• The Daily Buzz
    • Politics
    • Science
  • PopVerse
    • Anime
    • Film & TV
    • Gaming
    • Literature and Books
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Pop Culture
    • Reviews
    • Sports
    • Theatre & Performing Arts
    • Heritage & History
  • The Wealth Wire
    • Business
    • Corporate World
    • Personal Markets
    • Startups
  • LifeSync
    • Beauty
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Food & Drinks
    • Health
    • Health & Wellness
    • Home & Decor
    • Relationships
    • Sustainability & Eco-Living
    • Travel
    • Work & Career
  • WorldWire
    • Africa
    • Antarctica
    • Asia
    • Australia
    • Europe
    • North America
    • South America
  • Silicon Scoop
    • AI
    • Apps
    • Big Tech
    • Cybersecurity
    • Gadgets & Devices
    • Mobile
    • Software & Apps
    • Web3 & Blockchain
No Result
View All Result
  • The Daily Buzz
    • Politics
    • Science
  • PopVerse
    • Anime
    • Film & TV
    • Gaming
    • Literature and Books
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Pop Culture
    • Reviews
    • Sports
    • Theatre & Performing Arts
    • Heritage & History
  • The Wealth Wire
    • Business
    • Corporate World
    • Personal Markets
    • Startups
  • LifeSync
    • Beauty
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Food & Drinks
    • Health
    • Health & Wellness
    • Home & Decor
    • Relationships
    • Sustainability & Eco-Living
    • Travel
    • Work & Career
  • WorldWire
    • Africa
    • Antarctica
    • Asia
    • Australia
    • Europe
    • North America
    • South America
  • Silicon Scoop
    • AI
    • Apps
    • Big Tech
    • Cybersecurity
    • Gadgets & Devices
    • Mobile
    • Software & Apps
    • Web3 & Blockchain
No Result
View All Result
BUZZTAINMENT
No Result
View All Result
Home Entertainment & Pop Culture Film & TV

Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein Has Jacob Elordi in Oscar Talks and It’s Completely Deserved

Riva by Riva
November 10, 2025
in Film & TV, Movie
0
Credits: The Hindu

Credits: The Hindu

0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Guillermo del Toro spent decades dreaming about making Frankenstein, and on November 7, 2025, that dream finally hit Netflix after a limited theatrical run and a Venice Film Festival premiere that left critics speechless. But here’s the twist nobody saw coming: the film isn’t really about Oscar Isaac’s manic Victor Frankenstein despite his operatic performance. It’s not about Mia Goth’s haunting Elizabeth or Christoph Waltz’s morally complicated mentor. This is Jacob Elordi’s movie from the moment his Creature lurches to life nearly an hour into the runtime, and what he does with the role is nothing short of miraculous. The 28-year-old Australian actor known for playing pretty boys in Euphoria and The Kissing Booth underwent a 10-hour daily transformation involving 42 separate prosthetic pieces to become Mary Shelley’s misunderstood monster, and the result has critics using words like “masterful,” “revelation,” and “career-defining.” One fan tweeted they refuse to believe that was actually Elordi under all that makeup, comparing his disappearing act to Bill Skarsgård in Nosferatu. Roger Ebert’s site called the film “breathtaking” and “heartbreakingly poignant.” USA Today declared it del Toro’s “greatest hit ever.” And multiple Oscar pundits are already predicting Jacob Elordi will earn his first Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor, which would cement his transformation from Netflix teen heartthrob to serious dramatic actor taken seriously by Hollywood’s elite.

The Transformation That Required a Small Village

Let’s start with the insane commitment Jacob Elordi made to play the Creature. Every single shooting day, he arrived at the makeup trailer at an ungodly early hour to begin the 10-hour process of becoming Frankenstein’s creation. The transformation involved applying 42 separate prosthetic pieces to his face and body, essentially rebuilding him from scratch to look like Victor Frankenstein’s patchwork assembly of dead body parts stitched together and brought to life through electricity.

Credits: Entertainment Weekly

Ten hours. Every day. For months of filming. That’s not acting, that’s endurance athletics disguised as performance art. And when filming wrapped each day, removing all that makeup took another 90 minutes using an inflatable sauna wheeled into Elordi’s trailer to help shed the prosthetics without destroying his actual skin. The physical toll alone would break most actors, but Elordi never complained. Instead, he used that grueling process to get into character, allowing the weight of the makeup and costume to inform how the Creature moved, gestured, and inhabited space.

The costume itself required its own journey to set. According to behind-the-scenes reports, Elordi’s massive coat was so heavy and elaborate that crew members had to wheel it to set on its own dedicated transport. When you watch the film and see this hulking figure lumbering through gothic landscapes, that’s not CGI trickery or movie magic illusion. That’s Jacob Elordi actually carrying all that weight, moving like someone literally cobbled together from disparate parts that don’t quite fit right yet somehow work as a whole.

