Thursday, February 15, 2024

Lisa Frankenstein

Yesterday I decided to spend the day at my local multiplex for a double feature starting with Lisa Frankenstein.  I had so much fun watching this monster movie/romantic comedy mash-up!  It is 1989 and Lisa Swallows (Kathryn Newton) is still traumatized by the brutal murder of her mother and is struggling to adjust to her cruel new stepmother Janet (Carla Gugino) and popular stepsister Taffy (Liza Soberano) while trying to fit in at her new high school.  She would rather spend all of her time at a cemetery and, after an unfortunate incident at a house party, she returns there to her favorite grave of a young Victorian man.  When she wishes that she was there with him, his corpse is reanimated, albeit with a few missing parts, during a lightning storm and he finds his way to her suburban house.  She hides the Creature (Cole Sprouse) in her closet but, when he begins killing those who have wronged her, she uses their body parts to stitch him back together and creates her perfect boyfriend.  The story about a misunderstood teen looking for someone to acknowledge and appreciate her is a familiar one and, honestly, it is the weakest part of this movie but it doesn't matter because I loved everything else!  The production design is an over-the-top pastiche of all of my favorite 80s teen comedies and I especially enjoyed the use of a tanning bed to produce the necessary electricity for the Creature's transformations.  The absurdist tone balances the horror with the humor really well (think Heathers) and I was laughing out loud during a particularly grisly and blood-splattered scene in slow motion with the song "On the Wings of Love" in the background.  Newton is hit or miss with me but I think this is her best performance to date because she nails the quirkiness of the character in one fantastic Madonna-inspired outfit after another.  Sprouse gives a hilarious physical performance (he has almost no dialogue beyond grunting) and Gugino steals every scene she is in (I laughed so hard when she lamented the destruction of a Precious Moments figurine).  This is a silly and campy good time that teens and those of us who were teens in the 80s are sure to love!

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