Try GOLD - Free
'This is autobiographical'
The Independent
|November 04, 2025
As Guillermo del Toro's version of 'Frankenstein' arrives on Netflix, he and the film's stars Oscar Isaac and Jacob Elordi speak to Clarisse Loughrey about its long gestation
Crack open Guillermo del Toro’s ribs, peer in the cavity inside, and there - where a beating and bloody heart should be - you'll find a copy of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. It’s the ur-text for so much of modern horror, yet when the filmmaker behind Pan’s Labyrinth and The Shape of Water describes the novel as “his Bible” and Boris Karloff’s film monster as his “Messiah”, it feels insufficient to say that he’s been merely inspired.
No, Del Toro is too ethereal for that - better to say he lives in communion with the young woman who began to write so feverishly one stormy Genevan night in 1816. He is our Father of Monsters, after all, and they all bear her Creature's scars: maligned, abandoned, and feared as they are. It's been his career's ambition to make Frankenstein, and after nearly two decades' worth of false starts and broken promises, it's finally come to fruition with a Netflix budget's worth of scale.
It's a beauty to behold, with that rich, Gothic lacquer that's come to characterise his work. Yet even if this is one of the most faithful adaptations ever made, it's the deviations from the text that hold the film's real power a sense that Del Toro's Frankenstein is his story as much as it is Shelley's. Its ache feels especially intimate.
“There are large portions of the movie that are autobiographical for me,” he tells me, sitting surrounded by candles and blood-red flowers the day after the film's UK premiere at the London Film Festival. “I do that because [Shelley] basically wrote an autobiography of her soul.”
“I know Mary Shelley through Guillermo, so I care for her through him,” says Jacob Elordi, who plays his Creature (Oscar Isaac stars as his creator, Victor Frankenstein). “For me, it’s Guillermo as an influence and how she has influenced him, the way he sees the world and his suffering and his pain. Because I see the Creature as an extension of that, you know?”
This story is from the November 04, 2025 edition of The Independent.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM The Independent
The Independent
I was bullied for dyslexia - let's spare kids the same fate
At school, I wasn't called “dyslexic” - I was called “lazy”.
3 mins
November 10, 2025
The Independent
Are we making a meal out of the foodie conversation?
After a food vlogger was kicked out of Borough Market for filming a review on his phone, Hannah Twiggs fears for the hospitality sector's love/hate relationship with social media
5 mins
November 10, 2025
The Independent
King leads Remembrance Sunday service at Cenotaph
King Charles has led the nation in the annual Remembrance Sunday service attended by thousands of war veterans at the Cenotaph in London.
2 mins
November 10, 2025
The Independent
Clooney playing himself is his least convincing role yet
Noah Baumbach's new film 'Jay Kelly' casts a rich, pampered A-lister as, well, a rich pampered A-lister, and like many such movies, it quickly wears out its welcome
4 mins
November 10, 2025
The Independent
Robots revolutionise home care for aged and vulnerable
“This is a medication reminder... Have you taken your medication?”
3 mins
November 10, 2025
The Independent
A lifeline, not a headline: join our campaign today
Editor-in-chief Geordie Greig on why The Independent has partnered with Missing People to launch the SafeCall drive
2 mins
November 10, 2025
The Independent
Banning strangulation porn? It could be too little, too late
As I touched the blooming bruises on my neck, I could feel pinpricks of shame creeping up my throat. I hoped that concealer might cover the splotches. I dabbed it on ineffectively before giving up and hoping my hair would cover the worst of it.
3 mins
November 10, 2025
The Independent
The Independent launches SafeCall campaign to help reach every missing child
Support The Independent and Missing People's bid to help secure safer futures for vulnerable young people in Britain
4 mins
November 10, 2025
The Independent
Have you forgotten about our own low-frills Freddie?
Q You have been writing about easyJet's 30th anniversary, and say the first flight on 10 November 1995 was “the start of the low-cost revolution in the skies”. But surely the pioneer of low-cost air travel was Freddie Laker's Skytrain?
1 mins
November 10, 2025
The Independent
City deliver ‘incredible’ gift for Guardiola’s landmark
The universe had decided that Liverpool would be the opponents on Pep Guardiola’s landmark day, he had said. And for the manager who changed the footballing world, there may have been no more gratifying way to enter the 1,000 club. It was a grand day for Guardiola, in every sense.
4 mins
November 10, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