Share this with your friend who still thinks of Jacob Elordi as the guy from Kissing Booth!

The Performance That Has Everyone Screaming Oscar

Social media exploded with reactions to Elordi’s work within hours of Frankenstein hitting Netflix globally. One fan wrote on Twitter: “Jacob Elordi’s physicality is so perfectly suited to the role of the Creature. The way he embodies innocence, fear, and curiosity, all the while maintaining that hulking stature throughout. Once you watch the film, it’s impossible to picture anyone else doing it.”

Another declared: “Jacob Elordi Best Supporting Actor For Frankenstein I’m being Dead Serious. What he does in this movie is nothing short of Masterful. Totally Disappears into the role to the point that like Bill Skarsgård in Nosferatu I refuse to believe that was him.”

Critics echoed that enthusiasm. Digital Spy called Elordi’s Creature “one of the year’s best performances,” noting that while Oscar Isaac delivers “a captivating, operatic performance as Victor Frankenstein, it’s Elordi’s Creature who lingers in the memory.” Den of Geek emphasized the tenderness Elordi brings to the role, stating: “Most Frankenstein adaptations make the Creature an innocent, but rarely has the character been portrayed with the tenderness that Elordi brings.”

Credits: People

What makes Elordi’s performance so remarkable is how he uses subtle changes in delivery and physicality to convey the Creature’s emotional and intellectual development. Initially, he can only say his creator’s name: “Victor!” But Elordi modulates that single word across different scenes to communicate entirely different emotions—confusion, betrayal, longing, rage, love. As the Creature learns language and gains literacy, Elordi’s performance grows more complex, showing intelligence and sensitivity alongside the rage of someone rejected by his creator and shunned by humanity.

The scene where the Creature gently holds and pets a mouse has been singled out by multiple critics as “quietly wrecking.” That image, a massive figure built from corpses treating a tiny living thing with such delicate care, encapsulates everything del Toro and Elordi achieve with this character. He’s not a monster. He’s a being capable of infinite gentleness forced into violence by a cruel world.

Don’t miss out on witnessing the transformation of a teen drama actor into an Oscar contender!

The Golden Retriever Comparison That Makes Perfect Sense

One of the internet’s favorite takes on Elordi’s Creature comes from Decider’s review, which argues: “Jacob Elordi in Frankenstein Is Neither a Monster or a Creature. He’s a Golden Retriever.” That comparison sounds ridiculous until you actually watch the film, then it becomes impossible to unsee.

The evidence: When Victor Frankenstein chains up his newly created Creature and turns to leave the room, the Creature immediately tries to follow him, straining against the chains like an eager puppy desperate for its owner’s attention and approval. Throughout the early scenes, the Creature exhibits puppy-like qualities: boundless curiosity about the world, desire for affection from his creator, confusion when that affection is withheld, and ultimately devastating heartbreak when he realizes Victor sees him as a mistake rather than a son.

This golden retriever energy makes the Creature’s eventual turn toward violence even more tragic. He doesn’t want to hurt anyone. He wants to be loved, accepted, understood. But when every attempt at connection gets met with horror and rejection, when even his own creator abandons him, the Creature’s rage becomes understandable if not justified. It’s the same heartbreak of watching an abused dog become aggressive after years of mistreatment, except multiplied by the intelligence and literacy the Creature possesses.

Del Toro told Variety his goal was exploring “the human spirit” through Frankenstein rather than making another “science gone wrong” cautionary tale. He wanted to emphasize “forgiveness, understanding, and the significance of listening to one another.” That approach required a Creature audiences could empathize with completely, and Elordi delivers exactly that vulnerability beneath all those prosthetics and makeup.

Oscar Isaac’s Mad Scientist Brilliance

While Elordi steals the film, Oscar Isaac’s Victor Frankenstein deserves recognition for creating the perfect antagonist dynamic. Isaac plays Victor as manic, obsessed, and fundamentally narcissistic. This isn’t a sympathetic scientist driven by noble goals. This is a man playing God because his ego demands it, someone so consumed with the possibility of conquering death that ordinary ethics become irrelevant obstacles.

Credits: GeekTyrant

Isaac’s performance walks a delicate line between “mad scientist” archetype and genuine psychological portrait. He sometimes steps over into conventional territory but never descends into camp. You understand what drives Victor while never quite relating to his choices, which is exactly as it should be. The obsession with proving himself to peers and family, the refusal to accept responsibility for his creation, the horror he feels when his experiment actually succeeds, all of it reads as authentic character psychology rather than plot convenience.

