The Bride

A woman born of electricity. A man driven by obsession.

5.3
19851h 54m

Doctor Frankenstein creates a mate for his monster, a woman called Eva, who promptly rejects the male creature. In turn, the doctor becomes obsessed with Eva, and tries to make her a perfect Victorian woman.

Production

Logo for Columbia Pictures

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: The Bride (1985) - Trailer HD 1080p

The Bride (1985) - Trailer HD 1080p

Thumbnail for video: Actor Clancy Brown Discusses Jennifer Beals

Actor Clancy Brown Discusses Jennifer Beals

Thumbnail for video: Tour Of The Grounds

Tour Of The Grounds

Thumbnail for video: Frankenstein Suave

Frankenstein Suave

Thumbnail for video: TV Spot

TV Spot

Cast

Photo of Sting

Sting

Frankenstein

Photo of Geraldine Page

Geraldine Page

Mrs. Baumann

Photo of Quentin Crisp

Quentin Crisp

Dr Zahlus

Photo of Gary Shail

Gary Shail

1st Circus Hand

Photo of Carl Chase

Carl Chase

2nd Circus Hand

Photo of Tony Haygarth

Tony Haygarth

Tavern Keeper

Photo of Janine Duvitski

Janine Duvitski

Serving Girl

Photo of John Alexander

John Alexander

Circus Performer

More Like This

Reviews

W

Wuchak

8/10

**_A fairy tale version of the Frankenstein yarn with Sting and Jennifer Beals_**

In Geneva of the early 1800s, Baron Frankenstein (Sting) intends on making a bride for the ‘monster’ he created. While the monster (Clancy Brown) wanders the heart of Europe with a dwarf (David Rappaport), the lovely female creature (Beals) is educated at Castle Frankenstein and is intrigued by a noble captain (Cary Elwes), which doesn’t sit well with her creator.

“The Bride” (1985) combines Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein with “The Bride of Frankenstein” (1935) and the tone of Hammer films, such as "Vampire Circus" and “The Evil of Frankenstein.” It doesn’t include the creation story of the original monster, but is rather a creative continuation of that story. So, it’s a sequel.

The top Frankenstein movies make you care for the creature and this is one of the better ones in this regard. The best part is his friendship with the dwarf and their misadventures in a circus. But I found the other part worthy too, which explores interesting themes. For instance, the risk and consequences of governing males in a patriarchal society giving education and emancipation to women.

The flick failed at the box office and is obscure, but it shouldn’t be. While contrived in a comic book way (like Shelley’s book), it has heart and imagination, as well as the confidence to take its time. It is superior to Corman’s “Frankenstein Unbound” (1990) and at least on par with Kenneth Branagh’s “Frankenstein” (1994).

The film runs 1 hour, 58 minutes, and was shot in France (such as Sarlat-la-Canéda, Chateau de Cordes and Ain, Rhône-Alpes) with studio stuff done at Shepperton Studios, Shepperton, Surrey, England, which is just southwest of London.

GRADE: B+/A-

You've reached the end.