MAGGIE GYLLENHAAL'S BRIDE OF FRANKENSTEIN!! Fresh out of the theater, were giving our first reactions & review of The Bride! (2025) the highly anticipated gothic reimagining of the classic ...
Discover What’s Streaming On: Jessie Buckley just won an Oscar for Hamnet, and now you can watch her in a very different type of role in The Bride!—a new gothic romance loosely based on the 1935 film ...
If you love classic movies, THE BRIDE! is pure delight, fun with a brain that is a treat deluxe for those who love both classic movies and Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley’s original book “Frankenstein.” ...
Because you can never have too many Frankenstein movies, director Maggie Gyllenhaal is throwing her hat into the ring with The Bride!, a new gothic romance loosely based on the 1935 film Bride of ...
THIS PRODUCT. IT’S 645, MILWAUKEE’S OLDEST OPERATING MOVIE THEATER, HAS A NEW OWNER. MILWAUKEE FILM BOUGHT THE DOWNER THEATER ON MILWAUKEE’S EAST SIDE. THE NONPROFIT OPERATED THE DOWNER SINCE 2024, ...
Maggie Gyllenhaal’s The Bride is a captivating movie. Right from its very first moments, this film knows how to hook its viewers, immerse them in its world, and so thoroughly entertain them that ...
The global premiere of The Bride! took place at Cineworld Leicester Square in London, England, with the film’s stars coming out to celebrate. Directed and written by Maggie Gyllenhaal, based on Mary ...
Director Maggie Gyllenhaal reinvents a classic monster story in ‘The Bride!’ but sewing together different genres like body parts doesn’t always work. ‘The Bride!’ is a lot. Maggie Gyllenhaal’s second ...
Official image from ‘The Bride!’ courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures. The Bride of Frankenstein is a classic, feminine twist on the original story of Frankenstein, which has been consistently alluded to ...
Filmmaker Maggie Gyllenhaal's punk-rock-monster-crime-odyssey feminist essay "The Bride!" hit theaters on February 26, 2026, and it is most assuredly going to become a go-to slumber party film for ...
The Bride! starts with Buckley conveying Mary Shelley, the author of Frankenstein, in an inspired sequence that is best left to be discovered than analyzed in a review like this. We meet Buckley’s ...