Recently, I read a review of a Netflix western called The Abandons. This series is an upscale project starring some notable actors and featuring gorgeous scenery. The script is rudimentary: a motley crew of cattle ranchers defend their range against encroaching mining interests. The two opposing clans are lead by headstrong matrons and the program tilts toward some kind of catfight between the two female protagonists. The good guys are a rainbow coalition of Indians, feminists, and other disenfranchised people. The villains are entrenched politically and their machine controls the organs of the law and commerce. This is the kind of show in which the viewer has a sinking feeling when a cute and inoffensive dog is introduced -- you will win your wager if you bet that the villains will kill the poor canine before the end of the first episode. In the essay on the show, the critic noted that the series is reasonably entertaining but, nonetheless, represents a MVC production with the initials standing for "Minimum Viable Content" -- The Abandons, the reviewer suggested, exemplifies what is wrong with contemporary cable and streaming TV, that is, shows structured to keep you watching with a sort of grim persistence but which are otherwise forgettable and meretricious. Normally, I wouldn't put much stock into a dour opinion of this sort but perceived almost immediately what was meant by "minimum viable content" when I watched Guillermo del Toro's decidedly maximalist version of Frankenstein -- in the first ten minutes of the show, the Monster attacks a company of shipwrecked Danish sailors, clambering aboard the ice-bound vessel, hurling men into bonfires and pots of flaming oil, and sustaining about 20 mortal wounds, none of which slow him down,before plunging into icy water foaming up through slabs of ice shattered by a charge from a spectacularly lethal-looking blunderbuss. The havoc is exquisitely choreographed; the tall ship trapped in the ice looks fabulous as does the steppe of snow extending to a horizon rimmed with colors like a gas chromatograph's output or a tequila sunrise. The monster's roar is deep and resonant -- one can imagine what it sounded like on a theater audio system (an earthquake I presume). The creature's pallid features and jigsaw-scarred face make him look like a saint or martyr in an El Greco painting, elongated and greyish mucous crowned with wounded and ecstatic eyes. There is nothing minimalist about this spectacle -- everything is contrived to create the maximum impression on the viewer and del Toro manages to transform his film into a miraculous Wunderkabinet of odd and morbid sights: there are ranges of mountains that stretch across the horizon like the menacing peaks glimpsed in the background of a Brueghel painting ("November: the Return of the Flock"); corpses are looted from a battlefield, bodysnatchers displacing sinister flocks of black ravens -- the battlefield looks like the aftermath of Waterloo, lit by flaming heaps of rubbish and freezing with snow, littered with dead bodies out to the horizon. Bodysnatchers seize hanged men who are sent to the gallows in platoons, three convicts hanged at a time and their bodies still spasming as Dr. Frankenstein inspects the teeth of unfortunates about to be executed. Alleyways are full of butchered animals and pigs' heads line a corridor. The mad doctor's laboratory is a pinnacle of masonry perched on the very edge of a turbulent ocean that seems to be about four-hundred feet high, a grim edifice that features a screaming stone gorgon or Medusa-head looming over the charnel house full of fragmentary corpses; ballrooms are a quarter-mile long and huge palatial mansions rise over foggy basins and autumnal trees. There are masive explosions, vast pillars of fire, and still-life color shots that resemble some of the more grotesque visions of the photographer Joel-Peter Witkin -- a bouquet of flowers is clutched in a cadaver's hand severed from the body at the elbow, strange, glistening surgical instruments also on display. The women look like Elizabeth Siddon, the famous pre-Raphaelite model with the flaming red hair and they wear outlandish bonnets with spirals of silk ribbon wrapped around their ice-white faces. Corpses are carried to their graves in torpedo-shaped anthropomorphic caskets chiseled from alabaster; the dead face wrapped in lustrous scarlet is covered when the mask-lid of the sarcophagus is screwed down. In one scene, the camera surveys a gloomy, brown alleyway in some reeking, smoky city. A man walks down the alley with his hands clutched behind his back. Both hands are covered by bright green gloves, the only color in the otherwise monochrome composition. The costumes, sets, and palatial interiors are all ornate and grotesque. Everything is immense and colossal. (Sometimes, the extravagance of the set decorator goes awry -- in one scene, the monster shivers in the corner of a mill full of elaborate wooden gears and ratchets and flywheels; the place is infested with an army of rats, and is an exquisite creation -- there is only one problem, there's no water anywhere near this huge mill and, therefore, no way for the intricate contrivance of gears and pinions and rotating axles to be powered.) The whole thing is colossal, vast, and teeming with elegant detail. It's certainly the hallucinatory opposite of the idea of MVC.
