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FRANKENSTEIN – Alexandre Desplat
Original Review by Jonathan Broxton
It’s astonishing to think that there have been more than 50 cinematic adaptations of the story of Frankenstein since it was first penned, one haunted summer in 1818, by the then 20-year-old English author Mary Shelley. In writing Frankenstein Shelley essentially invented the science fiction literary genre as we know it; before Frankenstein, stories about the unnatural or the fantastic were usually supernatural, rooted in magic, myth, or divine intervention. Shelley’s innovation was to ground the creation of life in the science of the time, and it changed everything. On film, adaptations have differed wildly in tone and approach, from the early classic James Whale films starring Boris Karloff, to the Hammer horror films of the 1950s and 60s with Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing, Mel Brooks’s campy comedy Young Frankenstein, and director Kenneth Branagh’s Gothic take from 1994. This new version, by the Oscar-winning Mexican director Guillermo del Toro, may be the best of them all. Read more…

