Poging GOUD - Vrij
Del Toro's most marvelous creature
Los Angeles Times
|October 16, 2025
'Frankenstein,' the director's best film, considers monstrous men past and present.
JACOB ELORDI gives a bone-breaking and heartbreaking performance as the Creature in Guillermo del Toro's "Frankenstein." He could use a companion.
"Frankenstein" has haunted Guillermo del Toro since he was a kid who barely reached the Creature's knees.
Back in 2011, the writer-director was already tinkering with a version of the monster that resembled a blend of Iggy Pop and Boris Karloff with jagged sutures, gaunt wrinkles and a crushed nose. Since then, Del Toro has made changes.
The 2025 model is played by Jacob Elordi, a 6-foot-5 actor often cast as the ideal human specimen in movies like “Saltburn” and who here howls to life with handsome features and rock star swagger. But your eyes keep staring at his pale, smooth seams. He doesn't look hand-stitched - he looks a little like a modern android.
MIA GOTH plays two roles in Del Toro's adaptation.Of course he does. The decades have given Del Toro time to think about what truly scares him. It's not monsters. He loves all disfigured nasties, be they swamp creatures, eyeball-less ogres or bolt-headed Hellboys. It's tech bros, like the ones weaseling into Hollywood, who give their every innovation a sterile sheen.
"Frankenstein" is the director's lifelong passion project: He doesn't just want to make a "Frankenstein" but the "Frankenstein," so he's faithfully set his adaptation in the past. But he's adjusted the wiring so that 1850s Europe reminds us of Silicon Valley. The result is the best movie of his career.
This Baron Victor Frankenstein (Oscar Isaac) is a short-sighted egomaniac who barks over his critics while jabbing the air with his fingers. "I fail to see why modesty is considered a virtue," he says with a snort.
Dit verhaal komt uit de October 16, 2025-editie van Los Angeles Times.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Fix slow vote count to end conspiracy talk
State should spend more, mainly because of extra cost and time to count mail-in ballots
4 mins
June 15, 2026
Los Angeles Times
The right wing’s war on science could get worse
One of the rules I came to live by during my years of covering global trouble spots is: Never assume that things can’t get worse.
5 mins
June 15, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Pratt calls office fire ‘suspicious’
Last January, Spencer Pratt’s house in Pacific Palisades was razed by the raging flames of the Palisades fire.
3 mins
June 15, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Yamamoto's pitching solid All-Star case
On the 13th of July, Dave Roberts will reveal his selection for the National League's starting pitcher in the All-Star Game.
3 mins
June 15, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Curaçao makes history but loses
For 37 minutes on Sunday, Curaçao stayed with four-time champion Germany, with the World Cup first-timers daring to believe they could pull off the unimaginable.
4 mins
June 15, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Pokémon GO deal went bad; robbery suspects arrested
Two people have been arrested in San Francisco and booked into the Juvenile Justice Center on robbery and conspiracy charges after allegedly assaulting and stealing from someone trying to sell Pokémon cards.
1 min
June 15, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Ousted park biologist's suit over trans flag display is rejected
What began as an act of solidarity ultimately took a bitter turn for a National Park Service biologist.
2 mins
June 15, 2026
Los Angeles Times
The next big thing in restaurants? Small and steady growth
Shops that aren't trying to be instantly Instagram-famous might be part of a correction after 20 years of excess
4 mins
June 15, 2026
Los Angeles Times
Trump says U.S., Iran have a peace deal
Pact would reopen key strait as nuclear issues and other details are negotiated.
3 mins
June 15, 2026
Los Angeles Times
L.A. prosecutor persists with vote fraud inquiry
First Assistant U.S. Atty. Bill Essayli — President Trump’s loyalist federal prosecutor in Los Angeles — has not been shy in recent days about his intention to ferret out voter fraud in California’s primary election and criminally charge those responsible.
5 mins
June 15, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