The film opens near the end of Mary Shelley’s novel, in the Arctic where creator and creation have been switching roles of hunter and hunted. That framing device allows del Toro to spin out the tale through flashbacks that make the movie “jarring and frightening in the best horror tradition, but heartbreakingly poignant,” according to Roger Ebert’s site. Isaac anchors those shifts in tone, his Victor serving as unreliable narrator whose version of events may not match objective truth.

Mia Goth and Christoph Waltz Round Out Stellar Cast

Mia Goth, whose name feels almost too perfect for a gothic horror film, plays Elizabeth Lavenza, though del Toro significantly reimagines this character from Shelley’s novel. Rather than Victor’s adopted sister/fiancée as in the book, Elizabeth becomes the fiancée of Victor’s nephew in this adaptation. Goth brings her signature intensity to the role, embodying someone who “shares some of the morbid preoccupations” of her possibly future in-law Victor.

Credits: The Kit

Christoph Waltz delivers one of his most genuinely sympathetic performances as a wealthy patron funding Victor’s experiments. Usually cast as charming villains or morally questionable characters, Waltz here plays someone with “hidden motives” but also genuine affection for Victor. That complexity adds layers to Victor’s support system, suggesting even those who enable his dangerous work might do so from complicated places rather than pure evil.

The supporting cast also includes Felix Kammerer, David Bradley, Lars Mikkelsen, Christian Convery, and Charles Dance, creating an ensemble that grounds del Toro’s gothic vision in lived-in performances rather than broad horror archetypes.

Del Toro’s Dream Project Finally Realized

Guillermo del Toro has publicly stated that Mary Shelley’s 1818 novel Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus serves as his guiding text, the work that’s influenced his entire filmmaking career. From Pan’s Labyrinth to The Shape of Water (which won him Best Picture and Best Director Oscars), del Toro’s fascination with outsiders, monsters, and creatures society rejects has defined his artistic identity.

Frankenstein represents the culmination of that career-long obsession, his chance to directly adapt the source material that shaped his worldview. The film premiered at the 82nd Venice International Film Festival on August 30, 2025, where it competed for the Golden Lion. Though it didn’t win Venice’s top prize, the reception was strong enough to position the film as a serious Oscar contender.

After Venice, Frankenstein received a limited theatrical release starting October 17, 2025, allowing it to qualify for Academy Award consideration while building anticipation for the global Netflix release November 7. That dual strategy, theatrical prestige followed by streaming accessibility, has become Netflix’s preferred approach for awards-worthy content, and it’s working brilliantly for Frankenstein.

The film runs 2 hours 14 minutes, giving del Toro room to explore themes and character development without the breakneck pacing typical of modern blockbusters. Set in 1857 during the Victorian era rather than the novel’s earlier timeframe, del Toro grounds his vision in period trappings more familiar to contemporary audiences while allowing Victor to use electricity more extensively in the reanimation process.

The Reviews That Validate Del Toro’s Vision

Frankenstein currently holds generally positive reviews from critics, with particular acclaim for Elordi’s performance and del Toro’s visual craftsmanship. Rotten Tomatoes’ critical consensus states: “Finding the humanity in one of cinema’s most iconic monsters, Guillermo Del Toro’s Frankenstein is a lavish epic that gets its most invigorating volts from Jacob Elordi’s standout performance.”

Roger Ebert’s site gave the film a glowing review, calling it “a breathtaking coup, an exhilarating riposte to the conventional wisdom about dream projects.” The review praises del Toro for making “something almost new, and definitely rich and strange, out of a story we all thought we knew well.”

USA Today declared it “the most Guillermo del Toro movie ever, from its majestic gothic splendor to the monster’s tragic beauty,” adding that it might be his “finest work” as a director who “invests his entire essence into this beautiful creation.”

Variety’s Frankenstein expert analysis confirmed del Toro captured “the essence of the novel” despite taking liberties with certain characters and plot points. Den of Geek celebrated how del Toro “reconstructs a classic monster in his own image” with love and tenderness rarely seen in adaptations.

The consistent theme across reviews: this isn’t just another Frankenstein adaptation but a deeply personal vision that honors Mary Shelley’s themes while adding del Toro’s signature gothic romanticism and Elordi’s transformative performance.

Your Turn to Experience the Magic

Have you watched Frankenstein on Netflix yet? Does Jacob Elordi’s performance live up to the massive hype? Can you unsee the golden retriever comparison once it’s been pointed out? Drop your honest reactions in the comments because this film deserves conversation beyond awards predictions.

