Conversation about the premiere frankenstein of guillermo del toro He never stops adding unusual and delicious Mexican anecdotes. Now it’s his own oscar isaacHe plays the tormented doctor Victor Frankenstein in ”, and talked about the behind-the-scenes atmosphere and his surprising “Mexicanization.”
In a recent magazine interview GQIsaac shared what it felt like to find it all very happy setfar from the usual solemnity of Gothic dramas.
“Guillermo is an incredibly happy person, and the atmosphere on set was very happy. We were always laughing. Basically he just led me around playfully and we only spoke Spanish to each other. I think it’s because there was so much joy and brightness that we were able to go deeper into the darkness,” the Guatemalan actor revealed.
This dynamic, the result of Mexican humor and the trusting relationship between actor and director, allowed the classic tragedy to be taken into unexpected realms.

According to Oscar Isaac, for him frankenstein “This is a very emotional Mexican melodrama.”. “This is a very European story told from a very Latin perspective,” he acknowledged. At one point, he questioned the tone and asked del Toro if everything was “too much.”.
It didn’t take long for the director’s response to be filled with pride. “Look, bastard, it’s no coincidence that my Victor’s real name is Oscar Isaac Hernandez.”.
The fact that such a classical and supposedly European character has an interpretation that crosses Mexican and Latin specificities has not gone unnoticed by critics and the public.
many people have pointed it out One of the fundamental changes del Toro made Mary Shelley’s version foregrounds the relationship between creator and monster. “Father and Son”.
However, for the director, the relationship between father and son is in the Mexican cultural senseshe was not always completely happy and was rather a bit of a “bastard,” as he described her during the film’s presentation at San Ildefonso College.
“It’s better understood than anywhere else in Mexico…because forgiveness, acceptance, family, and the pain that is transmitted from generation to generation is something that we Mexicans understand. Because the father figure here is so mean and powerful.”said the director.

This movie is currently Netflix And in some independent movie theaters around the country, it was received with enthusiasm and surprise by those who had expected a traditional version of literature’s most famous monster.
The scene moves between full-fledged tears and sophisticated European-born Gothic. frankenstein It’s the latest example that under del Toro’s eye, even the most classic horror can have a “very Mexican” flavor and drama.