Frankenstein’s Monster’s Monster, Frankenstein
A pale imitation of “Garth Marenghi’s “Darkplace””, though it has some charm. What starts as a sendup of cheesy TV horror of a decade past turns into a parody of thinly-veiled tracts about the meaning of art that registers as an average episode of “Documentary Now!”, with a narrator that, like God in the similarly jumbled and troubled “Good Omens”, adds almost nothing. I can’t say it didn’t make me laugh, though, with the best gag being a well-timed commercial gag that proves somebody in this project really does care about art. Better than that Tim Robinson show, at least.
5