Frankenstein Is a Tear-Jerking Fairy-Tale With a Monstrously Good Jacob Elordi

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Photo: Ken Woroner/Netflix

In all honesty, I was nervous about seeing Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein. The three-time-Oscar-winning Mexican auteur’s long-gestating love letter to Mary Shelley’s classic, a novel foundational to much of his work, is lavishly financed by Netflix, and felt like it could be one of the streamer’s big swings which doesn’t quite hit—a fittingly over-ambitious creation of something staggering but also potentially regrettable.

But now, it’s premiered at the Venice Film Festival, and I’m relieved to say that I was entirely wrong. This retelling is classic del Toro—operatic, heartfelt, and visually dazzling. It’s also silly, campy, occasionally overly CGI-ed, and incredibly sentimental, but if you buy into it, it’ll sweep you right off your feet.

That hefty $120 million budget is visible from the film’s first shots. It’s 1857 and on the earth’s barren, snow-filled, northern-most reaches, a captain (Lars Mikkelsen) and his reluctant crew have had their ship mired in ice on the way to the North Pole. It’s here that they discover the grizzled Victor Frankenstein (Oscar Isaac), a broken man being pursued by a giant hooded beast.

That creature, possessing a brutal, unearthly power, wreaks havoc on the men who try to fend him off—but then he’s plunged into the freezing water, and Frankenstein is rescued. Ensconced in a cabin, Victor recounts his tale, which, following on from the action-packed prelude, forms this story’s first hour.

We meet Frankenstein as a boy (Christian Convery), clinging to his mother (Lauren Collins) and fearful of his domineering father (Charles Dance), an exacting surgeon who torments him for not living up to his name. Before you know it, both parents are buried, and Victor is hell-bent on becoming even more prolific than his father.

Charles Dances Leopold with his son Victor  in Frankenstein.

Charles Dance’s Leopold with his son, Victor (Christian Convery), in Frankenstein.

Photo: Ken Woroner/Netflix

There’s a supremely melodramatic cadence to this opening—all lurching death scenes and cartoonish violence—which some will find grating, but if you think of it as a fairy-tale, a cautionary fable, with all the broad, sweeping storytelling and symbolism that entails, then it becomes far easier to wrap your head around.

Soon, Victor sets off for Edinburgh and makes a name for himself. We see him, now played by Isaac, reanimating a corpse in front of a horrified audience—a move that alienates the establishment but catches the eye of Heinrich Harlander (Christoph Waltz), an arms dealer looking to finance exactly such an endeavor. He sets our hero up with a grand laboratory and he begins his experiments, piecing together dead limbs and pulling away pieces of flesh like translucent slices of Ibérico ham, in a thrilling and jauntily soundtracked montage that is a welcome change of pace from all the somber suffering it follows.

Christoph Waltz as Heinrich Harlander.

Christoph Waltz as Heinrich Harlander.

Photo: Ken Woroner/Netflix

Harlander also brings news of his niece, Elizabeth (Mia Goth), who will be married to Victor’s brother, William (Felix Kammerer). When the couple pay Victor a visit, he is captivated by his sister-in-law-to-be. Goth, a magnetic stalwart of both period dramas and high-octane horror, is perfectly cast here—an enchanting and otherworldly convent girl who is fascinated by science and cuts through male bluster with a scalpel’s precision.

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Mia Goth’s Elizabeth in Frankenstein.

Photo: Ken Woroner/Netflix

She’s aided by ravishing gowns and surreal headdresses courtesy of costume designer Kate Hawley—silk, tulle, taffeta, and feathered confections in stunning jewel tones that could very well earn her an Academy Award. One look comprised of a forest green dress paired with silk fuchsia pumps made me swoon.

As Victor and Elizabeth grow close, he also makes progress. On a thundery night, he’s ready for the pièce de résistance: the body he has assembled is electrified, and comes alive.

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Oscar Isaac’s Victor.

Photo: Ken Woroner/Netflix

It is at this point that Frankenstein shifts up a gear, and that is thanks to Jacob Elordi. The preternaturally tall, thoughtful actor stepped in to replace Andrew Garfield in the part of the creature at the very last minute, an incredible feat, especially considering how heart-wrenching he is in the role. Despite being layered with silvery pale prosthetics (another department deserving of awards attention) and virtually unrecognizable, it is his physicality that is most remarkable. Hunched and trembling, with twitchy, awkward fingers, he’s a frightened child who idolizes his creator. Victor, in turn, is a cruel and unrelenting father to him, admonishing his every mistake.

If you’ve seen Elordi in Euphoria or Priscilla, then you’ll know his talent for embodying a kind of stoic, locked-in toxicity, but this may well be the first true showcase of what he’s capable of: the role of a lifetime, which allows him to convey a world of emotion through his face, as his eyes glisten with admiration for his demanding father, and then overflow with tears of pain and righteous hatred as he’s mercilessly beaten. To my surprise, it’s a moment that had me weeping, too. You can’t imagine anyone else playing him, and an Oscar campaign now seems inevitable.

Jacob Elordi as the creature in Frankenstein.

Jacob Elordi as the creature in Frankenstein.

Photo: Ken Woroner/Netflix

And so we enter the film’s second half, the creature’s tale, in which Elordi soars further. We witness his first meeting with Elizabeth and the gentle and delicate forming of their friendship. Then, left for dead by Victor, he sets out to forge his own path, taking refuge in a farmhouse, longing to be a part of the family that lives there and doing good deeds for them in secret. He eventually befriends one member, an elderly blind man (David Bradley, wonderful in a small but crucial part), who goes some way to restoring his faith in humanity. This portion of the story also, inexplicably, had me blubbering.

Sofia Galasso as the little girl who lives in the farmhouse and David Bradley as the blind man in Frankenstein.

Sofia Galasso as the little girl who lives in the farmhouse and David Bradley as the blind man in Frankenstein.

Photo: Ken Woroner/Netflix

Naturally, his peace doesn’t last long. Fate intervenes, and the creature sets off to find Victor once more, to make one last request: for a companion with whom to share his ill-fated life. The denouement is one you see coming, of course, but it’s shattering nonetheless.

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Felix Kammerer’s William with Goth’s Elizabeth.

Photo: Ken Woroner/Netflix

Less effective are the film’s final 10 minutes, which tip over from extremely sincere to schmaltzy, but given the sheer force of Frankenstein’s emotive power, I find it difficult to fault it. Detractors will note that the strange, unreal golden light which pours through windows feels very Wicked-esque; that Isaac is too shouty and bombastic to be truly convincing; and that Victor’s many nightmares are more unintentionally funny than disturbing. They’re not wrong, but this is also del Toro doing what he does best—cutting straight to the heart and leaving his audience totally devastated.

Jacob Elordis creature and Isaacs Victor.

Jacob Elordi’s creature and Isaac’s Victor.

Photo: Ken Woroner/Netflix

The production design is sumptuous, the gore gleeful and sometimes abundant, and the special effects eye-popping, but none of this distracts you from the crux of the story. Frankenstein has already been retold countless times and will, inevitably, continue to be reinterpreted, but this is an adaptation to remember.

Frankenstein will be in theaters from October 17, and on Netflix from November 7.