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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_frankenstein_chronicles.jpg]]
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3''The Frankenstein Chronicles'' is a television series made by Rainmark Films for Creator/{{ITV}} starring Creator/SeanBean. Series 1 aired in 2015, Series 2 hit in 2018.
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5[[RegencyEngland It is 1827]]. [[DefectiveDetective John Marlott]], an officer of the river patrol, finds a gruesome patchwork corpse on the muddy banks of the Thames. After having it examined by a top surgeon, the case crosses the desk of [[HistoricalDomainCharacter Sir Robert Peel]], the [[ReasonableAuthorityFigure Home Secretary]]. He's convinced that the collection of parts ([[ItIsDehumanizing the characters refuse to even call it "a corpse"]]) is a work of sabotage cobbled together by some political opponents of the Anatomy Act, a law Peel is trying to pass which would allow surgical students to legally practice on cadavers. The surgeon believes it's the deranged work of some butcher or barber. Marlott's willing to follow these leads, but he's shaken by the fact that when he reached down to touch the corpse, [[FrankensteinsMonster it reached back...]]
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7The story, originally billed as [[RecycledWithAGimmick Frankenstein as a detective series]] quickly sets sail for [[BeethovenWasAnAlienSpy far]], ''far'' stranger waters.
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9----
10!!I'd say it's stitched together from at least 7 or 8 tropes...
11* ActorAllusion: Marlott is a former member of the 95th Rifles and fought at Waterloo, both traits he shares with actor Sean Bean's well-known character Sharpe
12* AgentPeacock: "Boz" the journalist, dressing like he ran at top speed through a paint factory before crashing through the display at a silk shop.
13* AllIssuesArePoliticalIssues:
14** This sets the first series in motion. After Marlott finds what appears to be a corpse surgically stitched together from parts of a half dozen cadavers, the Home Secretary explains that it's most likely part of a political plot to discredit the Anatomy Act by painting surgeons as heretical madmen.
15** To a lesser extent, in series 2 Ada Lovelace and Frederick Dippel take time to discuss with Esther Rose the social and political impact that greater automation will have in the future. Dippel starts with a materialist, economic concern that Esther, a seamstress, may find her occupation either extinct or so changed she'll have no place in it. Ada follows by pointing out the leveling effect that automation will have on the field of gender. Dippel concludes with a more [[{{Transhumanism}} Transhumanist]] stance, asserting that technology will eventually allow [[AGodAmI man to overcome God]].
16* AloneWithThePsycho: Flora finds herself admitted to hospital where her rapist works. She is in a coma and unaware, and anyone who might protect her is off chasing clues. [[DramaticIrony The only witness is the audience]] as he sends away the nurse, and sequesters himself alone in the private room with her....
17* ArtisticLicensePhysics: At one point, a lifeless patient is sought to be revived by a crude defibrilator made of two wireless electrodes connected to a larger electric device by a lightning arc to both electrodes. With current strong enough to maintain a lightning arc of several meters, and neither electrode connected to ground, the current would run to ground via the person holding them, who would not just be dead, but also crispy.
18* ArtificialHuman: In series 2, Frederick Dippel is trying to create an artificial woman.
19* BackForTheDead: [[spoiler:Lady Jemima Hervey in series 2]], who dies offscreen between seasons but [[ISeeDeadPeople appears as a ghost to Marlott.]] It's not immediately obvious she's actually dead, however, as at this point in the story she could plausibly be FakingTheDead or [[ThroughTheEyesOfMadness merely be a hallucination]].
20* BeethovenWasAnAlienSpy: Mary Shelley [[DirectLineToTheAuthor actually took part]] in experiments that prefigured the events of her novel.
21* BigDamnHeroes: Just when you think [[spoiler:Flora's rapist]] is going to victimize her ''again'', [[spoiler:John bursts into the room, denounces her attacker]], and sweeps out with the ill damsel in his arms.
22* BodyHorror
23** The patchwork corpse actually gets [[UncannyValley more disturbing once you see it in a sterile environment]]. On the shore of the Thames it just looks like a waterlogged corpse, but once it's on the operating table you can see how poorly the pieces are put together.
24** Marlott has nightmares about himself as a hideous monster, first as his future FacialHorror caused by syphilis, then later as a patchwork monster like the corpse on the Thames.
