Give "The Bride!" A Chance
Beyond Cringe
I've seen a few critically panned films where I can appreciate everything the critics pan about them. 'Dumb and Dumber Too' comes to mind, as does 'Wonder Woman 1984' and I feel "The Bride!" deserves its criticism. But I'd recommend seeing it, regardless, as I would those other films.
So I'm going to begin to make this case by talking not about 'The Bride!' and yeah, Maggie could have written a movie title with less stylization so it wasn't tedious to write about her movie, but by talking about one of the greatest books of the 20th century, possibly ever. Catch-22.
Catch-22 is critically acclaimed and commercially successful. It's title and central joke has made it into common vernacular "a catch-22" for any lose-lose situation, a polite and literate way to tell someone they are fucked.
But Catch-22 is dense and not only dense but enjoyable*. There is easily a whole semester that can be done on Catch-22 and the various characters presented to us, Yossarian and Orr of course, Nately, Clevenger, Doc Daneeka, Major Major Major, Milo Minderbender, Chaplain R.O. Shipman (in my edition) are all fascinating windows into institutional psychopathy. If there were only two texts to assign students to make sure they don't fuck everything up, it would be 1984 and Catch-22. If I could only assign one, it would be Catch-22. Why? Because in Catch-22 the enemy is calling from inside the house.
There is something extra about Yossarian vs the US Air Force fighting an abstract fascist threat, that doesn't come across in Winston Smith vs Big Brother, perhaps because Soviet UK is counterfactual.
Anyway, here's the catch with Catch-22, not the eponymous catch, but the catch is that Yossarian and the central cast of fly boys are misogynist cads, (this point is the '*' on 'enjoyable' above) to extract the value of Catch-22 a reader needs one of two things: the least practical thing is to bowdlerize the text, rewrite an edition with all the casual misogyny removed, this may be what George Clooney's TV adaptation is like, I have zero need for, nor interest in an adaptation of Catch-22.
The most practical thing, is to simply get beyond the misogyny in order to extract the incredible, satirical, institutional analysis that few works of literature can compare to.
"The Bride!" is not great, it is dense, it is a dense hot mess. It is also very "cringe" an expression that itself is becoming self-descriptive. I think we need to accept, that not many people are good at expressing themselves, a good many people are low in self-awareness. Low self-awareness goes hand in hand with stepping into the arena, and expressing something and "The Bride!" is certainly a something, and I think if you see it, you will be cringing in sympathetic embarassment at the opening monologue, the very try-hardness of it that is antithetical to the Grunge aesthetic and early 90s feel this movie mostly employs.
My recommendation is to just cringe it out and get the fuck over it, like the "vvvvvtttt vvvvvtttt vvvvtttt" noise that Robocop never stops making when he walks, the worst character and characterization in "The Bride!" being Mary Shelley, will sadly, just keep coming back, and I too wish it didn't, but somebody, perhaps many somebodies, thought it was a good idea, and it remains.
Consider though, that at some point, someone will download this movie and simply edit Mary Shelley out, and then maybe people freed of cringe reactions (not entirely, but mostly) will critically pick over all the stuff that remains in there, it will be revisited, inevitably, by video essayists and given that video essays are as prone to herd mentality as initial reviews, "The Bride!" feels like a candidate for reevaluation, and I think you can skip the normal 12 year half-life, forget the 90 million budget and wide theatrical release, forget the cringe and look at what is there.
Good Disconnect
2013's "Man of Steel" could be instantly improved by cutting out the entire prologue, the "fall of Krypton" action sequence where Russell Crowe struggles across an alien planet to put his infant son in a spaceship with his wife and see him off.
In the same way, I would instantly improve "The Bride!" by cutting out everything prior to Christian Bale's first scene as The Monster. A good decision, a promising decision Maggie made, was to advance the Frankenstein Timeline, albeit not into the present day, but 1930s United States.
This solves a lot of story problems, we have the monster as the catalytic agent to get the plot going, you can even follow directly on from Guillermo Del Toro's recent adaptation of Frankenstein. The monster's fear of eternal life in crushing solitude has come to pass, it is excruciatingly painful for the monster, and he is here, now, because there is a mad scientist with a lab that could possibly do what Frankenstein would not for the monster.
This is good, this is great, just the take-off was fucked with the Mary Shelley framing device that introduced convoluted metaphysics that split the sauce that was to be the thesis of the film. That decision didn't come out of nowhere, in the 1930s movie "Bride of Frankenstein" the framing device is that Mary Shelley in 1818 told her storm-sheltering companions "but wait there's more" and the same actress that plays Mary Shelley, plays "The Bride." But I digress.
