Animated creatures made from dead body parts - one is made from animal parts and is chimpanzee-like, the other is made from human parts and is human-like, but not reeeeally human - at least if you ask me (it's Frankenstein's famous monster).
Well... Hmm... Someone who's been living with a hunched back for as long as he can remember is obviously not exactly happy with his condition, which has led to him living a life of misery, abuse and exploitation, but we don't see or hear him lament his body as such. He's happy and amazed when it's cured, though.
I'm not sure (someone commented elsewhere that there's alcoholism, but that didn't register with me), but one character is so monomaniacal about something dangerous, and so frazzled, that it's reminiscent of someone suffering from an addiction.
Victor uses body parts from various animals. A severed lion's paw is shown, as well as diverse internal organs.
Victor also eventually kills his first creature, a monkey-based monster.
Someone loses an arm when it gets pulled into a machine. We don't see it happen up very close, but we see him struggle to pull free, and we hear him scream. Later on we see him with his prosthetic hand.
Lorelei breaks a bone by falling. It is shown notably in anatomy drawings superimposed with the image. The bone is does not poke out of the body and is fixed on screen.
Frankenstein's creatures being as they are, would be being tortured when brought to life. This may not be the intent, but Frankenstein does not seem to care.
Yes, but he's an atypical clown, in the sense that he looks nothing like the kind you hire for birthday parties or Ronald McDonald. No red nose, plusses across the eyes, huge shoes and pants, wig, and so on. He is called a clown, he does play the poor fool in the performances, and he does have a whitened face (and possibly some smeared red on his lips, but not in the sharply defined, very "lip-enlarging" way), but he's more like a person in an old-fashioned freak show. Humpbacked, constantly crouched and limping, wearing normal, but filthy clothes and with his own, normal (straight, dark), but filthy hair.
I don’t think it’s real v but towards the beginning when Frankenstein is removing the abscess he has to siphon it out, and then spits it out. It looks pretty similar to v but I don’t think it is.
A huge syringe is suddenly and forcibly plunged deep into a very large abscess to drain it (which then happens). We see it "in action" for a while, and not from a distance.
No, but someone sorrowfully mentions that his wife died from "a malignant growth". It happened in the movie's past, and we never see her or hear more about her/it.