25** [[spoiler: [[{{Foreshadowing}} ... and obviously, that second one comes to pass]], as he's remade into the TomatoInTheMirror]].
26* CelebrityParadox: An odd example. The first episode very much implies the series is a re-imagining of the novel as a detective story, with Marlott on the hunt for Dr. Frankenstein in 1820s London. However, the remainder of the series reveals that it's not, this is a world where ''Literature/{{Frankenstein}}'' was released and was a smash hit, as it was in our world. Once word begins to spread, it's quickly assumed the creation is the result of a copycat trying to re-create the experiment of the novel. Thus, the paradox becomes the fact that none of the characters in the first episode seem to notice the resemblance of the event to a famous novel released only a few years earlier, a fact that [[LampshadeHanging actually comes up later]]:
27-->'''"Boz":''' You never heard of it? They had a play. The whole world went. Twice.
28* ChekhovsGag: When Lord Daniel Hervey prescribes a medicine for Marlott's syphilis that's "[[HistoricalInJoke derived from bread mold]]", it seems like [[ItWillNeverCatchOn he's a hundred years ahead of his time.]] It turns out [[spoiler:he's actually [[GenreShift far, far further ahead of his time. It's stem cells]].]]
29* ChildByRape: Fiona's pregnancy is the result of her being drugged and later raped by an aristocrat. [[spoiler:It turns out this was Garnet Chester.]]
30* CorruptChurch: One part of the Anglican Church is portrayed as corrupt. The Dean of Westminster [[spoiler:orders the murders of priests who oppose his plan to sell church land which would result in the poor who live there being thrown out. He then has the murderer himself killed to tie up loose ends.]]
31* DeathOfAChild: Right out of the gate, the patchwork corpse is made up of about 8 children between the ages of 8 and 12. Later, we learn Marlott's infant daughter died of natal syphilis, and further down the road see plenty of fetuses in jars.
32* DefectiveDetective: John Marlott's traumatized by his service in [[UsefulNotes/TheNapoleonicWars the Peninsula]] and the loss of his wife and daughter, as well as [[ThroughTheEyesOfMadness suffering from both syphilis and mercury poisoning]] for much of the first season.
33%%* DistressedDamsel: Flora in the first season. Esther Rose in the second.
34* EvenEvilHasStandards: Mrs. Bishop is offended by the accusation she killed children, noting that she has twelve herself (even when she's a serial killer, and those children are her partners in crime). It turns out she didn't do it.
35* EveryoneCallsHimBarkeep: The Dean of Westminster is addressed several times as "Mr. Dean", and never by any other name.
36* ExpositionOfImmortality: [[spoiler:Frederick Dippel's]] immortality is revealed to the audience after he scares off Esther by telling her [[ISeeDeadPeople he can see the ghost of her son]]. He opens a briefcase, inside which are a series of labeled vials, all empty, going back over a hundred years to when [[HistoricalInJoke his father claimed to have discovered the Elixer of Life]].
37* EyeScream: John stabs Lloris in the eye with a fork to escape from Lord Hervey's estate.
38* FrameUp: [[spoiler: Lord Hervey]] frames John for [[spoiler: Flora]]'s murder near the end of the first season.
39* FrankensteinsMonster: [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin Duh.]] The story concerns the remains of a failed attempt found on the shores of the Thames. By the end of the first series, a successful one is made [[spoiler:out of the hero and the men he was hanged with]].
40* GeneticEngineeringIsTheNewNuke: The trick to bringing people back from the dead isn't anything so lurid and fantastical as [[LightningCanDoAnything electricity]], no no, ScienceMarchesOn. [[spoiler:It's stem cells harvested from aborted fetuses]].
41* GenreShift: The story follows three broad styles (so far):
42** Early series 1: [[{{Demythification}} De-mythified]] SciFi WhoDunnit
43** Late series 1: SciFiHorror
44** Series 2: GothicHorror
45* GoodGirlsAvoidAbortion: Flora's desire for (and later procuring) an abortion is disapproved of by everyone else (even herself, eventually) except Hervey. [[spoiler: It turns out he not only performed the abortion, but is the real culprit in the murders.]]
46%%* HardboiledDetective: Marlott.
47* HaveYouToldAnyoneElse: Not as a prelude to murder, but to preserve the incredibly sensitive political situation going on and prevent a panic. Not that it lasts.
