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Frankenstein (2025)

  • Writer: Gus Keller
    Gus Keller
  • 2 hours ago
  • 1 min read
ree

Frankenstein is fueled by timeless storytelling. Some might find it cliche, but that's inherent when faithfully adapting such a foundational tale. It has an iconic plot, Shakespearean drama, and vast themes. Ideas like mortality, creation, forgiveness, obsession, identity, abuse, grief, and loneliness all trace back to contemplations on the human condition. Each character bears flaws plus internal conflicts, yielding opportunities for poignant arcs. Intensity, layers, physicality, range, growth, and vulnerability combine into operatic acting performances. Altogether, this makes the script feel epic yet intimate. Therefore, Frankenstein wields melodrama with profound purpose.


Though unwieldy, Frankenstein remains grand. The imagery is rich with garish lighting as well as intricate composition. To offset an overlong runtime, its editing employs act-break chapters and flourishes of style. Abundant genre elements plus subjective accents fill the soundscape. Through trans-diegetic waltzes, juxtaposing ballet, and eerie choirs, its music exhibits classical variety. The production design delivers a unique aesthetic via gothic influences, large scale, and symbolic colors. Prestigious fame synergizes with against-type casting. Impressive prosthetics counterbalance the effects' disappointing CGI. Overall, Frankenstein crafts a complete cinematic experience.


Writing: 9/10

Direction: 9/10

Cinematography: 10/10

Acting: 10/10

Editing: 7/10

Sound: 9/10

Score/Soundtrack: 9/10

Production Design: 10/10

Casting: 9/10

Effects: 7/10


Overall Score: 8.9/10


 
 
 

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