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FRANKENSTEIN (2025) - Film Review
Guillermo Del Toro’s Frankenstein isn’t horror, it’s resurrection. It moves like scripture, lit by thunder and guilt. Every frame feels touched by obsession and grace, from the trembling hands of Victor Frankenstein to the sorrowful stillness of his creation. The cinematography glows with holy menace, the lab a cathedral of flickering light and sin. By the end, you don’t fear the monster. You mourn him. Del Toro doesn’t remake Shelley’s myth, he worships it, then bleeds into
Nov 11, 20253 min read
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