Share this breakdown with anyone who dismissed Jacob Elordi as just another pretty face because his work here proves he’s capable of so much more. Follow for continued Oscar season coverage as Frankenstein fights for nominations in Picture, Director, Supporting Actor, and multiple technical categories. Guillermo del Toro spent his entire career preparing to make this film, and watching that dream project exceed expectations rather than disappoint reminds us why cinema still matters in an age of algorithm-generated content and focus-grouped mediocrity.

Tags: 10 hours daily transformation42 prosthetic pieces makeupBest Picture Oscar contenderChristoph Waltz supporting castCrimean War body partsdream project realizedelectric animation lightningFelix Kammerer Charles Danceforgiveness understanding themesgolden retriever Creature comparisongothic drama NetflixGuillermo del Toro Frankenstein 2025heartbreakingly poignant filmhumanity monster storyJacob Elordi Creature performanceLars Mikkelsen Christian Converylimited theatrical October 17Mary Shelley 1818 novel adaptationMia Goth Elizabeth LavenzaNetflix November 7 releaseOscar buzz Best Supporting ActorOscar Isaac Victor FrankensteinPan's Labyrinth GuillermoRoger Ebert breathtaking reviewRotten Tomatoes positive consensusShape of Water directorUSA Today greatest hitVenice Film Festival premiereVictorian era 1857 setting
Previous Post

The Shah Bano Case Gets a Bollywood Film and Yami Gautam’s Performance Is Absolutely Clapworthy

Next Post

The 2026 Grammy Nominations Are Absolute Chaos and The Weeknd’s Snub Proves Nothing’s Changed

Riva

Riva

Next Post
Credits: Variety

The 2026 Grammy Nominations Are Absolute Chaos and The Weeknd's Snub Proves Nothing's Changed

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Credits: Storyboard18

Remembering Piyush Pandey – The Storyteller Of Indian Ads

October 25, 2025

Best Music Collabs of 2025: The Pair Ups Everyone’s Talking About

October 23, 2025

Who Runs Fame in 2025? These Influencers Do!

October 24, 2025
Taxes: The Oldest Classist Trick in the Book

Taxes: The Oldest Classist Trick in the Book

August 4, 2025

Hot Milk: A Fever Dream of Opposites, Obsessions, and One Seriously Conflicted Mother-Daughter Duo

0

Anurag Basu’s Musical Chaos: A Love Letter to Madness in Metro

0

“Sorry, Baby” and the Aftermath of the Bad Thing: A Story of Quiet Survival

0

“Pretty Thing” Review – An Erotic Thriller That Forgets the Thrill

0
Credits: Mettl Blog

The Multigenerational Manager: Incentive Designs That Work Across Life Stages.

November 21, 2025
Credits: LinkedIn

Career Resilience: Navigating Layoffs, Reorgs, and Hiring Freezes with Momentum.

November 21, 2025
Credits: Essential Computing

Discovering the New Frontier: Why Hybrid Teams Need a Different Kind of Review

November 21, 2025
Credits: Freepik

Handling Incivility: Scripts and Policies that Reset Norms Without Drama.

November 21, 2025

Recent News

Credits: Mettl Blog

The Multigenerational Manager: Incentive Designs That Work Across Life Stages.

November 21, 2025
Credits: LinkedIn

Career Resilience: Navigating Layoffs, Reorgs, and Hiring Freezes with Momentum.

November 21, 2025
Credits: Essential Computing

Discovering the New Frontier: Why Hybrid Teams Need a Different Kind of Review

November 21, 2025
Credits: Freepik

Handling Incivility: Scripts and Policies that Reset Norms Without Drama.

November 21, 2025
Buzztainment

At Buzztainment, we bring you the latest in culture, entertainment, and lifestyle.

Discover stories that spark conversation — from film and fashion to business and innovation.

Visit our homepage for the latest features and exclusive insights.

All Buzz - No Bogus

Follow Us

Browse by Category

  • AI
  • Anime
  • Beauty
  • Entertainment & Pop Culture
  • Fashion
  • Film & TV
  • Finance
  • Food
  • Food & Drinks
  • Gadgets & Devices
  • Health
  • Health & Wellness
  • Heritage & History
  • Lifestyle
  • Literature and Books
  • Movie
  • Music
  • Politics
  • Pop Culture
  • Relationships
  • Sports
  • Sustainability & Eco-Living
  • Tech
  • Theatre & Performing Arts
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized
  • Work & Career

Recent News

Credits: Mettl Blog

The Multigenerational Manager: Incentive Designs That Work Across Life Stages.

November 21, 2025
Credits: LinkedIn

Career Resilience: Navigating Layoffs, Reorgs, and Hiring Freezes with Momentum.

November 21, 2025
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Buzztainment

No Result
View All Result
  • World
  • Entertainment & Pop Culture
  • Finance
  • Heritage & History
  • Lifestyle
  • News
  • Tech

Buzztainment