The Prague Post - Del Toro delivers his monster, 'Frankenstein', at Venice

EUR -
AED 4.299797
AFN 74.931614
ALL 96.031574
AMD 440.479809
AOA 1073.632019
ARS 1630.923879
AUD 1.658735
AWG 2.110384
AZN 1.991069
BAM 1.957572
BBD 2.356632
BDT 143.793374
BHD 0.441991
BIF 3477.543108
BMD 1.17081
BND 1.491605
BOB 8.084868
BRL 5.951814
BSD 1.170009
BTN 108.01968
BWP 15.698335
BYN 3.415189
BYR 22947.867085
BZD 2.353219
CAD 1.622572
CDF 2692.862132
CHF 0.922241
CLF 0.026918
CLP 1062.884195
CNY 8.028711
CNH 7.989575
COP 4321.376075
CRC 544.269303
CUC 1.17081
CUP 31.026453
CVE 110.364877
CZK 24.380949
DJF 208.360551
DKK 7.472634
DOP 70.751913
DZD 154.895116
EGP 62.392677
ERN 17.562143
ETB 182.71729
FJD 2.590357
FKP 0.884233
GBP 0.868934
GEL 3.137852
GGP 0.884233
GHS 12.881943
GIP 0.884233
GMD 86.055927
GNF 10266.290664
GTQ 8.9511
GYD 244.79212
HKD 9.170184
HNL 31.075122
HRK 7.538722
HTG 153.391609
HUF 375.716879
IDR 19879.175267
ILS 3.601691
IMP 0.884233
INR 108.120574
IQD 1532.787123
IRR 1540639.010301
ISK 143.799546
JEP 0.884233
JMD 184.186683
JOD 0.830104
JPY 185.184012
KES 151.490849
KGS 102.387268
KHR 4687.98221
KMF 499.935712
KPW 1053.715591
KRW 1726.657212
KWD 0.361886
KYD 0.975028
KZT 559.409525
LAK 25810.034579
LBP 104795.918983
LKR 368.813765
LRD 215.285633
LSL 19.207782
LTL 3.457096
LVL 0.708211
LYD 7.42572
MAD 10.885551
MDL 20.148115
MGA 4861.150068
MKD 61.686862
MMK 2458.707556
MNT 4181.642855
MOP 9.439759
MRU 46.500081
MUR 54.747097
MVR 18.089
MWK 2028.840729
MXN 20.374509
MYR 4.655158
MZN 74.873654
NAD 19.207782
NGN 1611.209698
NIO 43.057679
NOK 11.152207
NPR 172.834243
NZD 2.00562
OMR 0.450179
PAB 1.169999
PEN 4.008608
PGK 5.137649
PHP 69.525596
PKR 326.427607
PLN 4.253036
PYG 7589.868588
QAR 4.266561
RON 5.094543
RSD 117.344404
RUB 92.024048
RWF 1712.955071
SAR 4.39342
SBD 9.423358
SCR 16.267549
SDG 703.656832
SEK 10.78531
SGD 1.490218
SLE 28.805163
SOS 668.685149
SRD 43.838662
STD 24233.39373
STN 24.521144
SVC 10.238265
SYP 129.432241
SZL 19.203476
THB 37.319602
TJS 11.121242
TMT 4.109542
TND 3.416892
TRY 52.087256
TTD 7.935843
TWD 37.133975
TZS 3047.034824
UAH 50.705169
UGX 4328.714002
USD 1.17081
UYU 47.533016
UZS 14309.950047
VES 554.33992
VND 30830.342348
VUV 139.819173
WST 3.244211
XAF 656.514677
XAG 0.015136
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.164171
XCG 2.108745
XDR 0.818368
XOF 656.551158
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.296731
ZAR 19.094782
ZMK 10538.709692
ZMW 22.377104
ZWL 377.000196
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.14

