Tales of Frankenstein

Christine finds the grave defiled the next day, with a locket that was buried with Paul lying on the ground.

As he is being arrested, the Baron tells the policeman, "You have your job to do, and so have I – and I don't think either of us would let anything stand in the way of our respective destinies...time is a small matter... there is always tomorrow."

"[3] Michael Carreras intended the series to introduce Hammer to America, and wanted to give it a good chance.

He enlisted Jimmy Sangster, fresh off The Revenge of Frankenstein, to write a pilot, "The Single Minded Black-Mailer".

The only real input Hammer had was in the choice of Anton Diffring, who played Frankenstein very much like Peter Cushing.

Since the series was intended for an American audience, Columbia rejected all six of Hammer's scripts in favor of one written in-house.

[1] The Monster was the flat-headed Universal Pictures version popularized by Boris Karloff and was played by Don Megowan, primarily a Western actor.

[4] Disgusted with their lack of input, Carreras went back to England, leaving Anthony Hinds to represent Hammer.

[1] Though the series was never produced, Anthony Hinds commissioned several scripts that provided Hammer with material for their later Frankenstein films.

Anton Diffring as Baron Frankenstein