December 15, 2025

78th Cannes Film Festival, Frankenstein, Jacob Elordi, Mia Goth, Oscar Isaac
78th Cannes Film Festival, Frankenstein, Jacob Elordi, Mia Goth, Oscar Isaac

Photograph and words by GREG WILLIAMS


Greg Williams takes pause to consider the bigger picture of images seen small on his social media. This issue: Jacob Elordi at the Venice Film Festival in August.

I took this picture of Jacob just before the premiere of Frankenstein at the Venice Film Festival, my favourite festival without any doubt. To have actors all dressed up in such a beautiful city, the boats, the water and of course the rich history of cinema makes it an incredible canvas to work on. Within that history is a set of photos taken of Paul Newman by Graziano Arici in 1963. They are my favourite Venice pictures ever. So for the 10 years I’ve been covering the Venice Film Festival I have carried those images in my head.

I’ve met Jacob a number of times in recent years and so when I was at a dinner with him I asked him if he’d be happy for me to do a picture. ‘Ah, you want to do the Paul Newman?’ he said. I couldn’t believe my ears as that was exactly what I was about to say to him. ‘Yeah, meet me at 6.30pm downstairs from my hotel tomorrow night…’ I ended up getting closer to ‘the Paul Newman’ than I ever have before in what must be close to 200 shoots I’ve done at Venice over the years.

Jacob’s great look and authentic style worked perfectly for the picture. He is up at the front of the boat in a not dissimilar pose to Newman. The image has an authenticity that I love. Seeing Jacob’s eye behind his glasses, the angle of his hand. The picture has a timeless quality that is made modern by Jacob’s slight mullet haircut, which makes it a little more punk rock. And then the Jacques Marie Mage sunglasses make it still feel vintage.

Leica SL2, 1/2000 sec, f/4.0, 1600 ISO, 75mm 


Photograph and words by GREG WILLIAMS
Shot on Leica SL2
Read our review of Frankenstein here

hollywood authentic, greg williams, hollywood authentic magazine

September 1, 2025

Charles Dance, Christoph Waltz, Frankensein, Jacob Elordi, Mia Goth, Oscar Isaac

Words by JANE CROWTHER


Guillermo del Toro has been yearning to give life to Mary Shelley’s classic story of reanimation, morals and monstrosity for decades and it shows in the care and attention in this ravishing retelling. It begins with a bang as a 19th century Royal Danish ship trapped in ice near the North Pole discovers wounded scientist Victor Frankenstein (Oscar Isaac) being pursued by a super-human ‘thing’ which can dispatch sailors with ease and is relentless in its mission. ‘What manner of creature is that?’ asks the horrified captain. ‘What manner of devil made him?’

Charles Dance, Christoph Waltz, Frankensein, Jacob Elordi, Mia Goth, Oscar Isaac
Ken Woroner/Netflix

Those are queries del Toro seeks to explore as we flashback to Victor’s unhappy childhood at the hands of his corporal punishment dad (Charles Dance) and grief at the demise of his beloved mother (Lauren Collins). Determined to conquer death, we next meet Victor as a dandyish rebel showing off his latest experiments to appalled surgeons in Edinburgh. As a gasping, bloodied thorax and arm flails around with electric currents (impressive and gross physical effects), the dodgy doctor attracts the attention of arms dealer Heinrich Harlander (Christoph Waltz) who supplies cash for further experiments, a gothic tower to harness lightning and another psychological wound in the shape of his niece Elizabeth (Mia Goth). Dressed like a bird of paradise with a mind as sharp as her tongue, Elizabeth is betrothed to Victor’s little brother (Felix Kammerer) but her extraordinary empathy for others makes her an intrigue to the callous cadaver collector – and the heart of the story when she encounters the product of Frankenstein’s master work; the ‘monster’. 

Charles Dance, Christoph Waltz, Frankensein, Jacob Elordi, Mia Goth, Oscar Isaac
Ken Woroner/Netflix

Del Toro keeps audiences waiting an hour before the arrival of this patchwork creature made up of the dead from battlefields that he’s sawn, snapped and sliced asunder (also pleasingly gruesome). When he appears he’s a pale wraith with huge eyes, a cowering animal that can only utter one word. Buried beneath prosthetics that make him look like living alabaster, Jacob Elordi manages to convey a wide range of emotions with his singular utterance and a performance that lives in the physical. As Frankenstein commits the sins of the father, abusing his ‘son’ and punishing him for a lack of perfection, it’s clear who is the true monster in the scenario… 
Gorgeously designed – sets and costumes are painterly in detail, gothic and sumptuous – Frankenstein boasts some explosive set pieces that rival action movies and themes that still resonate with world politics all these years after Shelley first published. Just as then gods and monsters are often interchangeable, Man is the cruelest creature on earth, we are what we do and a powerful man hurling insults is often only describing himself. It’s a faithful – perhaps too faithful for some – adaptation with an awards journey that starts at Venice. It is, both literally and figuratively, bloody good.

Charles Dance, Christoph Waltz, Frankensein, Jacob Elordi, Mia Goth, Oscar Isaac
Ken Woroner/Netflix

Words by JANE CROWTHER
Photographs courtesy of NETFLIX
Frankenstein is in cinemas now
Streams on Netflix from November 7