48%%* HeKnowsTooMuch: [[EverybodyDiesEnding Damn near everyone]] by the end.
49* TheHeroDies: Of course, it's Creator/SeanBean. Marlott is hung at the end of the first season. [[spoiler:[[FrankensteinsMonster He gets better]].]]
50* HistoricalDomainCharacter:
51** Creator/MaryShelley, author of [[DirectLineToTheAuthor the original book]], accompanied by her son Percy Florence Shelley.
52** Sir Robert Peel, [[DaChief Home Secretary]].
53** Creator/WilliamBlake, [[OneSceneWonder who gives Marlott exceedingly cryptic advice]].
54** "[[Creator/CharlesDickens Boz]]", a journalist obsessed with the lurid case.
55** Ada Lovelace, daughter of Creator/LordByron and commonly accepted as the first computer programmer, who spends series 2 trying to build an ArtificialHuman with Frederik Dippel.
56* HistoricalInJoke:
57** A ChekhovsGag variant in the "bread mold" treatment that Lord Daniel Hervey gives Marlott. A viewer familiar with medical history will notice that penicillin is a type of bread mold that can cure syphilis, a fact not officially discovered until the 1920s. Hervey's status as a figure outside the medical establishment suggests it may be a mistaken case of SnakeOilSalesman. Furthermore, Marlott's [[ThroughTheEyesOfMadness visions and delusions]] seem to get worse from this point, and someone familiar with medical history might also notice that ergot is a type of bread mold that can [[SlippingAMickey really mess you up]]. What exactly is in the bread mold is quite a surprise: [[spoiler:[[TakeAThirdOption fetal stem cells]].]]
58** The involvement of Johann Dippel in a ''Frankenstein'' story, referencing his possible role in inspiring the novel in the first place.
59* HistoricalVillainUpgrade: Sir Robert Peel is portrayed as blackmailing an opponent into withdrawing his motion against the Anatomy Act so it can be passed, and being pretty ruthless in general for his reforms. Mary and Percy Bysshe Shelley participate in an experiment to resurrect the dead, after one of their friends volunteers. However he has to be smothered by Percy and Chester, while the apparatus cannot revive him. Chester then makes it appear to be a suicide. This inspires Mary's novel.
60* HollywoodAtheist: [[spoiler:Lord Daniel Hervey]] is a surprisingly straight and dark example. He has murdered multiple people, on top of kidnapping children to experiment on hoping that he'll [[ImmortalityImmorality achieve immortality]] this way. Likewise, [[spoiler:Frederick Dippel]], his accomplice in all this, says there is no God and that once one realizes it then "anything is possible", implying a [[TheUnfettered lack of any moral restraints]].
61* ImmortalityHurts: [[spoiler:Marlott]] repeatedly suffers from lethal wounds and eventually recovers, and seems to be in misery the whole time.
62* ImmortalityInducer: The Elixer of Life is used to resurrect the dead.
63* InsistentTerminology: The thing that Marlott pulls out of the river ''is not a corpse''. A corpse is a single dead body. The thing in the river is [[FrankensteinsMonster eight]].
64%%* IronicNurseryRhyme: ''Oranges and Lemons''
65* ISeeDeadPeople: One effect of dying temporarily is the ability to see ghosts, though apparently not the ghosts of those you're close to.
66* InThePastEveryoneWillBeFamous: Much of the cast is either a historical figure of the time or just a few steps away from them. Season 2 [[TheHeavy heavy]] Frederick Dippel, for example, is a fictional descendant of real figure [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Conrad_Dippel Johann Dippel]].
67* ItWillNeverCatchOn:
68** Lord Daniel Hervey has developed a medicine he believes works wonderfully to treat syphilis, [[HistoricalInJoke made from bread mold]]. The rest of the medical community treats his cures as AllNaturalSnakeOil. [[spoiler:Actually, it's not penicillin. It's [[GeneticEngineeringIsTheNewNuke far, far more advanced]], and even ''more'' likely to be treated as snake oil, even today.]]
69* KarmaHoudini: Although his schemes fail in the end, [[spoiler:the Dean of Westminster]] is never properly brought to justice for having ordered multiple murders for personal gain.
