night?

- What's all this?

- Your mother has

an overnight trip

in aid of her experiments.

- I really must go.

A rather promising

contact who has an item

essential to my work.

- Eye of newt?

I've taken the night

shift, I'm afraid.

The old boy will have to

look after himself for once.

- Perhaps I should sleep

in the main house tonight-

- I shall be perfectly fine.

The only bother will

be how to occupy myself

with so little happening.

- The old boy go for your story?

- Did he cop for having it?

- We require an approach

with rather less subtlety.

- Right, you look in here,

I'll go check the library.

- I say!

Is someone there?

- Didn't mean to

disturb you, guv.

- What are you doing here?

Get out.

I'm armed, I tell you.

- No, no, old boy,

just be civil, man.

- Stay away or I shall fire.

- I've gotta get to

the door, haven't I?

If you're gonna chase

me from the house.

Me all terrified and regretful.

Where is it, old boy?

- Where's what?

- She says she wanted

something a bit less subtle.

I reckon we should

give it to him.

- Where is it?

- Oh, no, no.

- You know what we want.

- I don't!

- Where is it?

Where is it?

Where is it?

Where is it?

- Robert.

Oh my, my darling.

- They were.

- Ssh.

I know.

I never should have

left you alone.

I'm sorry.

We should never be parted again.

I promise.

I promise.

Please William, I won't have

you causing him any strain.

- Damn it, Mother, must

you guard him so jealously.

It's okay.

- Robert.

- You're all right,

Father, I've got you.

There we go.

All right.

You gave us a little bit

of a fright there, old boy.

You've been out

cold for three days.

- Sorry to have worried you so.

And Clara.

- She will arrive

in a day or two.

I try to dissuade her but she

insists that she should come.

- Just imagine the girl

wanting to see her father.

Good grief, you look

a hundred years older.

- Oh, I feel twice

that and more.

- What were you doing?

Taking the blaggards

on single-handed.

- Thought I could take them.

- At least you haven't

lost your fighting spirit.

- Ha ha, the last

of it, I think.

I feel rather closer

to the end of things.

- You mustn't be

so morbid, Robert.

- The old legs are done for.

One of them is

turning gangrenous.

I couldn't bear to lose it.

I've been so reduced

over the years I, well,

I want at least to remain whole.

Perhaps my time has come.

- No.

My work.

Robert, I am, I am so close.

So close.

- Let it be, Millicent.

Let me go.

- I won't hear it.

I forbid it.

- Oh, she loves me so terribly.

- Terribly indeed.

It's a selfish love.

A selfish, solitary

exclusionary thing

to the expense of

everything else.

- She loves you too,

you know, in her way.

- As if her way

is not to bother.

- I haven't told

you often myself,

how much I love you,

but I do, you know.

I am in awe of the man you've

become, a better man than I.

I'm so proud of you.

I'm so wonderfully proud.

Working when you needn't.

Helping your fellow man

when you could waste the day

on bridge, cigars, as

selfishly as the others.

- How thoroughly un-British.

The Queen will have

dispatched her troops.

- It felt the time to say it.

I fear this may

be my last chance.

- On the contrary.

I want more of the same please.

And regularly too.

It simply won't do.

You've got to stay with it.

We need you.

I'll be off then.

- Yes, yes, that's fine.

You may go too, Martha.

- Ma'am?

- Go home.

We shall require your

services no longer.

Yourself, the cook, the

housekeeper and the gardener,

the whole meddling lot of you.

I want you out by tonight.

- But.

But without notice, Ma'am.

- You shall be paid,

I'm sure you can find

yourself another situation

or a workhouse or an alleyway.

Now go!

Some warm milk to

help calm you my love.

I had to, my love.

I had to, you'll see.

- No, you couldn't have.

- I can save you!

- No!

- I can!

- Get out.

Get out!

- Robert!

No!

No!

- That he whose existence

appeared a part of us all

can have departed forever.

That the sound of a voice

so familiar and dear

can be hushed,

nevermore to be heard.

- That was a sin to have

only us at his graveside.

- She wouldn't be moved on it.

She wants him to

herself even now.

- I still can't

believe he's gone.

He'd been ill so long you

could almost forget about it.

- Yeah, I suppose the as*ault

brought things to a head.

