Director Maggie Gyllenhall's film The Bride is like the wayward child of the films Bonnie and Clyde and The Bride of Frankenstein (1933), and since it is a new interpretation from the point of view of the dead woman Ida (Jessie Buckley), it feels new even though what's happening seems also antiquated since it is still an old tale.
Set in 1936 Chicago, we get Frank (Christian Bale) coming to see Dr. Cornelia Euphronius (an amazing Annette Bening) whom he hopes will do him a favor – in this case animating a deceased woman's body to be his bride. Doc endearingly calls him Frank – since she learns that he was created by the legendary Dr. Frankenstein. When you do the math as Doc does, Frank is well over 100 years old. Let's say he's has taken a licking and has kept on ticking.
Doc has her own version of Igor in Greta (a creepy Jeannie Berlin), and as the discussion is had about this animation, you get the vibes of what has come before but in a new way. Bale's depiction of Frank is ingratiating but also humble – he knows what he is and is not making any excuses. He has also lived a long enough life that he no longer wants to be alone.
Meanwhile, we see Ida living her life and somewhat enjoying it unabashedly. When the spirit of Mary Shelley (also Buckley) finds her, she inhabits her body and causes Ida to become suddenly outspoken and unapologetic about things, and Buckley is a revelation as she brings this free spirited woman to life. Unfortunately, this gets her in trouble with a local mobster, and she is killed because of it. They bury her quickly and that should have been the end of her, but Frank and Doc are looking for a fresh grave, and they dig her up.
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| Ida is brought back to life |
The animation scene is familiar in the sense that we have seen it before – remember Colin Clive madly yelling "It's alive" when his monster moved, but Doc is more sedate when the animated Ida sits up and she says, "Your bride, Frank." It is in this very lowkey and practical way that Gyllenhall makes this scene the antithesis of what we expect from past Frankenstein films.
Frank and Ida don't really hit it off at first – yet it is a far cry from Elsa Lancaster's bride's outright rejection of the monster in The Bride of Frankenstein. In Gyllenhall's capable hands, Ida – who doesn't remember much of what happened to her – slowly warms up to him and gets to like Frank as a kindred spirit. She realizes that she has always been an oddball and Frank's as odd as they come.
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| The Bride and Frank's road trip |
Once they escape the confines of the Doc's house, they wander through the streets and revel in the freedom they experience. When confronted by two mobsters who want to abuse the Bride, Frank finally explodes as monsters often do and kills the men. This puts them on the run in the previously mentioned Bonnie and Clyde type of car ride that seems carefree, but the consequences of their actions are always hanging in the air around them.
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| The odd couple that clicks |
The rest is spoiler territory, but it is a tragedy that you know will end in catastrophe, and yet the indomitable spirits of the Bride and Frank seem like they cannot be destroyed, and the love they find is fragile and yet beautiful. Two broken people somehow have found a way to fix each other's physical and emotional injuries in ways that would otherwise seem impossible.
Cinematographer Lawrence Sher should be credited with creating a landscape that is appropriately muddled and dark, and yet also features instances of brightness when the moment calls for it. Composer Hildur Gudnadottir's score goes from being bleak to inspiring, and production designer Karen Murphy has created a believable 1930's backdrop that makes the atmosphere realistic and starkly dour.
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| Frank meets Ronnie Reed |
There is one scene that is a nod to Mel Brooks' Young Frankenstein when the Bride and Frank invade a high class party where Frank's cinematic hero Ronnie Reed (Jake Gyllenhall) is celebrating. They do a frenetic dance to "Putting on the Ritz" that gets the joint jumping and reminds us of the memorable scene in Brooks' film.
Overall, The Bride is a brutal, beautiful, and ugly film about an impossible love that features violent star crossed lovers that we somehow are rooting for despite their unforgivable actions. Buckley, Bale, and Bening give Oscar worthy performances that you will greatly appreciate.
I highly recommend this film and give it 4 out of five stars.
Please check out the trailer. It'll inspire you to see this film as soon as possible.
"Putting on the Ritz" Scene from Young Frankenstein
