70* LifeImitatesArt: InUniverse, this is the presumed source of "The Frankenstein Murders", that a LoonyFan of the series has devoted themselves to recreating the events of the book.
71* LightningCanDoAnything: Subverted, and in a ''Frankenstein'' story no less! Through demonstrations on a corpse and a failed attempt at resurrection, we see [[TruthInTelevision exactly what lightning can and cannot do]].
72%%* LostLenore: Marlott's wife and daughter.
73* MagicalDefibrillator: We see the experiment (with [[DirectLineToTheAuthor Mary Shelley]] taking part) that inspired the original novel, and it's basically Film/{{Flatliners}}: RegencyEngland Edition. The subject takes a dose of some kind of poison, is monitored until signs of life cease, and then is to be shocked back to life with a hand-powered dynamo. [[SubvertedTrope The experiment is a failure.]]
74* MaybeMagicMaybeMundane
75** The first season takes this route with the "Frankenstein Murders". The corpse grabs at Marlott, but that could just be a reflex action. The children fear "a monster", but that could just be an evil human. Marlott has visions and nightmares, but he's suffering from a degenerative neurological disorder and [[WorstAid poisoning himself]] with at least one chemical that causes further brain damage. He's also receiving an experimental treatment involving mysterious chemicals given to him by a supposed SnakeOilSalesman. We see [[DirectLineToTheAuthor actual experiments with resurrection]], but it's clear that it's a primitive form of [[MagicalDefibrillator defibrillation]]. Eventually, the mystery is resolved: [[spoiler: it's magic, or at least SufficientlyAdvancedTechnology. The dead are being resurrected using fetal stem cells, and they suffer the symptoms commonly associated with extended loss of oxygen to the brain]].
76* MirrorScare: Three times in the first series, Marlott sees himself as a monster in a mirror. [[spoiler: Only the first two times are a nightmare, the third time is for real.]]
77* MiscarriageOfJustice: John is wrongly convicted of [[spoiler: Flora]]'s murder at the end of the first season and sentenced to death. His lawyer doesn't help much, trying to have the charge dismissed on humane grounds rather than trying the {{insanity defense}} despite John suffering from neurosyphilis, making his guilt questionable even if he had done it. [[spoiler: He's hanged, but [[BackFromTheDead it doesn't stick for long]].]]
78* MythologyGag:
79** Boz's investigation uncovers [[Literature/OliverTwist young children on the street being exploited]].
80** Frederick Dippel is the descendant of Johann Dippel, a real life MadScientist born in Castle Frankenstein, who may have served as an inspiration for the original novel.
81* PsychicPowers: William Blake is portrayed as having clairvoyance apparently-he could see "the beast" as he's called him committing the murders. Interestingly, there is some belief that the real Blake did have this. His painting ''The Ghost of a Flea'', shown in the series and its opening credits, Blake claimed came in a vision he had. Blake also claimed to [[ISeeDeadPeople see ghosts]] regularly.
82* PullTheThread: Marlott realizes that no theory of the crime that actually fits with established evidence explains how the corpse actually ended up in the river. [[Literature/SherlockHolmes Once he eliminates the improbable]], what remains, [[GenreShift however impossible]], must be true: [[FrankensteinsMonster it crawled there itself.]]
83* RedHerring
84** Billy Oates and the Bishops are obviously merely distractions from the real criminals, though their role as a link in the chain leading to the true perpetrators is crucial.
85** [[spoiler: Sir William Chester]] is innocent of the crime in series 1, despite all the evidence and [[Administrivia/TropesAreTools tropes]] that pile up against him.
86** [[spoiler: Sir Daniel Hervey is not SlippingAMickey to Marlott, and he's not just [[ItWillNeverCatchOn ahead of his time]] with the "bread mold cure"]].
87** On a meta level, the plot structure is [[WrongGenreSavvy very misleading]]. This is not a WhoDunnit. This is GothicHorror.
88* ResurrectiveImmortality: This appears to be the effect of the Elixer of Life, judging by the punishment [[spoiler:Marlott takes after being brought back]].