- I'm glad he d*ed in his sleep.

That it was peaceful for him.

- Hmm.

I wish we'd been able

to see him at rest.

Mother was so quick to

get him to the mortuary.

- Mother.

Mother and I are

just alone here now.

- Must you stay?

There's nothing

here for you, Clara.

Not with the old man gone.

He was the heart and

soul of this place.

What now remains?

Just an empty shell.

- I should remain, for

Mother's sake at least.

- Do you think she'd take

the same care of you?

Do you think she'd even notice?

Oh, go back to cousin Jane's,

go where there's some

warmth and feeling.

- I shall have to withdraw

from the ball, of course.

- Don't you dare.

Father would want you to have

every chance of happiness

you possibly can.

You can go from cousin Jane's.

You'll look lovelier than ever

next to that old wallflower.

- And what about you?

- Don't you worry about

me, old girl, I'll be fine.

- It's too awful.

It's too awful to

even contemplate.

- He cannot be gone.

He would never have left me.

- There's been a spate of body

snatches these last months.

There's money to

be made, I'm sure.

It's an outrage.

- Have you retrieved any

of the poor souls taken?

- Not that I'm

aware of, sir, no.

We'll endeavor to do

our best, of course,

but the truth of the matter

is he could be anywhere.

Anywhere at all.

- The Frankenstein

serum is working.

You are growing stronger

than ever you were,

but I have missed something.

I was rushed when reattaching

your leg, I was clumsy.

It will not heal.

You need a new leg.

A new body.

In which you can grow.

This too has failed.

What more do you want from me?

What am I missing?

Embalming fluid.

Were they using

formaldehyde a century ago?

No.

This may be it, Robert.

You need a clean body.

Clean and unpolluted,

a fresh body.

Freshly k*lled.

- I'm not sure there's

much point in going home.

Have to set off for the morning

shift as soon as I get in.

- I'm hoping for an

hour's sleep standing up

so I don't crumple my clothes.

- Could do with a shave and all.

- Old Bramming

said about as much.

No doubt the entirety

of Western civilization

would break down if

a man were to appear

with a bristle on his chin.

- Be like the last days of Rome.

- Yeah.

Well, um.

- Well.

- Goodnight.

- Night then.

- Is it true?

Alfred.

The girls said that

he, he passed away.

But I say that there

must be some mistake.

He was as healthy

as a horse, he was-

- No, no, no, no, it's

quite true, I'm afraid.

They found him this morning.

- No.

- His heart probably gave out.

He must have given it

dog's abuse over the years.

- There was nothing

wrong with his heart.

Not with his heart.

He would've been all

alone when he passed.

- Yes, it's, was

terribly sad, I suppose.

- You suppose?

That's just the problem

with this place.

There's no understanding here.

There's no kindness.

We have our troubles, our lot,

and we're whisked away

to the workhouse or here

or jail or worse.

No understanding.

No thinking about us as people.

No thinking about

what might help.

What we might be feeling.

- Liza, I had no idea you'd

formed such a bond with him.

Would you like to see him?

There may be an autopsy

but I would say given his

age and history he prob--

He's gone.

- What do you mean he's gone?

- God in heaven, can the body

snatchers have come here too?

- Body snatchers?

You mean he's been robbed?

You were meant to be

looking after him.

How could you let this happen?

How could you?

- You shouldn't be out

here at this time of night.

Ain't safe.

- I'm not sure I much care

what happens to me now.

- I didn't know that your father

had been taken too when I.

- Gave me a piece of your mind.

- Do you wanna hit me back?

- No, I suspect if we

were to come to blows

I'd be much the worse for wear.

- They said they'd

give me a plot.

The church did.

A pauper's patch.

Somewhere I could stand and

pretend his body was in there.

He was my father, Alfred.

I was too ashamed to say

and then ashamed of

how ashamed I was.

- Oh God, Liza, I'm so sorry.

- I know you are.

It weren't your fault.

He said,

he said you were

decent with him.

Treated him like a human being.

Like a man.

Which is what he was.

No need to walk me home.

I know these

streets well enough.

- Well then, let's say

you're walking me home.

How is it you've done so

well for yourself, Liza?

- We'd all do well,

given the chance.

These people aren't here

because they drink and do wrong.

