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| Image courtesy of Warner Bros. |
I’m always pleased to see directors take wild swings, some
of which connect (Darren Aronofsky’s unfairly maligned and kind of brilliant “Mother!”)
and some of which miss the mark (Richard Kelly’s “Southland Tales” and Emerald Fennell’s
recent “Wuthering Heights” adaptation).
Sadly, Maggie Gyllenhaal’s outrageous and visually stylish “The
Bride!” belongs to the latter camp. It’s a movie with almost nonstop energy,
although it clearly doesn’t know how to channel that energy into something coherent
or captivating.
The film often looks incredible and there references galore –
“Bride of Frankenstein” obviously and “Bonnie & Clyde” but also, strangely,
“Young Frankenstein” during a scene in which the filmmakers thought it would be
a good idea to recreate the famous “Puttin’ on the Ritz” sequence from Mel
Brooks’ picture.
One must throw all sense of logic out the door while
watching “The Bride!,” which is set during the 1930s, but features modern music
and a hodgepodge of other styles and language that are drawn from other eras.
At the film’s beginning, a young woman named Ida (Jessie
Buckley) does some sort of work for a notorious gangster (Zlatko Buric) in
Chicago. She gets a little rowdy at a club one night and two hoods (John Magaro
and Matthew Maher) with whom she is sitting end up killing her. Somewhat
unexplainably, the woman has been possessed by the spirit of Mary Shelley (also
Buckley), who pops up in black and white to speak to her.
Shortly thereafter, Frankenstein’s monster, known as Frank
(Christian Bale), shows up in Chicago at the home of a mad scientist (Annette
Bening) saying that he’s lonely and needs a mate. She helps him dig up the body
of Ida, whom he renames Penelope, and brings her back to life. In the process,
she spits up some black goo, some of which stains part of her face.
The two instantly find themselves in trouble after attending
a speakeasy type of club, where Penelope is harassed by two men, whom Frank
ends up killing. The two go on the run, with the newspapers reporting about the
search for the “monster killers” and two detectives (Peter Sarsgaard and
Penelope Cruz) on their trail.
“The Bride!” wans to have its cake and eat it too. There’s a
musical number, some grotesquely graphic violence, elements of gangster
pictures, a bit of horror thrown in, a romance (sort of), and some nods to
other genres (Jake Gyllenhaal pops up as an arrogant song and dance man with
whose movies Frank is obsessed).
This is not a film without context or ideas. It is made
clear that Penelope is a woman who, having been created at the request of a
man, has a fate that is seemingly not hers to control, that is, until she
decides to start doing things her way. At the same time, Frank is not overbearing
and abusive toward women as nearly every other man in the film appears to be.
During the course of the picture, the bride decides she
wants to have agency of her own as do the film’s other women – Bening’s
scientist and, especially, Cruz’s detective who exists in a world in which she
isn’t taken too seriously by her male coworkers. At times, this material is
promising – at others, a little too on the nose, especially during a scene in
which Buckley shouts “me too!” over and over.
However, the film is all over the map thematically and the
film overall feels disjointed. The manner in which Buckley, who’s the
frontrunner for best actress for her powerful turn in “Hamnet,” was seemingly
directed is a bit mind-boggling. At times, she speaks as the voice of reason,
while at others she goes off on strange tangents in weird voices - during one scene
she shouts numerous words ending in “mate,” such as stalemate or checkmate,
while in another she does an extended Marlene Dietrich impersonation. Bale, on
the other hand, veers from calm and collected to melodramatic shouting.
I’ll give the filmmakers credit – this is a movie with almost nonstop energy and a fair amount of chutzpah. It’s a picture that takes risks. Unfortunately, in this case, it’s not one in which the risks pay off. It’s one that’s destined to be a curio, rather than a picture with the lasting power of the numerous movies to which it pays homage.