The point being that the monster is a deep and mostly coherent character that I would guess, Christian Bale whole-assed in preparation for the role. He is a monster we are already familiar with from all the adaptations that came before. We know his plight, his monstrous appearance has plebs assume the worst of him, to treat him like a monster until he lives down to their expectations. He has to run and hide to survive and he does so all alone, and has been doing so since the death of Victor Frankenstein in the events of the book.
I am hard pressed to think of a movie, that better captures the disconnect between sexes of a romantic courtship/puppy love phase. The general problem with onscreen romances, be they Pride and Prejudice, Emma, When Harry Met Sally, 10 Things I Hate About You, Along Came Polly, Love Actually etc. etc. is the coherence. So even when Ben Stiller is an uptight insurance executive and Jennifer Anniston is a manic pixie dream girl, they are manufactured to go together.
What I found most interesting in "The Bride!" and it was likely on-accident, is that it depicts a man commissioning a woman for himself from an artist through a process that is essentially random. He gets what he gets, and I suspect what happened, was that Christian Bale the actor was given a lot of creative control when it came to realizing his monster, and Maggie Gyllenhall likely through incompetence struggled and never overcame the problem of fleshing out the bride as a character.
What we get, is an onscreen courtship where a man and a woman don't understand each other, talk past each other, project onto each other, aren't listening to each other, are both slaves to their own egocentricity.
This is interesting. It's interesting to watch, even if it is hard to like, and even if Maggie cannot stick the landing.
Obviously, I am making an appeal to ignorance, I have not conducted a census of romantic movies, I haven't seen Gone With the Wind and I haven't seen Maid in Manhatten. I am generalizing out that most rom-coms in particular, are formulaic with a particular trope being that the lovers know they have found the right person because they are "seen" by the other. I once walked into a room where some people were watching a Rom-com I couldn't identify for you today. I can't even recall who was in it. All I saw was female hands opening an envelope(?) and pulling out a watch. I said "so that's the watch she always wanted as a child..." or something, and one of the viewers remarked "how did you know?" I knew because the formula was well established by the time I was 15.
The onscreen relationship you see in "The Bride!" isn't even close to Sandler-Barrymoore romcom 50 first dates. The basis of that movie is that the lovers 'see' each other even though Barrymoore loses her memory of Sandler every day.
Even Curb Your Enthusiasm, which I understand to involve minimal direction for the cast coming from Larry, and has at its center for the first 6 seasons, a dysfunctional but loving marriage, doesn't give us the same disconnect because at some level, I suspect Cherryl takes Larry's direction.
The deconstructive solution, seems simple to create an authentic disconnect between lovers - isolate two writers such that they are projecting and reacting, not choreographing.
I am not ready to conclude that Maggie Gyllenhall is an incompetent director and writer, even if "The Bride!" is largely incompetent as a film. The main source of doubt, are my doubts that the writing challenge is theoretically surmountable. That in "The Bride of Frankenstein" is a character to be fleshed out is the next most interesting thing about "The Bride!" this may have been the vortex under which we have the directorial energies circling to give Bale the room to be this experimental male lead, trying to maintain his characters integrity, while being open to whoever the bride reveals herself to be, while succumbing to the temptation that she might be a tabla-rasa and that she might wish to be, whatever he wants her to be.
That's interesting.
Feminism Problems
Kant being recently on my mind, the 'original' "Bride of Frankenstein" as a character is a means, not an end. She is not a fully formed character but a plot device, she is there to scream in horror at the monster, even though she herself is a monster, compounding the monster's own horror of his existence. The "Bride of Frankenstein" is iconic, what it isn't is very good. As a sequel it is more akin to the modern phenomena of "Dune: Part 2" or "The Hobbit: Desolation of Smaug" and "The Hobbit: Enough Already" where a book is adapted into multiple films.
The 1931 Frankenstein movie, took a bunch of liberties with the source material, maybe because of run-time constraints, maybe because the studios didn't give a damn. For example it isn't Victor Frankenstein but Henry Frankenstein, there's no framing device of Victor recounting his misadventure to a ship's captain in the Arctic circle etc. etc.
"The Bride of Frankenstein" resurrects the monster, carelessly, like the somehow by which Palpatine returned, and then unused source material pads out the runtime, most notably the monster coming across a blind man's cabin in the woods and learning to talk.
In this sense, Henry Frankenstein completing a female monster and bringing it to life is a smaller departure from the source material than Victor being Henry, than him surviving the events of the first film and expecting a child of his own with his wife Elizabeth. In the source material the bride is abandoned because Victor fears the possibility of the monsters reproducing.