They drink and do wrong

'cause they're here.

And it's not us

which puts us here.

You don't let us live, your lot.

Not the whole of our lives.

Not like we want them lived.

You use our men's

bodies for their work,

our women's bodies

for your amusement.

I've clawed my way up a little,

but a little's all it is.

- I think you're remarkable.

I mean to find the people

that did this to us.

To your father and to mine.

- I do and all.

I keep wandering around here

as if I might catch

someone at it.

- So do I.

We should go in on it together.

Have you seen

anything suspicious?

- Only you lurking in the dark.

- I, I hope you've eliminated

me from your inquiries.

- Might have done.

- Do you remember

when we were young?

When everything was new.

Before the children,

before setback and illness

and, and failure.

No one can have loved as we did.

It was ours.

We invented it.

We were why people sing,

why poets take up pen.

Where are you?

Where have you gone?

Are you in there at all?

We have to find you new bodies

and bodies to replace

them when, when those rot.

Let the body's pile high.

- Mrs. Browning.

This is a surprise.

- I'd hoped

to see you, Brammings,

to talk over recent events.

- Of course.

Of course.

I was very sorry to

hear of your loss.

Of course you have

my condolences.

Young William appears to

be bearing up bravely.

- His loss is not on the

same scale as my own.

- Quite, quite.

Well, you wish to discuss?

- Recent events, Brammings.

- Well the

disappearing drunkard,

have the trustees some concerns?

I can assure you that-

- I can assure you

I have no interest

in the concerns of

the other trustees,

or in the disappearances

of the wastrels

that you house here.

Nor in their lives.

On that, I feel

sure we can agree.

- Well I,

of course I have, as you know,

been rather at odds with

your son on the matter.

As for the lives

of our patients,

I would agree that many

of them are better served

by the workhouse or the courts.

- Or the gallows?

- Well, in certain

cases, perhaps.

- You have always

struck me, Brammings,

as a man of ambition,

of advancement.

A man whose career would

not be slowed by idle gossip

regarding female patients.

- Now I really don't think-

- A man who knows the value

of a sympathetic ally.

- Indeed I was grateful-

- A man who looks

for opportunity

and yet knows when to look away.

Against your ambition,

against a considerable

rise in income,

what do these people matter?

What does one care

for the ants underfoot

as one advances

towards greatness?

What would it matter

if others were to

leave this establishment

earlier than expected?

- Quite, quite.

You, you said a rise in income.

- A considerable rise.

100 pounds for each of them.

- Their lives may be

worthless, but my cooperation,

however, is not.

- Very well, 500.

- And only the men.

- The women, Brammings,

shall remain untouched.

- And any more idle gossip.

- Will be silenced.

- How nice to have

things out in the open.

I must say, I thought

you only cold.

I could scarcely have imagined

that underneath all that

you were such a malignant bitch.

Now what do you require of me?

- An open door.

And a blind eye.

- So this is how you

lot spend your time.

- Less glamorous

than you expected.

- If I'd have known I would've

left my tiara at home.

- It's not all it's

cracked up to be, you know.

I feel like I've

spent my entire life

running away from money.

Finds you, somehow,

wealth and privilege.

Just becomes expectation

and boundaries.

I do realize how

spoilt that sounds

and I know I'm very fortunate

to have these as problems.

- Well it's better

than wondering

where your next meal's

gonna come from.

Though I am surprised

at how unspoilt you are.

You're the only

person of your class

who I've not wanted

to kick in the knee.

- You did punch me in the face.

- That's what I'm saying.

- My father was very

keen for me to understand

the true value of money.

Its limitations, that there

are many more important things.

- You really loved

him, didn't you?

Your father.

- Yeah, I did.

He was a very good man.

- Mine was flawed,

but I loved him all the same.

- I wonder where they are now.

- We'll find them.

Though whoever's took

them's getting themselves

a steady supply of bodies.

- I'd say that's a thing.

Where there's supply.

- There's demand.

Oh no, no.

Thank you very much.

Are, are you sure

he's going to turn up?

- He'll be here.

- I'm beginning to feel a

bit like Sherlock Holmes.

- I had someone else

in mind for you.

There he is.

Jasper!

Jasper.

- Liza!

