Chattanooga Times Free Press

Q&A Hollywood

- By Adam Thomlison

Q: I keep hearing people talk about a remake of “The Bride of Frankenste­in,” but I've yet to see it. Is it actually going to happen?

A: If it doesn’t happen at this point, Hollywood owes Christian Bale a new head of hair.

Bale (“The Dark Knight,” 2008) said in a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter that he was about to shave his head for a new role, playing the monster Frankenste­in in the remake of the 1935 horror classic “The Bride of Frankenste­in.” That little quote is the most concrete confirmati­on we’ve had yet that it’s actually happening.

What you’ve been hearing as rumors have, in fact, been failed attempts to get this remake off the ground.

The original idea was to make it as part of a cinematic universe, much like Marvel movies but with Universal Pictures’s classic monster lineup. But when a 2017 remake of “The Mummy” (starring Mission: Impossible franchise superstar Tom Cruise) flopped at the box office, all those big plans were shelved, including the “Bride of Frankenste­in” remake.

Fortunatel­y, an unlikely hero swooped in to save the day: Maggie Gyllenhaal. Bale’s “Dark Knight” co-star, who recently won accolades for her directoria­l debut, 2021’s “The Lost Daughter,” is now going to write and direct the remake, which she’s calling simply “The Bride.”

We don’t know much more than that, except that a few other major stars — including Annette Bening (“American Beauty,” 1999) and Penelope Cruz (“Vicky Cristina Barcelona,” 2008) — are attached.

Assuming all goes well from here, we’ll find out the rest in October 2025, which is the currently scheduled release date.

Q:Was that Nestor Carbonell I saw on “Shogun”? I haven't seen him since “Lost.”What else has he been doing?

A: It’s hard to believe that “Lost” ended 14 years ago — hard because people still talk about it, and because Nestor Carbonell, like his “Lost” character, doesn’t seem to age.

Carbonell played Richard Alpert on “Lost” — a mysterious figure who first appears in flashbacks but is later revealed to be one of the people who were already living on the supposedly deserted island. He’s also revealed to be immortal — a fact which, by the time he was introduced in the third season, wasn’t all that outlandish by the show’s standards.

In real life, Carbonell is, in fact, a real human being who just happens to look 40 forever. That’s helped him establish himself as a serious TV supporting man, often playing serious profession­als reacting to the heightened circumstan­ces around them.

While you did, in fact, see him in FX’s “Shogun,” his first post-“Lost” show was a bit of a flop. “Ringer” got just one season on The CW, from 2011 to 2012 (so, just a year after “Lost” ended), with Carbonell playing an uptight FBI agent assigned to protect the show’s protagonis­t (played by Sarah Michelle Gellar, also seeking a career-defining role post-”Buffy the Vampire Slayer”).

Have a question? Email us at questions@tvtabloid.com. Please include your name and town. Personal replies will not be provided.

 ?? ?? Maggie Gyllenhaal to write and direct “The Bride”
Maggie Gyllenhaal to write and direct “The Bride”

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