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GODS AND
MONSTERS |
Director: Bill Condon
Time: 106 min
Country: USA
Date: 1998
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One of the most critically acclaimed films of 1998 and winner
of several awards including the Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay, Gods and
Monsters is a compassionate speculation about the final days of James Whale
(1889-1957), the director of Frankenstein and 20 other films of the 1930s
and '40s, who was openly gay at a time when homosexuality in Hollywood was
discreetly concealed. Adapted and directed by Bill Condon from Christopher
Bram's novel Father
of Frankenstein, the
film stars Ian McKellen in a sublime performance as the white-haired Whale, who
is portrayed as a dapper gent and amateur artist prompted by failing health into
melancholy remembrance of things past. Flashbacks of lost love, World War I
battle trauma, and glory days in Hollywood combine with Whale's present-day
attraction to a newly hired yard worker (Brendan Fraser) whose hunky,
Frankenstein-like physique makes him an ideal model for Whale's fixated
sketching.
The friendship between the handsome gardener and his elderly
gay admirer is by turns tenuous, humorous, mutually beneficial, and ultimately
rather sad--but to Condon's credit Whale is never seen as pathetic, lecherous,
or senile. Equally rich is the rapport between Whale and his long-time
housekeeper (played with wry sarcasm by Lynn Redgrave), who serves as protector,
mother, and even surrogate spouse while Whale's mental state deteriorates.
Flashbacks to Whale's filmmaking days are painstakingly authentic (particularly
in the casting of look-alike actors playing Boris Karloff and Elsa Lanchester),
and all of these ingredients combine to make Gods and Monsters (executive
produced by horror novelist-filmmaker Clive Barker) a touchingly affectionate
film that succeeds on many levels. It is at once a keen glimpse of Hollywood's
past, a loving tribute to James Whale, and a richly moving, delicately balanced
drama about loneliness, memory, and the passions that keep us alive.
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