- Good to see you,

you old pile of bones.

- I ain't seen you in a while.

- Been working.

- I'd heard.

That's a shame for you.

And I heard your

old man got took.

Ah, poor old Alfred.

He had many a time in here.

I'll say this for

whoever took him.

Whatever they're doing to

him, he won't need pickling.

Nah.

And who's this?

Are you moving up in

the world, my girl?

- This is a friend.

Dr. Watson, from my work.

- You've not come to

take me in, have you?

I'll fight you before you

put me in one of them coats.

I will.

- His dad got took and all.

- Did he now?

Was he in the loony

bin with old Alfred?

- No, he was-

- He got dug up.

Proper sacrilegious it was.

- I'd heard there was

some of that going on.

- Well that's why we're here.

There's nothing

goes on around here

without you hearing about it.

Or you having a

hand in it yourself,

if you get whiff of a coin.

- Oi, I hope you don't

think I'm involved

in none of that, my girl.

I've been known to buy and sell

the occasional item of interest.

Them what's dead should

be left in peace I say.

I may not go by

every law of the land

but the laws of God and

nature is different.

- Maybe you heard

something about it.

- Nothing.

- Then maybe you could

inquire among your associates.

- And ask them what?

Anyone in the

market for a spleen.

I'll tell you, I've

not heard a thing

and that means

something, don't it.

It means it ain't

one of ours doing it.

Last round of body

snatching a few years back,

they wasn't being taken for

food or for throwing on the fire

instead of coal, was they?

They was being taken

for men of science

picking over their bones,

seeing what made them tick.

Alfred got took from

your place, didn't he?

- Mm-hmm.

- You wanna find

them what took him?

I suggest you look

closer to home.

- Did you hear the

devil's footsteps.

Click, click, click,

click it goes.

I can keep traveling.

It's come to take me, hasn't it.

Sit with them cooking in pantry.

Walking in the square.

Meant to dance.

What a very nice time.

- There's been another

one on the fourth floor.

One here and all?

- Yes, I think so.

What do you mean another one?

- Do calm down.

Two patients have

simply chosen to leave.

- Two patients in restraints

have chosen to leave

from behind locked doors.

- Really, you must not

apply reason to madness.

Is there any blood?

Any disturbance?

Any signs of a struggle?

A struggle, Browning.

Not poor housekeeping.

- Mr. Brammings.

Mr. Brammings.

There's something desperately

wrong in this place, sir.

First Alfred Dobson,

now these two.

- I see no similarities.

What happened with the

drunkard was unfortunate.

But what you have this

morning are two empty beds,

no bodies, and an

overactive imagination.

- What you have

this morning, sir,

is patients disappearing

on your watch.

Now I know you

don't care anything

about these people

at all, you old fool,

but you do still have

a duty towards them.

- Now see here, you jumped up-

- Get off me.

We swore an oath to

these men, Brammings,

to do them no harm and to

see no harm done to them.

- And two empty beds aside,

there remain many more in here

in need of your fussy,

nannying bedside manner.

Now may I suggest

you learn your place

and get back to work!

- Now what?

What can we do?

What with old

Brammings in the way?

- Now we go over his head.

We go to the trustees.

Mother!

Mother!

Mother!

Mother!

- What

are you doing here?

- Are you quite

all right, Mother?

Where are the staff?

- I have dismissed them.

I no longer require

their services.

- It would appear you

have a very great need

of their services.

- I have been

rather preoccupied.

I will get to these

things this afternoon.

- Let me help you.

- I prefer to be alone.

- Of course.

But with Father gone.

- I asked you what

you're doing here.

- Fear not.

I come in a purely

professional capacity.

There's trouble at the asylum.

- Then I suggest you

speak to Mr. Brammings.

- I have.

There have been disappearances,

he shows very little interest.

- I can assure you I have less.

- And yet you have

a responsibility

towards our patients,

whether you care

for them or not.

- What would you have me

do, become a night watchman?

- I would have you call a

meeting of the trustees.

Demand Brammings explain

himself and if he cannot,

I would have you replace him.

- Very well.

- You will do so?

- Certainly I shall.

- I'm fine by the way.

And Clara too, she has written.

- You were well paid

for your information.

Information that came

to be quite incorrect.

I believed you were a

man who knew things.