So the eponymous "Bride of Frankenstein" being a means, to the end of illustrating the monster's plight, doesn't give anyone needing to adapt the character a whole lot to work with.
For me though, this very conundrum produces an interesting mirror to hold up to feminism in the 21st century.
Imagine you were to close your eyes and imagine, which you can't do and keep reading. That I decided to reclaim Frankenstein to my own ends. I open my movie with Mary Shelley talking to us from beyond the grave, embodied but displaced, my Mary Shelley informs you that I never intended for Frankenstein to be any cautionary tale against hubris, that I died before I got a chance to write what the story was really about - the Great Man theory of history, and transhumanism, objectivism!
I think people would writely criticise my hubris of sticking my hand up the arse of Mary Shelley and having her posthumously endorse some Ayn Rand shit as transparently self-serving and disrespectful.
The obvious illegitimacy of this move, is because my claims to know the mind of Mary Shelley go against the solidarities of Identity Politics. From a group identity resolution, Mary Shelley is a woman so somehow therefore, all women are Mary Shelley, Maggie Gyllenhall is a woman, therefore Maggie Gyllenhall is basically Mary Shelley.
I suggest, that the cringe inducing opening of the movie, can be explained because under the auspices of identity politics, the fallacious appropriation of an individual's voice is not obvious. However, for it seems, so many who experience the appropriation of Mary Shelley's voice, it is obviously illegitimate because they experience it as cringe. Mary Shelley has to announce the false bravado of "the motherfucking bride" and it isn't cool, it isn't even ironically uncool, it is simply a misstep.
Bringing us to the second misstep, and where 21st century feminism starts coming into starker resolution, with the introduction of 'Ida'. The bride is given multiple names throughout this movie, but like the monster, really doesn't have one, or shouldn't have one. I have invoked Ida, which is the first chronologically, a much more interesting one is given by the monster later 'Penelope' aka 'Penny' which is the first name the bride accepts, the most famous literary Penelope being the wife of Odysseus and I'd bet some money, that Maggie or someone else in the development of "The Bride!" knows their Natalie Haynes.
The monster as Odysseus, has been struggling for a long time to reunite with his beloved Penelope, likely the idea from where this name is suggested after "Ginger Rogers" is recognised by the bride as a film reference. Haynes says in her non-fiction art history book 'Pandora's Jar' that I happened to read a few weeks before seeing "The Bride!" that historically Penelope has been held up as the ideal wife, for her quality of loyalty and devotion, awaiting the return of her husband faithfully for 20 years. Hayne's points out that Penelope is not given enough credit for being the ideal partner of Odysseus, in terms of her own cunning, her own sacrifices, the ordeal she endures for 20 years.
I won't be able to do the chapter on Penelope justice in a few sentences and via my lack of expertise. But as the name offered by the monster, this is something a feminist must radically reject, resist, reclaim. Alas, another similarity with the poetry of Homer, is where to lay the blame for the whole debacle.
Who caused the Trojan war? Ostensibly, it is Paris who abducted Helen of Sparta to make her Helen of Troy. But Paris abducts Helen because she was promised to him as the most beautiful of mortals by Aphrodite in order to win the judgement of Paris. But Paris judged Aphrodite the fairest after turning down the bribes offered by Athena (wisdom) and Hera (offered him Eurasia). Having to wikipedia the story because I'd forgotten the third contestant was Hera, I noticed that the event goes down on "Mount Ida" so the Greek myth references in "The Bride!" are looking less coincidental.
Zeus delegated judging to Paris, so maybe the Trojan war is Zeus' fault, but the golden apple inscribed with 'to the fairest' was tossed out by Eris, personification of Strife.
This is the complicated mess of who started the Trojan war, tohm, I hear you say, what the fuck does this have to do with "The Bride!" and 21st century feminism.
Mary Shelley is Maggie's muse, in the first scene Ida is possessed by Maggie Gyllenhall who brings about Ida's death, that she may become the bride of Frankenstein's monster. The movie is taking place in a reality of Mary Shelley's creation, the events of Frankenstein are canonical, the monster only exists because of Mary Shelley, and Mary Shelley had him demand of Victor a female companion. Maggie steals Mary and makes her kill Ida to provide the necessary materials for the bride.
Again, it would all be much tidier, if you just cut Ida and Mary Shelley out. Then it is just the monster demanding a bride who is a resurrected corpse. That corpse can have a backstory, revealed later when her memories return or she is recognised from her former life. But instead Ida is killed by Maggie reclaiming the plot catalyst from the monster.
