Watched: 03/08/2024
Format: Hulu
Viewing: First
Director: Yorgos Lanthimos
Selection: Me
I remember seeing the trailer for Poor Things (2023) and immediately saying "well, I would like to see that".
It is true: one of my favorite films is Bride of Frankenstein. Not "favorite horror film" or "favorite 1930's movie". Bride of Frankenstein just lands every note correctly - storywise, visually, casting, etc... It's simply a favorite. And it wasn't hard to see echoes of that film in the trailer.
When learning about 1930's horror films, I delved a bit into the German Expressionism that informed the aesthetic. And this movie, from the trailers again, seemed to be saying "hey, nerds, we play with some of that stuff".
The look, the lens selection, the occasional use of a keyhole POV into the world, and certainly the artificiality of the sets and astounding set design seem to call back to what you might find in The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari, Nosferatu, or some early Fritz Lang (I won't pretend I have a wider base of knowledge in this arena than I do). It's certainly not a 1:1, and Lanthimos and his design team go above and beyond, creating a world unique to this film, entirely built upon sets and where the artificiality and surreal environs are the point.
I would expect some of the detail in early horror also informed Lanthimos' inclusion of details like the Pig-Chicken and other oddities seen in the film (not that Bride of Frankenstein doesn't delve into it's own pockets of weirdness).
There's also a tiny dash of Wizard of Oz in there, but what movie worth it's salt doesn't nod a bit toward that film?