- And so I am.

Only I never told

you nothing as fact.

Only what I'd heard.

I can't do no better than that.

- You must do much better,

I am not to be disappointed.

The man you claimed had

the items in his possession

is now dead.

His body stolen, his house

searched without result.

I believe we can rule him out.

- It wasn't him what got them.

It was him they was got for.

It was his wife

what bought them.

It was his wife, I tell you.

It was his wife.

- I thought a

disguise was in order,

if we're staking out the place.

- Right.

- Well now I feel stupid.

- I assure you, you've

never looked lovelier.

- We'd be for it if

old Brammings caught

us sneaking about.

- He's on his way to the ball.

This place and

its people will be

entirely gone from his thoughts.

I feel we're always one step

behind what's happening.

We hide in the cemetery,

they strike in the asylum.

We watch over the dead,

they take the living.

- Do you really think old

Brammings is in on it?

- It's hard to believe.

Yet he cares so little

for these people.

- But you do though, don't you?

You care for our lot.

- I care a very great

deal for your lot.

- That's old Manic.

Screams the place

down half the night.

- That's certainly

very helpful, isn't it.

- Quiet down now, love.

Everything's all right.

- I can't see a pattern here.

They're taking both

the living and the dead

with no discernible

buyer in sight.

- I'm with Jasper.

It's one of yours doing it.

Look at who they're taking.

It's only the poor, the

forsaken, except your father.

He doesn't fit in.

- No, I suppose not.

- The rich look after

themselves, even in death.

Their crypts are

locked up tight,

their graves are

covered in cages.

I'm surprised your

father didn't have one.

He was rich enough.

- Mother was dead

set against it.

She's gone rather

strange since he d*ed.

A bit Miss Haversham.

She didn't, she didn't

want him penned in.

- She's been here more often,

wandering in a

daze sort of thing.

- My mother's been here?

- Some of the girls

have spoken to her.

She's looked clear through them

as if she's not

seen them at all.

- We use your bodies.

- Still you need more,

to find your way back.

- Oh God.

- Eh?

- You need fresh flesh.

Living flesh closer to your own.

- You said, "We

use your bodies."

- William.

- Oh Mother!

Father?

What in God's name has she done?

What in God's name

has she done to you?

- He doesn't know me.

His soul is lost.

- His soul is lost?

Yours will be damned, damned

forever for what you've done.

- He would wish this.

If I could revive

his intelligence,

he would wish to be

brought back to me.

You cannot begin to

understand the love we share.

- This isn't love.

And you didn't share it.

You kept it all to yourself.

- Just too great a cruelty

to have loved so deeply

and have lost so completely.

- This loss, this grief

is the debt we pay

for loving so richly and

being loved in return.

- I shall pay no such debt.

I struck no such bargain.

He didn't mean to die.

He would never have left me.

He acted rashly in a

moment of weakness,

and if I had not left

the morphia within reach.

- He took his life?

You said he d*ed in his sleep.

Didn't, he couldn't have.

- I can still save him.

- Enough!

Stay away from him.

You're a monster, you m*rder*r.

Ssh, ssh.

- He needs you.

The final sacrifice.

- Ssh, ssh.

- Son.

- My God, you've done it.

- You?

- Who the hell are you?

- I am your reckoning.

k*ll them.

- Get off me!

- Father!

Ssh.

- He saved us.

He knows us.

- Mother.

No.

No!

- Robert!

- William!

What's gone on there?

- It's hard to summarize.

- Oh, your mother.

- Where is the creature?

You did not let it escape.

- Did you see anyone

when you came in?

Were you safe?

- Well, there's a riot

going on up there.

- But did you see anyone?

- Anything?

- What are you talking about?

Will someone tell

me what's happened.

- It was her.

My mother's committed

unspeakable atrocities.

She took my father

from his grave.

All those patients.

Alfred.

She tore them apart.

- Can't be.

She can't have.

- Who knows how many souls.

She assembled them into

a horror, a nightmare.

It moves.

It has life.

Do you have something

to do with this?

- Certainly not.

- Then what the hell

are you doing here?

Why did you att*ck us?

That book.

You said you thought my father

had a book in his possession.

- The diary.

The diary.

- What diary?

- The diary of

Victor Frankenstein.