If it sounds incoherent, that's because it is. But we aren't past the film's opening yet, Ida's death is precipitated by her causing a scene in the proximity of a mafia boss. I was left guessing as to why the movie was set in the 1930's. I think it was specifically 1936, and I thought it might have something to do with WW2 and the rise of Nazism and the Holocaust or something. That hypothesis went nowhere, I suspect it was in the 1930s because that's when the Boris Karloff movies came out, and that's really where the bride came into existence, not 1818 when Mary Shelley began telling the story.
That leant the Bonnie & Clyde idea of Monster & Bride, but it also provided the mafia as I suspect, a symbolic patriarchy.
But which "patriarchy" because there are (at least) two, and I am confident I have previously documented in my blog, the incoherency of this Feminism 101 concept. There is intelligent design patriarchy, or the conspiracy patriarchy. This is an active, organised concept that suppresses women. Then there is a descriptive, emergent, status quo patriarchy - this is a passive patriarchy that merely collects observations of all the ways in which women are oppressed in society relative to men.
The mafia is a criminal conspiracy, and it is a conspiracy in the film. The symbolic patriarch of the mafia, who has women's tongues cut out and murders with impunity.
Organised crime is much less scary than disorganised crime. It seems scarier when you live in modest comfort, because you are already spared disorganised crime. It seems scary when you are literally minding your own business and some fat guys in suits come in, don't introduce themselves and suggest you need to pay them a "protection" fee every month because it would be a shame if your business were to burn down.
That seems scary, compared to when unemployment is so high, that pretty much anyone might cut your throat for spare change in your pocket. It's much scarier when you go to the town hall and instead of saying "we are going to address this by building an effective witness protection program where we can guaruntee the safety of those we need to come forth and testify against the Gambino crime family, we are going to get them on taxes, we are going to flip their low level members and get them turning states evidence against the big players..." they say "well we need to stop the civil war between religious sectarian groups in order to secure property rights so people can safely farm again and create the surplus calories needed to keep children in school for longer so we can start building a modern economy that provides good opportunities to our youth so they won't turn to crime and instead pay taxes that we can transparently spend on social programs without foreign interference."
I may not like the term "patriarchy" but I will grant it for argument's sake to move on to the question that interests me - "how efficient is patriarchy?" I think patriarchy is unfortunately, quite efficient, which is to say, its the disorganised kind of crime. Fighting it is not a simple matter of disobedience, standing up and saying "I'm not going to take it anymore" is the starting line, not the finishing line.
This I think, is the unintentionally interesting disconnect between the bride and the monster as a love story. The bride is fighting nebulous patriarchy, a loose end that is handled clumsily in an impatient mid-credits scene. This is, and it is probably a taboo, a Quixotic quest of modern feminism, which is a generalisation on my part, not a stereotype. It is where you fight a coordinated conspiracy to oppress women, but in the movie the monster has literally nothing to do with the mafia.
If you think instead of patriarchy as spontaneous, disorganised, decentralized local cells, where there is no campaign to take the head of the snake, just local battles, then probably the best weapon a 21st century woman has in her possession, is her agency over mate selection, and that is right in front of the bride throughout the film, it is treated as the spine of the film, with the film's ending and final act being that she has come to love the monster who loves her. That's why justice for the mafia don that motivated the circumstances of Ida's death is an afterthought.
I think it is a product of incompetence (and incoherence) because there is a convoluted backstory based on the criminal conspiracy that saw Ida die. She was a spy, basically a prostitute employed by a detective in a case that was killed due to police corruption taking bribes from the Mafia but Ida wanted justice for the silenced and dead women.
With Maggie's visual interpretation of the bride, her production has successfully created an iconic character, it doesn't matter that the movie is bad or bombs, like "The Suicide Squad" and Harley Quinn, the bride's look was destined to become a 2026 Halloween costume staple. Except the next cringe and incompetent thing the film does that an audience needs to move beyond, is that it depicts women everywhere dressing up as the bride, replicating her cheek smear or tattoo birthmark, and fighting their battles of disobedience under patriarchy.
This is doing Aldous Snow's "I'm like an African white space Jesus. That's not for me to say though." from Get Him To The Greek, but Maggie calls herself African white space Jesus.
Alas, this is projection, and I think it is projection that sustains appeals to the nebulous "patriarchy" notion, that the battle is about disobedience to a system that oppresses women, by stepping into your power and subjugating your oppressors. That's literally what is happening when a group of women, made up as the bride, pin down the mafia don and tattoo his face in the mid-credits scene.
But what is wrong with patriarchy, such that it is, is that it treats women as a class of inferior people. It manifests in the basic way, that your boyfriend won't go see Pride & Prejudice which you want to see, so you end up watching XXX: The Return of Xander Kaine with him.
