This is a low-budget film with minimal locations so cinematographer, George Steuber should be commended for his ability to make the film look interesting while it’s playing out in confined spaces. Most of the camera work and shot choices look good and the audio is relatively consistent. I really dig the film’s artwork and it’s “Freddy Vs Jason” inspired hybrid. It put’s a very different twist on a classic story, that lately has become quite stale. In Damien’s film, the core character and his rationales remain the same but they’re made a little more interesting by the inclusion of a mummy, as well as the excitement of a head to head. The tale of Victor Frankenstein is hardly an original one, it’s been retold in various ways or style for many years. The film also stars Daniel Rodas, Brandon deSpain, Robert MacNaughton and Constantin Tripes.
As Professor Walton (Boomer Tibbs), head of the research department conducts his own analysis of the mummy and Victor takes his corpse to the next level, all hell breaks loose in the university as a showdown between creations ensues.
Frankenstein Vs The Mummy follows college professor Victor Frankenstein (played by Max Rhyser) who is trying to balance his life involving secretly carrying out experiments trying to regenerate dead tissue, while at the same time attempting to keep up a personal relationship with Naihla Khalil (the lovely Ashton Leigh), a work colleague whose doing her own study of the mummy of a cursed pharaoh.
“Frankenstein Vs The Mummy” is the second full length feature from New York based writer/filmmaker Damien Leone, who had previously made the Horror film “All Hallows Eve”.