Maggie Gyllenhaal says WB showed concern over extreme scenes in The Bride; “You cannot have Frankenstein lick black vomit off the Bride’s neck”
The Bride
Maggie Gyllenhaal’s The Bride is set to hit theaters this week. The first reactions to the gothic romance started trickling in on social media a few days ago, following the film’s world premiere in London. The film is tracking soft, so it’s not currently projected to be a monster at the box office. However, it could be the kind of welcome shake-up for mainstream movies if it lives up to its hype.
The film stars Jessie Buckley as The Bride and Christian Bale as Frankenstein’s Monster. “A lonely Frankenstein travels to 1930s Chicago to seek the aid of a Dr. Euphronius in creating a companion for himself,” reads the official synopsis. “The two reinvigorate a murdered young woman and the Bride is born. She is beyond what either of them intended, igniting a combustible romance, the attention of the police and a wild and radical social movement.“
The concern
The early reactions talk about how bold the movie is and how its content is totally unhinged. According to Variety, after the studio held test screenings, Warner Bros. had requested that Gyllenhaal tone down the intensity of the violence. Gyllenhaal explained, “There’s sexual violence. There’s violence. Because it’s a big studio movie, we tested and tested it. We had big screenings in malls, where people came to see it, which I had never been a part of as an actress or a director before. So fascinating. And one of the things that they brought up was the violence: Is it too violent? And I was talking about it with a girlfriend of mine, who said — and she wasn’t being reductive — ‘I wonder if you had been a man making this movie, if you would have had the same response.’”
Gyllenhaal made it a point not to desensitize the extreme scenes during filming, so the uneasy response is just what she aimed for. Warners “asked to take some” of the violence out of the movie during test screenings. She reveals, “So what you’re seeing is even a little bit pulled back from what was originally in the movie.”
Gyllenhaal also explained how she wanted to have gravity with the deaths in the film, “One of the things that was important to me is that everybody who is killed, is hurt — we, at least for a moment, get to know them. There’s the Stormtrooper version of killing people, where they have white masks on and you don’t know who they are. And then there’s the version where every single death has a consequence and a cost — every single one.”
The understanding
As The Bride comes from a big studio with more general audience appeal than something like A24, the savvy director still realized that she could compromise with Warners. “Yeah, it was difficult, but not in a bad way. It was just very new for me,” Gyllenhaal told The Times. “I loved working with Pam Abdy, who runs Warner Bros. with Mike De Luca. She understood me and understood what I was saying. And there would be times where she would be like: ‘Maggie, you cannot have Frankenstein lick black vomit off the Bride’s neck. It’s just too much. You can’t do it.’ But she understood why I wanted it.”
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