Bale's monster is flawed but good guy, he is just desperate. The script shows us this, shows us the bride seeing this in him. Before she is brought to life, (and after Maggie has already possessed her and deprived her of personhood) Bale gets cold feet, rejecting her on account of her being 'too pretty' and the mad scientist pushes it through, she even pulls the lever to bring her to life because the monster has a panic attack, so frightened by the prospect of what the source material got so right in the original bride's lineless cameo - she screams upon seeing the monster. (and also the Helena Bonham Carter incarnation from 1998ish, commits suicide by self immolation upon realizing her own fate.)
Narratively, there is supposedly this issue of consent, but again, consent is a limitation of the modern collectivist form of feminism that allows Maggie to appropriate Mary Shelley to her own ends, it just continues - Ida is dead, Ida is dead because Mary Shelley precipitated the strife that killed her own creation. Maggie, as Mary Shelley hand picks Ida to be the bride of Frankenstein, so already we have Maggie as Mary Shelley consenting to the match. Then there's Annette Benning's character, she is the one who actively argues the case against resurrecting a woman for the monster, just as Shelley's Victor did in the source material.
Except Benning's objection isn't on the grounds of them reproducing, a la "Seed of Chucky" but on the grounds that she could create a monster. The monster puts forward his counterargument to "what if she's a monster?" as "then I will love her." and to this Benning tacitly consents, like a father blessing a groom.
It's shallow, dare I say, a close reading of the text, to say Ida doesn't consent to being resurrected to serve as a companion for a lonely monster. If you back off a bit, all the characters are Maggie Gyllenhaal, and the marriage has been arranged variously by her, Mary Shelley and Dr. Cornelia Euphronious (Benning), the bride is perfectly safe with the monster, he has already been vetted. The bride just has to trust that her fellow women are looking out for her.
The women in this movie, universally approve of the match.
Earlier in publication than Shelley's Frankenstein, but near enough to be contemporary was Pride and Prejudice, which could also be considered a guidebook on fighting Patriarchy through mate selection:
As the story progresses, so does her tumultuous relationship with Mr Darcy. The course of Elizabeth and Darcy's relationship is ultimately decided when Darcy overcomes his pride, and Elizabeth overcomes her prejudice, leading them both to surrender to their love for each other. ~ from the wikipedia article.
As a man, a much more difficult version of feminism to grapple with, is the more literal interpretations of women's liberation. This is the considerably harder battle of not employing mate-selection, something within women's control, to tackle men's violence against women. This takes the form of needing to educate Pete, that the problem has nothing to do with Sarah's insistence on dating Dave (including isolating herself in domestic environments with him) despite his history of jealousy, insecurity, possessiveness, emotional dysregulation and verbal and physical abuse, because Sarah is free to be attracted to whomever she likes, and to date whomever will have her that she chooses. The problem is that Dave refuses to be domesticated by Sarah.
I understand this, the freedom for Sarah to date Dave and not Pete. It to my understanding, has a lot in common with women's freedom to wear miniskirts and thong underwear to the club and not expect sexual violence. Furthermore, it is relatable. No matter how many studies replicate that arranged marriages provide higher levels of satisfaction, I don't think anyone who has gained the liberty to choose their own partners feels compelled by such data to wish for a return to arranged marriages.
It is the right for women to pursue their own Beauty & The Beast fairy tale. "The Bride!" is an interesting twist on the Beauty & The Beast fairy tale, for the beast in this case is thoroughly domesticated, the bride is not. Benning reveals in the final scene, that somehow the bride was a means and not an end to her. Some long unrealised dream to create a disobedient geometry.
All the evidence suggests, that Maggie is incredibly well read, her movie is a hot intertextual mess. The deep cuts are peppered through the movie itself. That's where the reflection of 21st century feminism comes into sharp relief, and it's unfoundedness and incoherence is the making of this movie, encapsulated in this appeal to disobedience.
"Well behaved women seldom make history." ~ Laurel Thatcher Ulrich.
Obviously this mantra hinges on your definition of "well behaved" you can easily "beg the question" by asserting that a well-behaved woman, cannot make history, so if she does, then she can't be well behaved. But I suspect this assertion, could prove, like the rule "i before e except after c" I suspect nobody has ever really examined the claim, I can think of a number of exceptions to Ulrich's statement, but that wouldn't substantiate a frequency claim like 'seldom':
- Queen's Victoria, Elizabeth II, Isabella of Spain, Eleanor of Aquitaine etc.
- Penelope of Ithaca, Iphigenia, Sita etc. from mythology.
- Margaret Thatcher, Teresa May, Angela Merkel, Julia Gillard, Jacinta Ardern etc. in politics.
