

Cinematographer Daniel Pearl shot on Kodak Super 16 mm film with Arriflex 16 SR3 cameras. Adam Goldberg as Detective Michael Sloaneįilming took place in New Orleans.Parker Posey as Detective Carson O'Conner.However, his very first creation, the original Frankenstein monster, now calling himself Deucalion, is also alive and looking to kill his creator. While investigating the murders of a serial killer who mutilates and removes the internal organs of the victims, two present-day New Orleans police detectives, Carson O'Conner and her partner Michael Sloane, learn that Victor Frankenstein, now calling himself Victor Helios, is still alive and has created a number of genetically-engineered creatures with the intent of building a legion of followers to assist in his overthrow of the Old Race (humans). Koontz later developed the concept into a series of five novels: Frankenstein: Prodigal Son, Frankenstein: City of Night, Frankenstein: Dead and Alive, Frankenstein: Lost Souls, and Frankenstein: The Dead Town.

Subsequently, executive producer Martin Scorsese also expressed desire to exit the series. He withdrew from association with it and turned to the task of realizing the original concept of the book form. USA and the producers decided that major changes must be made and Koontz had no interest in the show in its new form. The film was intended as the pilot for an ongoing series, and was initially based on Dean Koontz's version of Frankenstein. It was produced by Lions Gate Films, and aired on the USA Network on October 10, 2004. Adam Goldberg, Ivana Miličević and Michael Madsen co-star. The detective is aided in her search by one of the killer's creations, played by Vincent Perez. It is a loose adaptation of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, and stars Parker Posey as a police detective on the trail of a serial killer, played by Thomas Kretschmann, in present-day New Orleans. Frankenstein is a 2004 American science fiction horror television film produced and directed by Marcus Nispel and written by John Shiban.