- What's that?

- The Frankenstein diary

possesses knowledge

unimaginable to humanity.

Your mother had it

in her possession

and with it raised hell.

- Now you want it for yourself.

- For myself?

No, you fool, I

want it destroyed.

Man has forever

sought to cheat death.

To create life.

To assume the power of the gods.

The Frankenstein diary

knows their power.

It whispers its

secrets, makes promises,

and brings only death and

destruction and despair.

A century ago Victor

Frankenstein raised a demon.

His wife and brother were

m*rder*d at its hand.

Frankenstein himself

d*ed a pitiful wretch.

His diary lived on, its

trail of destruction resumed.

Down through the years our

collective has hunted it,

following every lead with

a necessary ruthlessness.

Bringing me finally to you.

- So what now?

- Now its work is alive

and out in the world

ready to k*ll and destroy

anything it comes upon.

- What about my father?

- He's dead.

- I saw him in there.

There's some part of

him that's still alive.

- You saw only what

you wish to see.

The creature he has become must

be destroyed with the diary.

I shall see it done.

- Wait.

My mother made that thing.

It's my responsibility too.

- I didn't see

nothing as I come in.

- Could he be hiding?

Does he have the intelligence?

- He is an it, it has only fury.

- Here.

What are you doing down there?

God almighty!

Get away from her.

Go on, get away.

- I dread to ask what

happened to this man.

- Dread is right, squire.

A demon straight

from hell it was.

Tore into him like

he was nothing.

- 10 foot tall it was,

if it was an inch.

- And the smell, lord.

- Which way did he go?

- Down into the

darkness it went.

We should go after it is what.

Bash its brains in before it

has a chance to go for us.

- Has it att*cked anyone else?

- Well, not as such.

- Sort of cowered

when it seen us.

- But you could tell it would

go for us if it got a chance.

Got him cornered down there.

Just need-

- Just need someone to.

- Right.

Perhaps you should

stay here, Liza.

I don't wanna put you

in any more danger.

Let me try to reason with him.

- It has no reason,

it is not your father.

- At least let me try.

Just allow me a moment.

He appears to know me at times.

It's okay.

It's okay, Father.

Ssh.

- That was Alfred's tattoo.

That's Alfred's body.

- I'm so sorry, Liza, it is.

- That's him there,

rotten and spoiled.

- It's him, it's

my father, it's others too.

- She really did it.

As if he was worth any

more than any of us,

what she'd do to us.

Alfred.

- When you've quite finished.

- You're f*ring into dead flesh.

You're only making him angry.

He's panicked, overawed

with sights and sounds,

crowded out and sh*t at.

And he only has half a mind

to understand it all with.

- The noise and the lights,

like a moth to a flame.

- A moth doesn't

usually m*rder a flame.

- My God!

- That thing barely

made him blink.

- We need to come

up with something.

Some way of stopping him.

- Give me some room.

Father!

Ssh, ssh, ssh, ssh.

Hey, hey.

Hey, hey.

It's okay.

It's okay.

Ssh, ssh.

- Father?

- Clara.

- How can this be?

- No no, Clara, no.

- Can it really be him?

- Clara, get away from him.

- Stop!

- No!

No!

- The creature has escaped.

We must follow it

and destroy it.

Had you have done so sooner,

had you allowed me to do so,

she would be breathing still.

- How can he be destroyed?

What force can we

muster against him?

- It must be something his

strength can't overcome.

Something elemental.

- Drowning.

It appears to breathe, or

a fall from the cliffs,

if it can be herded there.

The coast road's a

mile and a half away.

- It must be done here.

Now.

- Those bumbling fools of

mine should have k*lled him

instead of b*ating him,

and your mother with him.

- You sent those thugs.

You had him beaten.

- We should burn the

house to the ground

and k*ll them both.

The diary with them.

- You did k*ll him, you

destroyed him completely.

- It was your

mother who did that.

- So help me, if you were a

man I would knock you down.

- Let me take care

of that for you.

We must do this, William.

Get away from these

people and end it.

Give him peace.

- Father.

You must know me.

I can still see you in there.

Forgive me.

- Go on, you have to.

- Son.

- Father.

- It's over.

It's all over now.

- Let's hope to God it is.
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