- Ada Lovelace, Mary Curie, Mary Summerville etc. in the sciences.
- In literature there are almost too many to name but probably should include Murasaki Shikibu, the Bronte sisters, Beatrix Potter, Enid Blyton, Agatha Christie etc. etc. etc.
Again, everything hinges on the definition of "well-behaved" and in large part I have to plead ignorance, for all I know Enid Blyton financed her writing by selling crystal meth to local teenagers, Margerat Thatcher declared war on the falklands, is that well-behaved or badly behaved? She was leader of the Conservative party, but her radical economics ended Britain's post war period of upward social mobility, but it was also pretty much identical policy wise to the Reagan administration across the pond.
Iconoclasts need to be free to be iconoclastic. I'm not anti-any form of liberalism (with the usual caveat that your rights to swing your fists through the air end at the tip of my nose)
I think "The Bride!" finds in the mafia, an unintentionally interesting metaphor for how to approach 'the patriarchy' - I'm sure the mafia, and organised crime, kills women. I'm also reasonably confident, that at its deadliest, the mafia has killed far less women than the institutions of marriage and family, nor the alcohol, tobacco, automotive, pharmacuetical or cosmetics industries.
Furthermore, I wouldn't be surprised, if organised crime is unpopular with both men and women. There is an overwhelming common ground on which to form an alliance, and that history will show, most people are against organised crime, and its condemnation is codified in laws.
Just so, given what little we know about Ida, it seems that the monster is a better romantic partner for her than any of her known male associates at the time of her death. The major thing making the relationship bad, is that the bride is possessed by Mary Shelley, who created the monster. So this is kind of like a woman being possessed by her own mother-in-law.
The bride depicts for me, the naive isolationist war against patriarchy that inadvertantly prophesied the US-Isreal attacks on Iran. As at writing today, Trump has criticized/begged for NATO allies to help him out of the mess he made without consulting them.
If "The Bride!" is confusing, then there's hope that women can sit in the audience wondering what the fuck the bride is doing and where the movie is going, and men can sit in the audience and find the monster's situation weird and disconnected.
Again, that's interesting.
Appropriation of the Commons
So let's address this, for me, worst aspect of the film. Worst creative decision. I have very limited influence, so my neologism of "samening" an offense equal and opposite to "othering" is something I'll have to rearticulate. I think it's bad when people "other" I agree, it is aggressive to be all like "you can't sit with us." but there is also an aggressive form of inclusion, I've seen it. The pressure exerting "hey, come sit with us." not as friendly invitation, but as laying claim to someone's time and attention.
My sense is, a lot of people naively assume that "inclusion" can only be good thing, not bad thing, forgetting arranged marriages, gangs, teenage betrayals. Forgetting egocentricity, that one can be included as a means, as an object, as an accessory.
Then there is the question of owning people, to which I feel the answer is an emphatic 'no' but people will take possession of people they identify with. Usually this is banal as people declaring "we won" regarding the victory of a professional sports team that the person objectively contributed nothing to. But sometimes you will get a quite intense sense of proprietary ownership over a person, like people who feel it is their place to defend the honour and reputation of Jesus. Someone to the best of our knowledge, was a person, and I don't think Christians "own" Jesus anymore than anyone can own a person.
I think a problem with identity politics, is when you start thinking in group resolution, you can lose sight of something like Mary Shelly was a person who had her own voice and could very much speak for herself. Some 'forgetting' like this is my most charitable explanation as to why Maggie hubristicly felt that she could write Mary Shelly in the first person as though she knew her mind, the mind of the author of multiple manuscripts of Frankenstein & His Monster: A Modern Promethean Tale, that included her explicitly tackling a request by Frankenstein's creation to Victor, to make him a bride, and Victor (and by proxy, Mary Shelly) doesn't think it a good idea and declines it.
In 2019, Greta Gerwig released her improved ending to Little Women, O magazine quotes her as saying "I wanted to give Louisa May Alcott an ending she might have liked" and in Greta's case it seems there's a paper trail, along with the biography of Louisa May Alcott that suggest that Josephine as a self-insert probably should have wound up a righteous spinster babe.
I recently read Pandora's Jar by Natalie Haynes, a non-fiction book by the author of "A Thousand Ships" which was a retelling of the Trojan war from the perspective of its women and goddesses. In the conclusion, which I have to paraphrase because I returned the book to the library already, Natalie argues that it is valid to retell stories from other perspectives because they've always been retold from other perspectives.
This is hard to argue when you have Greek playwrights like Euripides riffing off episodes of the Iliad and Odyssey and Jason and the Argonauts. I tentatively accept her conclusion, her arguments compelled me to accept it, including through the preceding book leading to her conclusions.
