Universal Monsters - Viewing Order

If it ain't licenced, that definitely would make things way easier.
That's a good point. Licensing can definitely complicate things, especially when it comes to using stills from films. It's interesting to see how these issues are navigated in different publications.
 
Technically they're actual Universal Monsters content. There's a unique version of Victor Frankenstein who creates a new Frankenstein's monster inside a Frankenstein's castle attraction, and there's the original Larry Talbot Wolfman after he's brought back in the Return of the Wolfman novel.
The best crossovers ever made! XD
 
Bram Stoker's Dracula Starring Bela Lugosi and Mary Shalley's Frankenstein Starring Boris Karloff comics added, which are essentially the original books but with the UM actors. I suppose you could argue that the original Dracula novel happened with Bela Lugosi... before happening to him again in 1931.
 
It would be cool to have a versus movie between English Dracula and Spanish Dracula with Antonio Banderas playing the Spanish Dracula
 
Massive Multiplayer Crossover
Pandora, of course, is the Bride of Frankenstein.
Cesare from The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari is Dr. Pretorius's assistant and valet instead — and it turns out he's a pretty nice young man when he's not being brainwashed into committing murders while sleepwalking.
Henry Frankenstein presses Hans Beckert, the whistling child-killer from M, into his service.
Dr. Rotwang builds his robot girl on the outskirts of Berlin in the 1920s rather than in the fantastical future of Metropolis.
And Lulu from Pandora's Box performs at a club with his robotic creation.
Christopher Isherwood (himself a Historical Domain Character) offers to introduce Pandora to a friend of his who performs at another club, an American singer.
Uh... so Metropolis, The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, M and Pandora's Box are connected in some way. This novel doesn't really contradict the Frankenstein films other than the 1920s timeline, but this does contradict the aforementioned films in some ways.
 
Metropolis' Dr. Rotwang can be rationalised as a relative of the Pandora's Bride character, since one lives in 1899 and the other in 2026. That or it's the same as The Mummy's Hand characters in Dark Universe Stories or Sherlock Holmes' apparent lack of aging.
 
Would the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen's Dracula be a variant of Armand Tesla's Dracula or would it be someone else?
 
This article says that the original Dracula book is supposed to be set in 1893

 
If this is referring to Bram Stoker's Dracula Starring Bela Lugosi, that places itself explicitly in 1890. Otherwise, yeah that's interesting. Only the unofficial Christopher Lee Count Dracula film is set there.
 

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