Frankenstein
Frankenstein Review: Mary Shelley’s Classic Gets Its Due
Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein plays as a mirror to modern-day hubris. Very emotionally articulated, the film remains a stunning adaptation of Mary Shelley’s novel. The film is a smart autopsy of unchecked ambition in an era of tech gods. Shelley showcased the creature’s abandonment to expose societal failure in her 1818 novel; here, it is reframed. The god-complex gets real. It escalates from the lab, and the catastrophe unfolds in under two hours. However, Isaac’s Victor starts magnetic, but goes into a cautionary selfie of narcissism. On the other hand, Goth’s Elizabe | Click Here...
Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein Trailer: Ignites A Literature Classic In The Dark
"My maker told his tale… and I will tell you mine." So opens the thunderous new trailer for Frankenstein, Guillermo del Toro’s long-dreamed descent into Mary Shelley’s gothic underworld, and what a staggering descent it is. With just a few breathless words from the Creature himself, the trailer unfurls like a mournful soliloquy torn from the grave, promising a tale not merely retold, but reborn. The trailer is an elegy soaked in shadow and snow, a dirge of regret, rage, and haunted memory. Through the Creature’s voice, fractured, yearning, furious, we step into a broke | Click Here...