But only to a degree. One thing that diminishes "A Thousand Ships" as a project (I haven't read it, so it could be great, but I'm just commenting on the project) is that while the Iliad may not pass the Bechtel test, it isn't like it is devoid of great female characters who have great scenes like Helen, Cassandra, Hecuba and Penthasilia who fights Achilles. The question is more of emphasis, I guess, and probably a matter of which roles got relegated to the cutting room floor in the moving picture era.
Then there's something like 'Julia', which is Orwell's '1984' told from Winston Smith's romantic liason Julia's perspective. The difference being, our ability to preserve the fidelity of the manuscript an author turns in has improved remarkably since Euripides was putting on plays, and that was already a massive improvement over oral traditions of Epic Poems.
Right there's this thing, that Orwell was doing, which was sitting down to a Typewriter and being like "how can I get my thoughts on Communism and Socialism and man's inhumanity to man out to the general public?" and he writes "Animal Farm: A Fairy Tale" and he writes "1984" about a dystopian future and they both hit.
Somewhere in this very feelie terrain, there's a right of reply. Like anyone can pick up a typewriter and write their own response to Animal Farm, and 1984. Responses include the very famous "Brave New World" by Aldous Huxley, and while not a direct inspiration, Margaret Atwood's "The Handmaid's Tale" was described upon release as "A Feminist 1984" and I think in modernity and post-modernity, writing a reply that involves creating your own world and characters is the path that leaves one far less exposed to hacks.
Over on the flipside, there's something like Baz Lurman taking "Romeo & Juliet" and setting it in Las Angeles in the mid-90s. At that time, my feeling is this was a huge swing, where Baz scored a home run on all the doubters. It's success no doubt lead to greenlighting the forgotten "O" and enjoyable beloved fluff featuring a teacher putting Shakespeare to rap in "10 Things I Hate About You" when people realised that teenagers love Shakespeare when you don't make it so fucking boring.
But if some guy was like "I'm going to improve on Shakespeare" by inhabiting the ghost of Shakespeare to endorse my new better version of 1998's Shakespeare in Love, I feel in my waters that it would be far more likely to be caught somewhere in pre-production as "maybe this is a bad idea."
I don't know if it's some embedded sense of Marxist-collectivism, but it does feel to me, that feminism has this distinct hubris wedded to it, that I doubt is essential or necessary, where anything and anyone can be annexed for the cause but is the yin to the cringeness yang woman must feel when watching Vin Diesel remind us that flying a rocket car up to a space station as part of a counter-terrorist heist is "about family" when he and his crew have a cook up to celebrate using a Shelby GT-500 to take out a nuclear submarine in the Arctic Circle.
Of recent I've begun to wonder if anything is actually cool. I don't have an answer, but something that is definitely uncool is trying to be cool. That's the risk though, and again, through that on screen disconnect between Bale's coherent consistent monster and trying to make something of The Bride that isn't relative to the monster, illustrates two viewpoints both trying to be cool in front of each other, that is a unique viewing experience.
Christian Bale > Jacob Elordi
I've now had time to watch some of the reviews I avoided of "The Bride!" Another reason to see this film is because Christian Bale's take on the monster, is probably the best ever. I'd say he's also the best looking monster since Boris Karloff.
I disagree with nothing said in this review that pans the film and this review that praises the film. Don't miss that I think neither of these reviews contradict the other. It is clearly, demonstrably, about what you see and I'm probably closer to being in furious agreement with Mark Kermode, whose review I sought out because of his review of Del Toro's "Frankenstein" from 2025.
Del Toro's movie is commendable because it is closest to the plot beats of the source material. He set out to make a faithful adaptation of Shelley's book, to honour her rather than co-opt her. It was commercially successful, critically acclaimed (it just won 3 Oscars, relating to production design) and was nominated for 9. It was also, surprisingly boring.
Furthermore, Mia Goth as Elizabeth gets these great costumes. Victor as a child has visions of a grotesque angel of death or something, the stuff people go see Del Toro movies for since at least Pan's Labyrinth maybe even Cronos. There's some expectation then, for an interesting visual take on the monster, but the creature is visually boring.
I've seen multiple reviews comment on Del Toro's Frankenstein being boring, even to the point of people putting it on and falling asleep in the middle of it, and I'm inclined to agree. It's a conundrum, because Del Toro has made it to the standard of a proper period drama, he has faithfully adapted the text and yet it is less interesting to watch than Pride & Prejudice, Emma, Vanity Fair period dramas that involve no explosions, no monsters, no reanimated corpses, no rotating barrel blunderbusses nor arctic expeditions.
