Bride of Frankenstein Biography Flash a weekly Biography.
Bride of Frankenstein fans, buckle up, because for a character canonically onscreen for maybe ten minutes, our gal is absolutely everywhere this week—and I’m not just talking about those people on TikTok using a white streak wig as an excuse to avoid actual costumes.
First, the humongous headline: Maggie Gyllenhaal just dropped the teaser trailer for her bold reimagining, The Bride!—no exclamation point, no impact. Jessie Buckley is the Bride alongside Christian Bale’s monster. The trailer is giving me “punk rock in pin curls” vibes, with a chromed-out 1930s Chicago and enough existential dread to fill a mad scientist’s notebook. Warner Bros. is hyping that one up so hard, you’d think we’re all actually lining up to be reanimated. The social feeds are split between “queen, she’s slaying” and “how dare you sully Elsa Lanchester’s name,” so you know we’re in proper culture war territory. The film won’t hit theaters until March 2026, because apparently directors now schedule around Guillermo del Toro like he’s Marvel Phase Four, but the trailer’s out now and you cannot escape it. YouTube comments are a fever dream—as always.
Meanwhile, our old bride is back streaming, just in time for the “everyone’s goth for October” season. Amazon Prime Video stuffed the 1935 original Bride of Frankenstein into its Universal Monsters slate, so it’s easier than ever to revisit her iconic, hissing, not-at-all-into-this wife energy. If you haven’t rewatched it lately, prepare to be reminded she has more impact in five minutes than some instagirls have in their whole career.
But wait, there’s Frankenstein drama! Guillermo del Toro’s Netflix Frankenstein is killing it, but—plot twist—he totally cut out the Bride. Yep, arguably the most famous plus-one in horror, and she doesn’t even get a walk-on. Twitter—sorry, X—did what it does: half the people are incensed (“Justice for Bride!”), the other half are posting memes of the monster swiping left. Del Toro’s costume designer even dropped little nods to the 1935 Bride in Mia Goth’s wardrobe, like bandages echoing that iconic look. “We look at Elsa all the time,” she said in a recent interview. It’s like the Bride is haunting Hollywood even when she’s not on screen.
On socials, #BrideOfFrankenstein was flaming up again because of Gyllenhaal’s trailer, with some speculating she’s never been more relevant—and not just for people planning last-minute Halloween looks.
No sightings today of the Bride herself on Threads, unless you count that one gif of someone yelling “She’s ALIVE!” with bedhead. Kindred spirits.
That’s it for this week’s all-things-Bride update. Subscribe if you never want to miss the resurrection—and search the term Biography Flash for more great biographies. Thanks for listening. Now go reanimate your social life.
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