Experts break down the history of Frankenstein’s Bride, from Mary Shelley to Maggie Gyllenhaal’s “The Bride!,” and why the ...
As the monster and her Frankenstein, Jessie Buckley and Christian Bale serve up a messy, electrified take on 'Bonnie and ...
The lack of a rich, fully articulate origin text for the Bride, not to mention how imperfect and compromised her movie ...
Indian cricketer Kuldeep Yadav will marry his longtime partner Vanshika Chadha on March 14 in Mussoorie. The couple, childhood friends from Kanpur, saw their friendship grow into a lifelong ...
Amy Nicholson is the film critic of the Los Angeles Times. She is a current on-air voice at LAist and KCRW, and a member of the Los Angeles Film Critics Assn. and the National Society of Film Critics.
Most recently, the Bride, as a dramatic character, has been part of a series of creative reimaginings through an explicitly feminist lens. For instance, the dark coming of age comedy, Lisa ...
Bride planning a small adults-only ceremony faces family backlash when a relative threatens to skip the wedding over one ...
Meanwhile, Frankenstein’s monster (Christian Bale) has become so agonizingly lonely in his century of undead existence that he seeks out the eccentric Dr. Euphronius (a wonderfully wry Annette Bening) ...
Star Indian cricketer Kuldeep Yadav is set to marry his longtime partner, Vanshika Chadha, on March 14 in Mussoorie, ...
Directed by James Whale, the 1935 movie and its prequel, a 1931 adaptation of Mary Shelley's classic novel, laid the ...
The Bride!’ tells the story of two unusual beings trying to understand each other in a world that fears them. Even when the film feels uneven, the performances of Jessie Buckley and Christian Bale ...
The Bride! is such a swing-for-the-fences tonal smorgasbord that it demands to be seen in theaters. Perhaps more than once.