    -0.18%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5000

    15.25

    -3.28%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.69

    -0.32%

  • RIO

    0.6500

    94.66

    +0.69%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    55.84

    -0.95%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    22.29

    -0.27%

  • BCE

    -0.4300

    23.83

    -1.8%

  • BCC

    0.9600

    74.71

    +1.28%

  • RELX

    -0.2500

    33.36

    -0.75%

  • NGG

    0.4600

    87.52

    +0.53%

  • VOD

    0.1700

    15.31

    +1.11%

  • BTI

    0.0900

    58.8

    +0.15%

  • AZN

    -2.0200

    200.81

    -1.01%

  • BP

    -0.2400

    47.24

    -0.51%

Del Toro delivers his monster, 'Frankenstein', at Venice
Del Toro delivers his monster, 'Frankenstein', at Venice / Photo: Tiziana FABI - AFP

Del Toro delivers his monster, 'Frankenstein', at Venice

Mexican director Guillermo del Toro gave birth to another monster Saturday, his big-budget "Frankenstein" movie, joking that the effort had left him worn out as his creation got its world premiere in Venice.

Text size:

The last creature he delivered here, the aquatic being in "The Shape of Water", swam off with the festival's top prize in 2017 before going on to triumph at the Oscars.

This latest version of the Mary Shelley masterpiece is also among the 21 films in competition for the Venice Film Festival's Golden Lion.

Del Toro's film is an elaborate, evocative production the director said he had been dreaming about making since he was a child.

In one early rave review, the Hollywood Reporter said the film "transcends horror in an emotionally charged take on Mary Shelley".

"I've been following the creature since I was a kid," the director told journalists at the Venice Film Festival ahead of the premiere.

"I always waited for the movie to be done in the right conditions, both creatively and in terms of achieving the scope that it needed for me to make it different, to make it at a scale that you could reconstruct the whole world," Del Toro said.

"And now I'm in post-partum depression."

It was surely no accident that the film got its premiere on what is know as Frankenstein Day -- the August 30 birthday of the novel's author, Mary Shelley.

- Dozens of versions -

Starring Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein and Jacob Elordi as his creation, the film is a no-holds-barred Gothic spectacle.

Following the scientist obsessed with inventing his own living creature, it explores themes of humanity, vengeance, unbridled will and the aftermath of that all-consuming hubris.

The film's rich visuals include the imposing tower where Frankenstein performs his experiments and the gruesome anatomical parts from which his creature is stitched together.

Not everyone was convinced however. "Variety" said the film "cost more than 'Titanic' and still looks like it was made for TV".

Since James Whale's seminal 1931 "Frankenstein" starring Boris Karloff, there have been a string of adaptations, testimony to the appeal of the story.

They range from serious takes such as "Mary Shelley's Frankenstein" of 1994 from Kenneth Branagh, to Mel Brooks's 1974 spoof "Young Frankenstein".

For Del Toro, Mary Shelley's novel tries to answer the question "What is it to be human?", he told journalists.

"I think that the movie tries to show imperfect characters and the right we have to remain imperfect. And the right we have to understand each other under the most oppressive of circumstances," he said.

"And there's no more urgent task than to remain human in a time where everything is pushing towards a bipolar understanding of our humanity," he said, referring to the modern world.

The Netflix-produced film will have a limited theatrical release in October before streaming in November.

- Dark Danish humour -

While "Frankenstein" is the biggest production launching Saturday, "The Last Viking" by Danish director and writer Anders Thomas Jensen and "Below the Clouds" by Italian documentary maker Gianfranco Rosi drew enthusiastic applause at their press screenings.

"The Last Viking" is a darkly comic, sometimes disturbing drama about mental health and identity politics, featuring Danish actor Mads Mikkelsen as a suicidal man with a personality disorder.

"Below the Clouds" is a sumptuous black-and-white rendering of the gritty and historic Italian port of Naples by Rosi, one of Europe's most acclaimed documentary makers who won the main prize in Venice in 2013 with "Sacro GRA".

On the sidelines of the festival on the Lido Saturday, several thousand protesters marched against Israel's siege of Gaza, a demonstration called by left-wing political groups in northeast Italy.

The Gaza war was one of the main talking points in the lead up to the festival due to an open letter denouncing the Israeli government and calling on the festival to speak out.

The letter, drafted by a group of independent directors called Venice4Palestine, has garnered more than 2,000 signatures from film professionals, organisers told AFP.

B.Svoboda--TPP