Development In August 2023, the weekly issue of
Production Weekly reported a forthcoming remake of the 1935 film
The Bride of Frankenstein from
Netflix, written and directed by
Maggie Gyllenhaal and starring
Penélope Cruz,
Christian Bale, and
Peter Sarsgaard (Gyllenhaal's husband).
Pre-production . In January 2024, it was announced that
Warner Bros. Pictures was producing the film and
Annette Bening had joined its ensemble cast, which included
Jessie Buckley (who starred in Gyllenhaal's feature directorial debut,
The Lost Daughter, in 2021) as "the star of the movie", alongside Bale, Cruz, and Sarsgaard. According to
Deadline Hollywood, Bale and Buckley were "circling this project well before the strikes". In March 2024,
Julianne Hough came on board to star, with
John Magaro and
Jeannie Berlin joining the following month. In June,
Jake Gyllenhaal, Maggie's brother, revealed he would also star. In August 2024,
The Wall Street Journal reported that
Michael De Luca and
Pamela Abdy, co-chairs and CEOs of the Warner Bros. motion picture unit, with "a reputation in Hollywood for being talent whisperers with a willingness to spend", had "stepped in to foot the bill" after Netflix left the project (which included a disagreement over Gyllenhaal wanting to film in New York while Netflix pushed for New Jersey because it would be cheaper), adding that "The movie's costs, including production and marketing, will likely exceed $100 million." Gyllenhaal emphasized the creative freedom granted to her by De Luca and Abdy.
Filming Principal photography was scheduled to begin on March 4, 2024, in New York City. Cinematographer
Lawrence Sher shot the film entirely with
IMAX-certified digital cameras, marking his first collaboration with Gyllenhaal. Sher primarily shot
The Bride! with the Sony
Venice 2 digital camera while the Sony FX3 was used for select shots. The film's main aspect ratio is 2:39:1 which expands into 1:43:1 and 1:90:1 aspect ratios in the IMAX format. In January 2025,
Deadline reported the film's budget as being $80 million. The score was composed by
Hildur Guðnadóttir, who replaced the previously announced
Jonny Greenwood. Swedish musician
Fever Ray announced they would compose two songs for the soundtrack and make an appearance in the film. Gyllenhaal cut some violent sequences, including those of sexual violence, from the film in response to negative
test screenings; one particular moment cut involved Frankenstein licking the black vomit off the Bride's neck. == Release ==