Session 5

It's time for drama! Viktor Frankenstein is ready to give life to a creature, but is this really a wise thing to do? You can also find out what you've learned in this about the present perfect with for and since in our weekly quiz. Can you get all the questions right?

Sessions in this unit

Session 5 score

0 / 18

  • 0 / 3
    Activity 1
  • 0 / 15
    Activity 2

Activity 1

Drama

Frankenstein: Episode 2 - It's alive!

Frankenstein: Episode 2

"I'm scientist Viktor Frankenstein. I'm very smart and I feel powerful. I'm going to challenge Nature and I'm going to create life!"

What examples of present perfect with 'for' and 'since' can you spot in this episode?

The answers are shown in bold on the transcript below the audio.

Listen to the audio and try the activity

Show transcript Hide transcript

TODAY - IN THE ARCTIC

Viktor Frankenstein
Hello, I'm scientist Viktor Frankenstein. I've just been rescued here in the Arctic Circle. I feel weak but I have to continue my story and warn all of you about the dangers of science. At university in Germany all I wanted to do was to try and create life. I studied anatomy in my laboratory and spent days and nights in morgues and cemeteries collecting body parts...

IN THE PAST - IN THE CEMETERY

Guard
Hi there! I'm the night guard 'ere. This is my cemetery. Who are you?

Viktor Frankenstein
Who, me?

Guard
Yeah... If I ask the others 'round 'ere they aren't going to answer, are they? They're in their coffins, being eaten up by the little worms. They've been worm supper for a long time!

Viktor Frankenstein
The worms. Eyes, brain, so wonderful, so perfect, being eaten by worms...

Guard
Well, they're doing their business down there alright, but what business do you have 'ere? And what's in this big bag you're carrying?

Viktor Frankenstein
Oh... nothing... these are my things... my scientific... I'm leaving now...

Guard
And don't come back 'ere! What does he want with dead people? The dead are dead and that's the end of it, I say.

TODAY - IN THE ARCTIC

Viktor Frankenstein
Stupid man! Or was I the stupid one, the selfish one? I collected bones and flesh. I used bigger pieces because they were easier to work on and made me go faster. The creature was about 2.4 metres tall. It was ready on that rainy night in November...

IN THE PAST - AT DR VIKTOR FRANKENSTEIN'S LABORATORY

Viktor Frankenstein
It's all here now. Finally! Finally! I've waited for this moment for a long time. Actually, I've worked on this since I came to Germany two years ago. Oh... let me check these wires... they go to the roof... I'll use electricity. Yes, that Italian scientist, Galvani... that article I read... he made a dead frog jump using the power of electricity, but I, Viktor Frankenstein, will make a man rise from the dead!

A CLAP OF THUNDER

Creature
(roaring)

Viktor Frankenstein
Oh... the arms are moving... the legs... the eyes are open... oh these yellow eyes... they are...

Creature
(roaring)

Viktor Frankenstein
... they are... they are horrible! The skin is very pale... you can see through it. His hair is dark and his teeth are white, but his eyes are yellow and these black lips! What a horrible creature! I've created a monster!!

Creature
(roaring)

Viktor Frankenstein
No! No! Keep away from me, horrible creature!! I must escape!

Creature
(roaring)

TODAY - IN THE ARCTIC

Viktor Frankenstein
I ran! Oh how I ran! I spent the rest of the night walking in the rain. Then, in the morning, I heard a voice I recognised...

IN THE PAST - IN THE STREETS OF INGOLSTADT

Henry
Hey Viktor! Viktor! I haven't seen you for so long! Don't you recognise me anymore? It's Henry!

Viktor Frankenstein
Henry? Oh, of course, my dear friend! I didn't expect to see you here!

Henry
Good Lord, you look terrible! So thin and pale! It's good I'm here now. Your family back in Geneva is very worried. They haven't heard from you for a while.

Viktor Frankenstein
Yes, I... I've been busy...

Henry
Never fear, Henry is here! I'm taking you home.

Viktor Frankenstein
Home?!

Henry
Yes, your home, here in Germany, where you study.

Viktor Frankenstein
But... the monster...

Henry
What?

Viktor Frankenstein
Oh, nothing.

TODAY - IN THE ARCTIC

Viktor Frankenstein
I didn't want to tell him about the Creature. But what if it was still there? Well, it wasn't after all. But I knew what I had done and I was worried. I felt ill. I had a fever. Henry took care of me. Things were going back to normal when a letter from my father brought terrible news. I had to go back to Geneva immediately. That's what I'm going to tell you next.

Download

You can download the Drama from our Unit 12 downloads page or from our BBC Learning English Drama podcast page.

Vocabulary

morgues
(singular: morgue) places where dead bodies are kept

cemeteries
(singular: cemetery) places where dead bodies are buried

coffins
(singular: coffin) wooden boxes in which dead bodies are placed when put underground in the cemetery

worm
small animal with a long body that lives in the ground

flesh
soft part of the body between the bone and the skin

wires
(singular: wire) thin metal lines that carry electricity from one place to another

To do

Now check what you know about the drama with this three-question quiz.

Frankenstein Quiz

3 Questions

Now check what you know about the drama with this three-question quiz.

Congratulations you completed the Quiz
Excellent! Great job! Bad luck! You scored:
x / y

So, Viktor Frankenstein has created a monster and he knows it's somewhere in town. But after a few months he forgets all about it. Life seems to be back to normal when he receives a letter from his family asking him to come back home immediately. Find out why in the next episode.

Credits

Story adapted and produced by Graciela Damiano

Cast: Peter Kenny, Harry Haynes, Will Harrison-Wallace, Rob Carter.

Illustration: Carolina Thwaites-Lastra

English Language Teaching consultant: Nicola Prentis

Studio Manager: Philip Bull

Next

Now it's time for the Weekly Quiz. And it's not as scary as the monster!

Session Vocabulary

  • morgues
    (singular: morgue) places where dead bodies are kept

    cemeteries
    (singular: cemetery) places where dead bodies are buried

    coffins
    (singular: coffin) wooden boxes in which dead bodies are placed when put underground in the cemetery

    worm
    small animal with a long body that lives in the ground

    flesh
    soft part of the body between the bone and the skin

    wires
    (singular: wire) thin metal lines that carry electricity from one place to another