I often find del Toro's films to be lavish, but empty. (This was my impression of Pan's Labyrinth and Nightmare Alley as well as The Shape of Water which I thought was inert, overwhelmed by its design.) Frankenstein is a better film, more powerful emotionally, and the performances of its actors fight the sets and decor to a draw -- the mere humans aren't overwhelmed by the spectacle but hold their own. The film's narrative is clear enough and del Toro obviously admires Mary Shelley's novel because he incorporates much material from the book into his film. The ardor with which the film was made is evident in every frame and the movie is wonderful in many ways. I still sense something lacking in the picture and the fantastically beautiful set design, decor, and costumes seem to be compensating for a certain hollowness at the heart of the endeavor. That said, this movie is clearly del Toro's labor of love and it is impressive in all respects.
Victor Frankenstein is abused by his fierce, atheistic father, a scientist who beats the boy with a cane (on his face no less) for failing to properly answer anatomical questions: he won't cane the boy on his hands because a surgeon needs those instruments for his trade but the "face...that is for vanity." Victor's mother adores her son but seems remote from her cruel husband. When she dies in childbirth, Victor is bereft. Shortly thereafter, the old doctor dies and is buried in the family crypt. Victor figures out that galvanic charges can animate corpses and make them cry out, even enable them to catch balls pitched their way -- this is visualized in a macabre scene in which parts of a cadaver riveted to a board are displayed by Victor in a dissecting theater. "It's not science, it's a crucifixion!" someone declares. One of the curious attending the lecture with the animate corpse is a German named Heinrich Harlander; he's the scion of an arms manufacturing company. Harlander finances Victor's experiments which take place at an immense, abandoned fortress on the cliffs above the sea. Harlander's niece, Elizabeth (Mia Goth) is betrothed to little William Frankenstein, Victor's brother whose birth resulted in the death of his mother. Elizabeth is a spectral figure, herself enamored of elaborate dissection specimens and bugs -- she reads books on entomology and, although doomed to marry William, in fact, falls in love with Victor. After much lurid carnage, including a visit to a European battlefield with the sardonic , Harlander, Victor animates his creature. (Harlander misses out on most of the fun; he has acquired syphilis and is perishing: "devotees of Venus, become slaves to Mercury".) The tall, emaciated-looking figure is kept chained in a huge crypt where Victor, following in the footsteps of his abusive father, torments the creature. Despairing of the creature's intelligence, Victor sets the laboratory on fire using not a few but a thousand or so red tins full of some sort of inflammatory accelerant. The monster escapes and hides in a mill in the middle of nowhere -- it is here that the monster reads Milton, taught his letters by a blind shepherd and a little girl. About ten huge wolves attack and rend the blind shepherd into pieces. The monster escapes through the forest full of skeletons dumped there from the experiments in the nearby fortress tower. A year passes and the monster shows up on William's wedding day to embrace and threaten Elizabeth. Confronting Victor, who remains in love with Elizabeth, the creature demands that the scientist alleviate his suffering by making him a mate. Victor refuses. When Victor sees the creature embracing Elizabeth, he recklessly fires his revolver. The monster can be wounded but his damaged flesh regenerates. Elizabeth lacks this miraculous ability and she is killed by a stray bullet. The monster and creatures pursue one another toward the North Pole, locked in a duel to the death. The duel ends at the Danish sea-captain's ice-breaker, locked in the snow and ice floes. The Dane is like Ahab -- he is pursuing the fata morgana of sailing to the North Pole although his men are about to mutiny. Victor is grievously wounded. The monster demands that the seafarers surrender the dying man to him. When they refuse, the creature again attacks the vessel and its crew. He breaches the boat and confronts his creator where there is a weird sort of reconciliation. Freed from the burden of vengeance, the Monster uses his titanic strength to shove the three-master out of its prison of ice. The Dane now understands that his pursuit of the North Pole is obsessive and as megalomaniacal as Victor's promethean effort to overcome death. He tells his men to set sail for home.
The story is lucidly told and so spectacularly illustrated that its various plot holes are not really apparent. The film is divided into a prologue (the monster's attack on the ship in the high Arctic), Victor's story, the Creature's story, and an epilogue (the final encounter on the ship, the reconciliation between Victor and his creation, and the Monster's generosity in freeing the ship from the ice.) The writing, by del Toro, is crisp and excellent -- there are many great lines. I have my reservations about this film, but can't exactly pinpoint them -- I'm afraid it's some kind Puritan instinct in me: the movie is so lavishly beautiful that I attribute flaws to it, just on the basis of its visual splendor. There's no doubt in my mind that the picture is often thrilling, majestic, and, even, intelligent.