#5 of 10: "Frankenstein". Grade: B
I'm conflicted by movies adapted from famous source material. If I've already encountered the novel/play/previous movie/comic book/etc, should I hold it against a film that tacks too close to the original source or strays too far from it? I generally try to judge a movie on its own merits and blot out anything in the past related to it. Maybe that opens me up for criticism of my criticism. "If you had read the book", you would have understood the story better. "Because you saw the previous versions of the movie", you don't understand what the director & screenwriter are going for here. Perhaps valid concerns. Perhaps contrarian hokum. So be it. I'll forge ahead.
"Frankenstein" is a beautiful film and worthy of many of its technical nominations. Cinematography, Costume Design, Makeup, Production Design, and Sound were stellar. It should win one or more of these five nominations. In the other categories, we're on less solid footing. The score was reminiscent of something Tim Burton would create. That's fine for an "Edward Scissorhands" with many moments of fancy and wonder, but not so much with a serious gothic narrative. Jacob Elordi, up for Best Supporting Actor, had his moments, but delivered to my eyes a pretty flat performance. Perhaps it was a case of makeup overwhelming acting. It's hard to see the recognition of humanity in dead eyes.
That leaves me with the Adapted Screenplay nom. It was fascinating to me that the women in this movie provided so little connective tissue to the story. They could have been written out entirely, and the movie might have been better. Wasn't the source material here written by a woman? Were women in the novel, and their influence on the two principles, fleshed out in any meaningful way? For a two and 1/2 hour movie, the character development was staggeringly lacking. For goodness sake, tell us who you are and why you're in this movie.
The movie was watchable. It touched on several important themes, including the meaning of humanity, creation, and the sins of fathers (and sons). There is still the potential for a definitive Frankenstein movie. Unfortunately, this "Frankenstein" isn't it.