'Victor Frankenstein' - Review - Chris At The Pictures

Sunday 6 December 2015

'Victor Frankenstein' - Review



★ ★ ½ ☆ 

James McAvoy and Daniel Radcliffe star in this empty but entertainingly bonkers gothic bromance. We meet Igor (Radcliffe) as a lowly circus freak with a penchant for medicine, rescued from a life of misery by the good doctor Frankenstein (McAvoy) and hired to assist in the creation of the infamous monster. 

The McAvoy/Radcliffe combo is as gleeful as you expect, the two of them obviously having a whale of a time bouncing off each other (sometimes literally) with great bravado, whilst Andrew Scott as a god-fearing police inspector grumbles and scowls somewhere in the background like someone who never got invited to the cool kids’ party. Our only female character, Lorelei (played by Downton Abbey alumna Jessica Brown Findlay), is savagely underwritten and made almost un-necessary by the narrative, somewhat marring the image of female empowerment stemming from Mary Shelley’s success with the original book.

London streets, factories and lecture halls locations are suitably grimy, smog-filled and dim, but the film as a whole is never in danger of taking itself too seriously: it bristles with camp energy of the Hammer variety, a healthy dose of grinding steampunk cogs and a little cameo from Mark Gatiss thrown in on the off-chance the gothic milieu wasn’t obvious enough. The body-horror beasties created in the lab are also a neat fusion of gooey practical effects and a dash of CGI wizardry.

Though the film goes to great lengths to convince you otherwise, we never actually learn anything new, deep or meaningful about the character just by seeing him from Igor’s perspective, save for the idea that perhaps Victor Frankenstein spent most of his time perfecting a Tim Curry impression. I suppose the film is somewhat successful in making you remember the man instead of the monster…but not quite for the reason it wants.

The film is scripted by Max Landis, author of this year’s American Ultra and a Fantastic Four script that never saw the light of day. On the evidence of Victor Frankenstein, I’m not entirely sure that Landis’ vision would have turned out much better than Trank’s: more enjoyable, perhaps, but still with all the depth of a teaspoon.

Yes, it’s ridiculous, yes it lets its own madcap attitude get the better of it and of course, we really didn’t need a Frankenstein origins story in the first place…but I won’t lie to you; the audience I sat with had a riot. ‘Oh, what pish!’ cries McAvoy, spittle flying from his mile-wide grin. Precisely!