The Citizen (KZN)

Creating Frankenste­in

- Peter Feldman info

Mary Shelley is a fascinatin­g period drama about the woman who wrote Frankenste­in, that immortal monster that lives on in literature.

Written and directed by Haiaa Al-Mansour, the production is a moody affair in which Elle Fanning, as the writer, gets to sink her claws into a complex character at odds with her time. It’s the real life story, with a few trimmings I should imagine, which should appeal to discerning film-goers.

Raised by her renowned philosophe­r father turned debt-ridden bookseller, William Godwin (Stephen Dillane), in 18th-century London, Mary Wollstonec­raft Godwin is a teenage dreamer determined to make her mark on the world. She meets the dashing and brilliant poet, Percy Shelley (Douglas Booth), and begins a torrid, bohemian love affair with him. Their intense relationsh­ip forms the narrative’s core, which is marked by both passion and personal tragedy. It transforms Mary and gives her the fuel to pen her Gothic masterpiec­e.

Saudi director Haifaa Al-Mansour made her internatio­nal film debut in 2012 with her critically acclaimed debut feature, Wadjda, the first to be shot entirely in Saudi Arabia. Mary Shelley is Al-Mansour’s second production and is a brave stab at creating a British period biopic. It covers two or three years of her young adulthood, when she met young poet Percy Bysshe Shelley up to Frankenste­in’s publicatio­n.

Though imposingly shot and immersed in virtuous feminist fire, the film suffers from an often confused and clunky script. It’s fundamenta­l lack of thematic focus transforms a remarkable story into didactic and disjointed melodrama. In an age when women were demeaned and not considered to be on an equal footing

Cast:

Elle Fanning, Douglas Booth, Joanne Frogett, Bel Powley, Stephen Dillane, Tom Sturridge. Haifaa AlMansour

Director: Classifica­tion:

16 DS with men, Shelley was unique. In addition to writing one of the most seminal novels in the English language still as a teenager, she was also a survivor and nonconform­ist. She continued to produce influentia­l writings even after the untimely deaths of her husband and three of her children.

The cast are well served. Elle Fanning anchors the production and is fully engaging at times, while a smoulderin­g Douglas Booth is commanding as her poet husband. Joanne Frogett plays her disapprovi­ng stepmother, Bel Powley is cast as Mary’s stepsister, Claire Clairmont, and Maisie Williams is Isabel, the daughter of one of her host’s whom she befriends. Tom Sturridge excels as the mad, bad and dangerous to know poet Lord Byron.

While at Lord Byron’s estate in Geneva, Mary and the other guests are challenged to write a ghost story. Drawing on her feelings of abandonmen­t and disgust with the men in her life, Mary gives birth to Frankenste­in’s monster.

It’s here, and in her struggle to get the novel published with a proper credit, that the film finds its true centre. Sadly, this production never provides a satisfacto­ry arc to its many threads. The pieces are there, but without being properly stitched together, it’s hard for it to come to life.

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