Frankenstein: Theater Review

The Bottom Line
Danny Boyle makes Frankenstein his own in a stunning new stage version.
Venue
National Theatre, London (Through May 2)
Cast
Benedict Cumberbatch, Jonny Lee Miller
Playwright
Nick Dear, based on the novel by Mary Shelley
Director
Danny Boyle
Danny Boyle directs Benedict Cumberbatch and Jonny Lee Miller -- who star on alternate nights -- in Nick Dear's play at London's National Theatre.
LONDON -- Fans of Danny Boyle's movies such as Slumdog Millionaire and 127 Hours will not be surprised to learn that his return to the stage directing a new play at the National Theatre based on Mary Shelley's Frankenstein is a breathtaking mix of intimate drama and spectacular imagery.
Benedict Cumberbatch, from BBC-TV's new Sherlock series, and Jonny Lee Miller (Eli Stone) star on alternate nights as Victor Frankenstein and the Creature in a play by Nick Dear that grabs attention in the first minute and never lets go.
Cumberbatch has the edge in both roles due to his ability to convey by expression and voice a degree of madness that is just beyond Lee Miller. Cumberbatch nails Frankenstein's air of innate superiority and he makes heartbreaking the Creature's aching search for wisdom and compassion. Both performances are well worth seeing in a two-hour show that has shocks and surprises, some considerable horror and moments of great tenderness.
The play will be streamed to movie theaters across the U.K. on March 17 and 24 and also will be available in other countries including the United States and Canada, although dates might vary. Boyle is not involved in the screen version, which is handled by the National Theatre.
The stage presentation has such invention and vitality that it should make a terrific impression on screen and the performances of the two leading actors are so precise and involving that they should only be enhanced by close-ups.
The National's vast Olivier stage is overhung by two large rectangular panels from which hang myriad lights that strike like lightning at the moments when the creature emerges from what he comes to think of as a cesspool of broken bones. For this Creature is a sentient individual who can assimilate information rapidly and the tale is really one of innocence corrupted.
At the beginning, a tall and wide circle of pulsing fabric strapped to a wooden rack becomes womb-like as it parts to reveal a man-sized newborn who falls to the ground and flaps like some nameless thing that Darwin might have discovered.
For more than 10 minutes, the fully naked creature struggles to stretch and stand; to gain motor control of limbs and how to walk and run. Exultant in his discoveries, he embraces the warming sun and cooling rain, and the simple pleasures of grass and soaring birds.
But soon his creator abandons him and strangers greet him with horror and beatings. Wandering, he discovers an old man, De Lacey (Karl Johnson), who is blind and generous, and who fills his hungry mind with literature, philosophy and general knowledge. That again ends badly, and the lonely creature goes off to seek his creator to ask him to make him a female partner. Frankenstein is a self-important scientist who believes himself a genius and is so obsessed with being the first man to create another that he ignores his lovely bride-to-be, Elizabeth (Naomie Harris), who only wants to give him babies.
When the Creature finds him, Frankenstein agrees to travel to a remote Scottish island where he will make a perfect being, but as his genius flows so does his fear, and soon the two are locked into a fate that will entwine them forever.
Set designer Mark Tildesley uses simple tracks of wood and grass for scenes in the open, brings up whole rooms and buildings from the basement of the rotating stage and others descend from the rafters.
Boyle early on introduces a raging contraption like a full-scale locomotive with huge wheels spitting flames and sparks to suggest the industrial turmoil that is the backdrop to the story. It leaves a bitter taste in the air that underpins the tragedy of a creator who has lost his way and a Creature unsure of why he is here and what he is supposed to do but directed by a man who knows exactly what he's up to.
Venue: National Theatre, London (Through May 2)
Cast: Benedict Cumberbatch, Jonny Lee Miller
Playwright: Nick Dear, based on the novel by Mary Shelley
Director: Danny Boyle
Set designer: Mark Tildesley
Costume designer: Suttirat Anne Larlarb
Lighting designer: Bruno Poet
Music and sound score: Underworld
THR's Daily Must Feeds
-
Anderson Cooper Boots 'Barbie Mom' Off Show
-
Donna Summer's Funeral Packed with Music Legends
-
'Transformers 3' Injured Extra Gets $18 Million Settlement
-
Bret Michaels Talks Summer Tour, Health Issues
-
Beastie Boy Discusses MCA's Death For First Time
-
Robert Pattinson For 'Hunger Games' Sequel?
-
Minka Kelly Cast As Jackie Kennedy
-
Glee Recap: The End Is an Afterthought
In This Week's Magazine
Social & Mobile
- MOST SHARED
- MOST POPULAR
- 1
Sweden's Loreen Wins Colorful Eurovision Final, Outdistancing Russia and Serbia
- 2
Cannes 2012: Un Certain Regard Top Prize Goes to Michel Franco's 'After Lucia'
- 3
Jessica Sanchez 'Idol' Pay Could Be As Low As $30,000
- 4
'American Idol' Winner Phillip Phillips to Undergo Surgery Tuesday
- 5
Beyonce Returns to Stage With Whitney Houston Cover (Video)
- 6
Mud: Cannes Review
- 7
Maniac: Cannes Review
- 8
Box Office Report: 'Men in Black 3' Tops Friday Box Office With $18 Million
- 9
'American Idol's' Jimmy Iovine on Jessica Sanchez’s Coronation Song: 'It Did Bomb, Didn't It?'
- 10
The 25 Best Film Schools Rankings