The cast too is talented, with the possible exception of Jacob Elordi. I think that's the central problem, the monster isn't interesting, unlike the shark in Jaws, once revealed, I wanted to see less of him.
And yet, the curious thing being that Bale's monster benefits immensely from Elordi's performance. Within Bale's introductory scenes we know his story, his motivations, his character.
But Maggie has also gone intertextual, giving Bale heaps to work with. She's watched Mel Brooks and Gene Wilder's "Young Frankenstein" and has a scene where the bride questions whether it's "Frankensteen" or "Frankenstyne" in pronounciation, then it references maybe one of the earliest shit-losing comedy scenes in cinematic history, Young Frankenstein's 'Puttin' on the Ritz' from which I'm sure the plot mechanic of having Jake Gyllenhaal playing a Fred Astaire star that the monster literally projects his fantasies onto.
No aspect of hilarity is preserved from the original gag, but its just an example of the freedom Bale had to work with to create a coherent character that also has a century of existence to use to give us insight into the predicament of this experimental byproduct.
Again, I hesitate to give Maggie too much credit, beyond her ambition. What she has is a mess, and I cannot understate how annoying the Mary Shelley personality is and how unwelcome it is whenever it shows up.
In the above linked reviews, there's two different comparisons made - there's an unfavorable one to Poor Things, that I thought of too. That's the movie at its most hackey, and I thought it during the dance scene to putting on the ritz. Especially if you are unfamiliar with Young Frankenstein, you will likely be turned off by that scene, as a try hard attempt to be quirky by out of touch nepo-babies.
With Young Frankenstein it is coherent though, because I guess the joke is, that dignified idiot, Gene Wilder as Dr Frankenstein, feels the best demonstration of his god-like power to create life, is a song and dance number that stars himself. I'm laughing comprehending it, and don't get me wrong, that gag is a greater achievement than "The Bride!" and it's complex, worth getting obsessed over. But Maggie takes that sentiment, and this is the monster's fantasy, to be a tap-dancing hollywood star.
Things like when Bale's monster reveals he gets his money by fishing it out of public fountains, wishing wells. the film has the scope, and the talent in Bale (who read Maggie's script and took Maggie's direction) to outshine what Elordi did in a faithful adaptation of the enduring source material.
Bale also eclipses, it goes without saying, Robert De Niro as the monster. I remember learning that De Niro was the monster after seeing Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, and being like 'that was De Niro?'
But then to flip it around, Jessie Buckley is a great actress, and in most of her personalities, she shines. Just not Mary Shelley, the worst and most prominent. I also think, that while she seemingly has a lot to work with, like being part Bonny, maybe part Zelda Fitzgerald, part Mae West. What I would guess happened was to Yin the monster's Yang, where the monster is a composite of body parts with a single original mind, the bride is a single body and somehow all women, so the intertextuality may include Frank Herbert's Dune sequels.
Jessie Buckley is fundamentally charismatic, but I think its that case of if you are every woman you wind up being no woman. However, I think this comes from there just being nothing to work with, with "The Bride of Frankenstein." beyond the very, very interesting disconnect.
Consider, that in "The Bride of Frankenstein" the primary antagonist, once the Bride is declared alive announces "Behold the bride of Frankenstein!" in a movie where Henry Frankenstein is already married to Elizabeth, who is already pregnant, and they live happily ever after, so she isn't his bride. Is the character making the same mistake as everyone has since forever, in referring to the monster as Frankenstein? Probably. The movie poster plays this trope.
Maggie was fucked like Charlie Kauffman's attempt to adapt 'The Orchid Thief' in Adaptations, where his own hubris from writing 'Being John Malkovich' leads him to want to write a story where nobody grows and nobody learns anything.
The Bride only exists because the monster does, he is literally her reason for being. 'The Bride' is also Uma Thurman's cognomen in Kill Bill until she is revealed to be called Beatrice, and that was one text this movie missed despite it being right there.
When you subtract the 'of Frankenstein' to make the bride somehow her own woman, what you are left with is nonsense, like Season 5 of Stranger Things nonsense, and this movie even has an unproposal scene.
Collage
I'm tired, so I think we can say, that there is a lot, probably too much going on in this film. I suspect you cannot work on a Frankenstein screenplay, with so little to work with to begin with, without consciously or unconsciously Frankensteining a bunch of stuff together. This movie has a collage feel.
What it reminds me of, is David W. Mack's collage based art-style, and in that sense the movie has a very 90s feel.
The production design, hair and makeup, costumes, what is the french - mis en scene, shot composition, cinematography is all of artistic merit.
It's worth seeing as a spectacle, and it's really really busy, like a teenage girl of the mid-90s vision board.




