Guillermo del Toro 'Frankenstein:' Director Explains Adaptation of Book to Movie - Netflix Tudum

  • News

    Guillermo del Toro Explains His Adaptation of Frankenstein

    “For me, it’s the Bible.”

    Nov. 7, 2025

In Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein — inspired by Mary Shelley’s seminal 1818 novel of the same name — tortured genius Victor Frankenstein (Golden Globe-winner Oscar Isaac) views his creation (played by BAFTA-nominee Jacob Elordi) as a monstrous experiment. But, for the movie’s director and writer, Oscar-winner Guillermo del Toro, the Creature, as Frankenstein’s monster is known, is something much more holy — he’s his “patron saint.” Del Toro has been entranced by the Creature since his childhood in Mexico.  

“I’ve lived with Mary Shelley’s creation all my life,” del Toro tells Tudum. “For me, it’s the Bible. But I wanted to make it my own, to sing it back in a different key with a different emotion.”

Now, his vision has been realized. Frankenstein is now streaming on Netflix, following its debut at the Venice Film Festival on Aug. 30 (which is also Shelley’s birthday). As viewers step into a world del Toro has imagined since boyhood, the director offers a peek inside his definitive retelling of the Gothic classic.  

Guillermo del Toro at home.
Tim Hirschmann/Netflix

“Mary Shelley’s masterpiece is rife with questions that burn brightly in my soul: existential, tender, savage, doomed questions that only burn in a young mind and only adults and institutions believe they can answer,” del Toro explains. “For me, only monsters hold the secrets I long for.” 

But, Frankenstein asks, who is the real monster? The sprawling epic follows Victor, a brilliant, ego-driven scientist, as he embarks on a quest to bring new life into this world. The Creature is the result; his very existence provokes questions about what it means to be a human,  a creator, a creature — a father and a son — to crave love and seek understanding. Both Victor and the Creature aim to answer those mysteries and search for meaning in a world that can seem quite mad. 

Popular Now

  • News
    Yes, That Really Was Charlize Theron Climbing an Apex Billboard
    April 24
    Actor climbing a rocky cliff edge in a forested area, filmed up close by a large movie camera on a crane, during an outdoor film production.

However, the frenzy of humanity isn’t the only feeling del Toro found in Shelley’s work. “The book has a lot of anxiety — the anxiety that you get when you’re an adolescent, and you don’t understand why everybody lies about the world,” del Toro says. He aimed to capture that anxiety by translating “the rhythms of Mary Shelley” for the screen. “When English is your second language, you are trained very acutely to the melody and the rhythms of a language,” he continues. “It has a particular rhythm, the dialogue in the book. I tried to make the dialogue be like that without sounding archaic.” 

In fact, del Toro was passionate about maintaining the modernism of Frankenstein in all aspects of the movie, which is set in 19th-century Europe. “When [Shelley] wrote Frankenstein, it was not a period piece. It was a modern book, so I didn’t want you to see a pastel-colored period piece,” he explains. Instead, the director favored swaggering fashions for Victor and styles that are “luscious and full of color.”

Del Toro hopes his Frankenstein stays with viewers as long as the Creature has resided in his own heart. “May monsters inhabit your dreams and give you as much solace as they have given me, for we are all creatures lost and found,” he says. 

See del Toro’s complete fantasy come to life now by streaming Frankenstein on Netflix. And keep coming back to Tudum for more news out of the laboratory.  

All About Frankenstein

  • Deep Dive
    Behind the Mask of Frankenstein
    How Jacob Elordi and Mike Hill brought forth an unforgettable Creature.
    By Troy Pozirekides
    Feb. 25
  • Awards
    Films including Frankenstein and Train Dreams are recognized. 
    By Tudum Staff
    Jan. 27
  • News
    Train Dreams and The Perfect Neighbor also earned mentions.
    By Tudum Staff
    Jan. 22
  • News
    Guillermo del Toro’s adaptation stars Jacob Elordi and Oscar Isaac. 
    By John DiLillo
    Jan. 22
  • Deep Dive
    The team behind the Mary Shelley adaptation unpack the making of their gothic epic.
    By Tudum Staff
    Jan. 13
  • Interview
    The writer and director reflects on making his visionary adaptation.
    By John DiLillo
    Dec. 18
  • Awards
    With 35 nominations, award season is officially underway. 
    By Tudum Staff
    Dec. 8
  • Behind the Scenes
    A closer look at Guillermo del Toro’s epic through its on-screen ephemera.
    By Jenny Changnon
    Dec. 2

Shop Frankenstein

GO TO NETFLIX SHOP

Discover More News

  • News
    Will Roman Reigns acknowledge Jacob Fatu’s challenge?
    By Christopher Hudspeth
    4:48 am
  • News
    Stay tuned for more adventures with Mel and Jack.
    By Jean Bentley
    Yesterday 7:05 pm
  • News
    The intrepid detective returns and is joined by a cast full of familiar faces.
    By John DiLillo
    Yesterday 2:52 pm
  • News
    Find out when and where to get your taste of the Upside Down. 
    By Keisha Hatchett
    April 24
  • News
    Production on the live-action Scooby-Doo series has officially begun.
    By Brookie McIlvaine
    April 24
  • News
    Monster: The Ed Gein Story and The Diplomat kick off an enthralling issue.
    By Tudum Staff
    April 24
  • News
    The two star in Baltasar Kormákur’s thriller, now streaming on Netflix.
    By John DiLillo
    April 24

Discover More Drama

  • What To Watch
    The bees disappear along with everyone’s sanity in the 2025 comedic thriller.
    By Krutika Mallikarjuna
    April 26
  • What To Watch
    Stream How to Train Your Dragon, You've Got Mail, Train to Busan, and more before the month ends.
    By Ashley Lee
    April 24
  • New on Netflix
    Plus Should I Marry a Murderer?, Supernova Strikers: Genesis, and more.
    By Ashley Lee
    April 24
  • What To Watch
    Clear eyes, full hearts, screens on.
    By Tudum Staff
    April 24
  • Interview
    In the new action thriller, Theron and Egerton play a deadly game.
    By John DiLillo
    April 24

Related Videos

  • Skip Intro
    Goth shares what it was like to receive a phone call from Guillermo del Toro.
    Nov. 28
    29:27
  • Making Of
    Watch the latest edition of Film School.
    Nov. 14
    11:06
  • Trailer
    There are two sides to every story. 
    Oct. 1
    2:12