Why Frankenstein should win the best picture Oscar
Briefly

Why Frankenstein should win the best picture Oscar
"Guillermo del Toro has spent his career humanising monsters, once calling them the patron saints of our blissful imperfection, so his adaptation of Frankenstein was always going to be a match made in heaven. The Mexican film-maker's passion project turns Mary Shelley's famous novel about the dangers of hubris and playing God into a touching tale about generational trauma, parental abandonment and the healing power of forgiveness."
"Fantasy, horror and sci-fi, however, are genres that notoriously don't do well at the Academy Awards, apart from in the technical categories. Yes, Del Toro is one of the few film-makers to get a best picture Oscar for a fantasy/sci-fi film in 2018 for his amphibian love story, The Shape of Water, but that win was an exception, not the rule."
"As with his other films, Frankenstein is a macabre marvel to behold; shadowy rooms in dingy grand buildings, either lit by candles or a seemingly never-ending golden sunset, filled with grisly dismembered corpses, the skin partly peeled off. Elordi, who spent up to 10 hours a day in the makeup chair, is transformed into a Creature that looks more like a brooding cadaver than grotesque ogre."
Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein adaptation reimagines Mary Shelley's classic novel as a narrative exploring generational trauma, parental abandonment, and forgiveness rather than solely focusing on hubris and playing God. Oscar Isaac portrays Victor, an eccentric scientist who brings a creature made from dead body parts to life, played by Jacob Elordi after extensive makeup application. The film blends horror, sci-fi, and melodrama through gothic fantasy aesthetics, featuring shadowy candlelit rooms and golden sunsets contrasting with Mia Goth's colorful insect-inspired costumes as Elizabeth. While del Toro previously won Best Picture for The Shape of Water, fantasy and sci-fi films rarely succeed in major Oscar categories, presenting significant challenges for this visually sumptuous and powerfully crafted adaptation.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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