In an August 1986 interview,
Re-Animator director
Stuart Gordon commented, "If we do a sequel to
Re-Animator, we'll call it
Bride of Re-Animator." He indicated that this title would be in homage to the film
Bride of Frankenstein, adding that he already had several ideas for a sequel and that given the title, Meg Halsey would have to be a key character in it. One idea for a sequel involved Dan Cain taking the job of a building superintendent to surreptitiously continue working on Meg Halsey's body at night. When government agents discover his whereabouts, they secret him away to the
White House where he is reunited with Herbert West and instructed to reanimate the
President of the United States. Pre-production on
Bride of Re-Animator began in early 1989. Production on the film was scheduled to begin on June 5, 1989, which left the filmmakers with less than one month to finalize the script, finish hiring the cast and crew, and get the special effects underway. Jeffrey Combs was initially not going to reprise his role as Herbert West due to a scheduling conflict, as he was already booked to be in Italy for the filming of
The Pit and the Pendulum. However, on May 25, 1989, production on
The Pit and the Pendulum was pushed back, and Combs was immediately cast to return as West. Director Yuzna considered
Patricia Tallman for the role of the Bride, but on May 28, 1989, he selected Kinmont to play the part.
Barbara Crampton, who starred in the first
Re-Animator film, and had appeared with Kinmont in Fraternity Vacation released in 1985, the same year of the first Re-Animator film, did not return for
Bride of Re-Animator. A 1991 issue of
Fangoria reported that Crampton declined to reprise her role due to
soap opera obligations. In a 2011 interview, Crampton said that her agent convinced her not to make a cameo appearance in
Bride of Re-Animator, as he felt that it was beneath her to have such a minor role.
Principal photography began in June 1989 and
wrapped the following month, on July 18. A scene in which Dr. Hill's head is found on exhibit at a carnival was shot in mid-June, but this sequence was not included in the finished film.
Special effects Tony Doublin of Doublin FX created the special effects for the eye/finger creature, which involved the use of a
rod puppet, a
stop-motion puppet, and a stunt hand. Doublin also created the puppet used to portray Francesca's dog Angel after West reanimates its corpse and attaches a human arm to it. When not depicted with a puppet, Angel was played by
dog actor Friday, who was cast after demonstrating that she could walk with a prosthetic arm. West's failed test subjects were designed by Japanese artist
Screaming Mad George and his crew, while the effects for Dr. Hill's head were created by Mike Deak and Wayne Toth of
John Carl Buechler's Magical Media Industries. The special effects for the Bride were created by
KNB EFX Group, including
Robert Kurtzman and
Howard Berger.
Greg Nicotero, who co-founded KNB EFX with Kurtzman and Berger, was working on the special effects for another film,
Halloween 5: The Revenge of Michael Myers, during the pre-production of
Bride of Re-Animator. However, Nicotero joined the
Bride of Re-Animator crew in June 1989, and oversaw the effects during the filming of the sequence in which West and Cain are shown working as wartime medics in a field hospital. ==Reception==