Experts break down the history of Frankenstein’s Bride, from Mary Shelley to Maggie Gyllenhaal’s “The Bride!,” and why the ...
With a few minutes on screen and no dialogue, the Bride leaves a lot off the table, something that inspired The Bride! director Maggie Gyllenhaal when she watched the film and tore through Shelley's ...
Walking into The Bride! , I honestly had no idea what kind of movie I was about to experience. The trailers looked intriguing, and I am a huge fan of the Frankenstein story, and I needed to see what ...
Most recently, the Bride, as a dramatic character, has been part of a series of creative reimaginings through an explicitly feminist lens. For instance, the dark coming of age comedy, Lisa ...
Part fantasy, part musical, part horror and heavy on messaging, The Bride! struggles to know what it is (Picture: Warner Bros Entertainment) The Bride! is a messy monster mash-up movie that’s more ...
A simple, slinky bias-cut slip dress, designed by her close friend Narciso Rodriguez, was Carolyn Bessette-Kennedy’s wedding ...
This is a rare and atypically fulsome outing for The Bride herself, a macabre mate for the lonely monster, who was literally ...
The Bride belongs firmly to the latter category. Maggie Gyllenhaal’s audacious reworking of the Frankenstein mythology is ...
Jessie Buckley and Christian Bale spark a feral, fascinating chemistry, though even their undead romance struggles to animate Maggie Gyllenhaal’s unruly feminist monster mash ...
Maggie Gyllenhaal's radical take on the Bride of Frankenstein story takes a middle finger to the patriarchy. Plus there are ...
That electric romance between Buckley’s Ida and Bale’s Frank resurrects ‘The Bride!’, even though its script is half-baked.