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Steven Pond of The Wrap called Frankenstein a “wildly enjoyable and deeply touching movie,” and claims that del Toro’s passion for the story “drips from every frame” of the upcoming film. Given that the filmmaker recently asserted that Frankenstein isn’t meant to be a cautionary tale about AI, but rather an unconventional yet complex family drama, Pond’s review of the film as “a remarkable achievement that in a way hijacks the flagship story of the horror genre and turns it into a tale of forgiveness,” implies that del Toro has squarely hit the mark in what he hopes to achieve with the movie.

While it may have taken a decade for del Toro to bring Frankenstein to the big screen, his love affair with the Mary Shelley’s tragic monster tale, famously first adapted for the screen by James Whale in 1931, goes back much farther than that.
“I’ve been following the creature since I was kid,” del Toro said in a press conference for Frankenstein in Venice (via Variety). “I waited for the movie to be done in the right conditions, both creatively in terms of achieving the scope to make it different, and to make it at a scale that you could reconstruct the whole world.”








