Current:Home > NewsFrankenstein stories are taking over Hollywood. But this time, women are the focus. -Summit Capital Strategies
Frankenstein stories are taking over Hollywood. But this time, women are the focus.
Indexbit Exchange View
Date:2025-04-10 18:26:06
Another “Frankenstein” film, another chance to come up to the lab and see what’s on the slab. In the horror comedy “Lisa Frankenstein,” however, the electrifying reanimation device was almost a 1980s hair crimper.
Played by Kathryn Newton, goth girl Lisa Swallows brings a dead Victorian dude back to life, attaching various found body parts to Cole Sprouse’s accidentally resurrected corpse. But the styling tool wasn’t doing the job for screenwriter Diablo Cody. Then an idea came that was her “Frankenstein lightning strike”: She swapped the crimper for a malfunctioning tanning bed, akin to the ones she saw rich girls had growing up.
“Those have always looked like coffins, like some kind of scientific slab,” Cody says.
“Lisa Frankenstein” (in theaters Friday) is the latest movie with its own take on the now-familiar mythos unleashing an experimental creation, first told in Mary Shelley’s classic 1818 novel “Frankenstein” and popularized a century later by the 1931 Boris Karloff horror movie. There’s a mini-resurgence at play where filmmakers are reinventing this timeless tale with elements of female empowerment and modern fears.
Last year’s “The Angry Black Girl and Her Monster” offered a young genius bringing her brother back from the dead after a gang shooting. “Poor Things,” up for 11 Oscars next month, features best actress nominee Emma Stone as a reanimated woman who gets a second chance at a better life. And monster-movie master Guillermo del Toro is about to start production on Netflix’s “Frankenstein,” an adaptation of Shelley’s tale with Oscar Isaac as the egotistical Dr. Victor Frankenstein and Jacob Elordi as his creature.
“It's always been about playing God and creating life. I don't think that's lost its allure for anyone over the course of history,” Cody says of the original “Frankenstein.”
“There’s no doubt, even in our secular society today, that the theme of ‘transgression’ beyond the limits of what is deemed acceptable for human knowledge continues to fascinate ‘Frankenstein’ audiences more than 200 years later,” says Peter J. Capuano, associate English professor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
'Lisa Frankenstein' review:Goth girl meets cute corpse in Diablo Cody's horror rom-com
‘Lisa Frankenstein,’ 'Poor Things' return 'Frankenstein' to the feminine perspective
Cody points out that most retellings feature a doctor figure who is male, though “Poor Things” and “Lisa Frankenstein” both focus on female narratives, from different viewpoints. In the former, Stone’s “creature” Bella Baxter matures from a child-like state to a free-thinking woman, and in the latter, Lisa is the “creator” who takes in a previously undead, speechless but strangely caring figure (given life via lightning strike) and, through murderous means, completes him.
For “Lisa,” Cody wanted to throw it back to the legend’s origins through Shelley. “What if you flipped the script and it was about a woman creating her ideal partner, which in this case is a genteel undead Victorian man? In Lisa's case, he's just what she needs in her life,” the writer says. “He’s the first person to really listen to her in a long time, and he validates her feelings and he doesn't interrupt – because he can't."
'Poor Things':How sex (and sweets) helped bring Emma Stone's curious character to life
Mary Shelley’s classic novel ties into modern themes (thanks, AI and COVID)
Shelley’s “Frankenstein” and the iconic 1930s movie leaned into the theme of technology run amok. “The fact that we have all this cultural anxiety around AI right now could be an underlying subconscious reason for why everyone is revisiting these ‘Frankenstein’ myths all of a sudden," Cody says. "We are excited about our ability to create this thing, and then we're scared of what the implications could be.”
The 19th-century novel has been interpreted in recent years as “a dire warning about the dangers of scientific hubris” in regard to nanotech, synthetic biology and especially AI, Capuano says. That’s where “we see the convergence of old themes such as Victor Frankenstein’s neglect of his creation – which is what spurs the creature to act monstrously – and new societal fears,” Capuano says. While there have always been fears about unintended consequences with technological creation, “the exponential growth of AI in the past few years has spurred a whole new, more widespread – and perhaps more real – fear of human obsolescence.”
Additionally, the aftermath of pandemic lockdown has spurred "real fears of the social damage that being isolated from other humans can have,” Capuano adds, recalling that in Shelley’s novel, Victor Frankenstein can only create his artificial being when he locks himself away from others.
Frankenstein's movie history:The good, bad and ugly
The new Frankenstein’s Monster takes a turn toward the attractive
In contemporary “Frankenstein” imaginings, the creature has moved far from the Karloff days of a giant figure with a flat-topped noggin and bolts protruding from his neck. In 1975’s “The Rocky Horror Picture Show,” the title creation is a musclebound blond adonis and in 1985’s “Weird Science,” a freak electrical accident brings Kelly LeBrock to life. And in "Poor Things," Stone's character is the object of several men's sexual cravings.
“The original ‘Frankenstein’ story was about power and playing God, less so than being about desire. Latter-day retellings of the legend are definitely more about wish fulfillment,” Cody says. With “Weird Science,” the creators are “these two teenage boys so of course they want to create the hottest woman imaginable.”
And in “Lisa Frankenstein,” the Creature is made more attractive through Lisa’s love and care. "He arguably doesn't look great when he first comes out of the ground. So he has a glow-up like Lisa.”
veryGood! (1834)
Related
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Avalanche kills 1 backcountry skier, leaves 2 others with head injuries in Alaska
- Paramount Global lays off hundreds in latest round of media job cuts: Reports
- How to get over a break up during Valentine's Day
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- 'Gin and Juice' redux: Dre, Snoop collab on pre-mixed cocktail 30 years after hit song
- 13-year-old South Carolina girl rescued from kidnapper in Florida parking lot, police say
- Putin says Russia prefers Biden to Trump because he’s ‘more experienced and predictable’
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Human remains and car found in creek linked to 1982 cold case, North Carolina police say
Ranking
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- How to get over a break up during Valentine's Day
- Environmental groups sue to force government to finalize ship speed rules that protect rare whales
- The Daily Money: Expect a smaller Social Security bump in 2025
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- A Tennessee House panel advances a bill that would criminalize helping minors get abortions
- Putin says Russia prefers Biden to Trump because he’s ‘more experienced and predictable’
- California mansion sits on edge of a cliff after after Dana Point landslide: See photos
Recommendation
'Most Whopper
Geraldo Rivera takes new TV role with NewsNation after departure from Fox News
Leopard Is the Print You Want To Be Spotted In- The Best Deals From Kate Spade, Amazon, J.Crew, and More
Virginia Utilities Seek Unbridled Rate Adjustments for Unproven Small Modular Nuclear Reactors in Two New Bills
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
Jon Stewart on why he's returning to The Daily Show and what to expect
How Ben Affleck Helped Jennifer Lopez With New Musical This Is Me...Now
As Marvel reveals the new ‘Fantastic Four’ cast, here’s a look back at all the past versions