89* ScienceMarchesOn: Acknowledged InUniverse. Though [[AdaptationDisplacement the original novel does not feature lightning or electricity as part of the experiment]], the series plays with audience expectations regarding it. An early form of the experiment is shown, an event that inspires Mary Shelley to write the novel, and the intended outcome was a primitive form of MagicalDefibrillator which [[SufficientlyAdvancedTechnology would have seemed miraculous at the time]] but is now considered basic medical practice. Eventually, a MadScientist reveals the secret to actually resurrecting dead tissue: [[spoiler:[[GeneticEngineeringIsTheNewNuke fetal stem cells]], which by modern sci-fi standards seems much more plausible.]]
90* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: Once it becomes clear someone's copying her infamous novel, Mary Shelley flees England. [[spoiler: Well, not just because someone's copying her novel, she's also a potential loose end.]]
91* ShoutOut: In Episode One, John Marlott claims he used to be in the [[Series/{{Sharpe}} 95th Rifles and Over the Hills and Far Away]] is whistled in the background at another point in the episode.
92* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome
93** The experiment that inspired Mary Shelley to write the original novel is a failure, as they attempt to shock a victim with no cardiac rhythm.
94** A [[GenreShift surprising example]] when Boz discusses the case with Marlott: [[CelebrityParadox this whole story seems to be very similar to an incredibly popular book from a few years ago]]. All concerns of political sabotage then take a backseat as the public becomes obsessed with "The Frankenstein Murders".
95** When [[spoiler:Marlott dies and is resurrected a short time later]], the effects on his mind seem consistent with the real-world effects of traumatic brain injury. He's non-verbal and in a fugue state for three years before eventually recovering, and is never the same afterward.
96* ThatManIsDead: [[FrankensteinsMonster Literally.]] After [[spoiler: his death and resurrection as a creature, John Marlott]] repeatedly claims to no longer be the man he once was, and takes on a different name.
97* ThatOldTimePrescription: A very creative subversion. The audience may easily identify the "bread-mold cure" as a primitive version of penicillin (it's so well known it's one of the examples mentioned in the trope description), but [[spoiler: they'd be dead wrong. [[ZigZagged It's actually]] a primitive and grotesque version of ''stem-cell therapy'']].
98* TheNothingAfterDeath: According to Frederick Dippel, there's nothing beyond an endless shoreline.
99%%* ThereShouldBeALaw: "A dead body isn't property."
100* ThroughTheEyesOfMadness: John Marlott has a rough time. He's suffering from clear symptoms of PTSD, visible signs of late secondary stage syphilis, treating his syphilis with mercury pills, and later tries a concoction supposedly containing "[[HistoricalInJoke bread mold]]", all of which can cause hallucinations or delusions. Unfortunately, he's also following a case that, [[MaybeMagicMaybeMundane at best]], features a deranged and ingenious killer and at worst may actually involve supernatural or paranormal events.
101* TitleDrop: The phrase "a world without God", the first episode's title, is repeated throughout the series as a fear several characters have of the implications assuming the dead can be resurrected by human beings (i.e. apparently they feel it would disprove God's existence, as the villains think).
102* WhoWantsToLiveForever: [[spoiler:Frederik Dippel's motivation in series 2.]] He's immortal and needs a companion that won't age and die before his eyes. To this end he first tries [[spoiler:to build an artificial human, then later to make Rose immortal like him.]]
103* WindmillCrusader: The case presented against the Anatomy Act is not based on something humanist regarding "decency", nor on something material regarding compensating the families of those who will be "donated to science", but on a more esoteric basis: those who are dissected by surgeons for the purposes of education cannot be resurrected when Judgement Day comes. The Anatomy Act is seen as creating "a heaven only for the rich", which ties it to Jemima's fears of "a world without God". Granted, by the standards of the InUniverse time, that’s not an unconvincing argument.
104* AWolfInSheepsClothing: [[spoiler:Lord Daniel Hervey]] initially comes off as a kindly physician concerned that the Anatomy Act may outlaw his practice (which is charitable for the poor) and implied to share his sister's religious objections as well. [[spoiler:However, it turns out that he is a multiple murderer who experiments on raising the dead with kidnapped children. [[HollywoodAtheist Oh, and he's also an atheist]].]]
105* WorstAid: Marlott suffers from syphilis, and gets the treatment common to his era: mercury.
106* YoungFutureFamousPeople: Sir Robert Peel, "[[Creator/CharlesDickens Boz]]", and Ada Lovelace have yet to reach the heights of their careers.

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