Robert De Niro as the Creature in Mary Shelley's Frankenstein, which also starred director Kenneth Branagh and Helena Bonham Carter. THR was not impressed, writing "De Niro has been scarier." TriStar Pictures/Courtesy Everett Collection Share on Facebook Share on X Google Preferred Share to Flipboard Show additional share options Share on LinkedIn Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share on Tumblr Share on Whats App Send an Email Print the Article Post a Comment Frankenstein had lived a long life in popular culture by 1994, but at the multiplex, Kenneth Branagh's film marked the classic Mary Shelley novel's first studio adaptation in decades. Expectations were high: The movie was the most expensive U.K. production of the year, budgeted at $45 million (roughly $100 million today), and THR reported just before the release that it "should be a monster at the box office" on its opening weekend. Unfortunately, THR dubbed Mary Shelley's Frankenstein a "monstrous disappointment" two months later, with poor reviews and weak box office leading to Branagh splitting from both his agent and manager at the time. Related Stories Movies Why 'Frankenstein' Prosthetic Designer Mike Hill Didn't Want the Creature to "Look Like a Monster" TV Streaming Ratings: 'Frankenstein' Unbound With Big Opening on Netflix The innovative makeup used for the film's Creature, portrayed by Robert De Niro, escaped the bad press. In fact, the team led by Daniel Parker earned the movie's sole Oscar nomination, though they ultimately lost to Ed Wood. Branagh and Parker spent nine months conceptualizing the Creature before filming, landing on a design that would leave De Niro fully covered in prosthetics whenever on camera. It kept him in the makeup chair for up to 10 hours a day - similar to what Jacob Elordi experienced on Guillermo del Toro's new version. In an interview with Fangoria in 1994, Branagh described their Creature as "a butchered mismatch of different organs and body parts. He has two different eyes, he has a different brain and a body that comes from several different people." This proved an evolved visual take on the iconic figure, with De Niro's mournful performance matching Parker et al.'s relatively tragic design. "The Creature actually heals over the course of the film," said Parker in the De Niro biography Untouchable. "He starts off with open wounds which have no blood, but then the wounds become bloody, gradually close and the stitches fall out. By the end of the film these wounds have become scars, so that we had to create six different stages that involved either color changes or sculpting changes." So if nothing else, call that Oscar nomination an apt recognition of a real team effort. This story first appeared in a November stand-alone issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. To receive the magazine, click here to subscribe. THR Newsletters Sign up for THR news straight to your inbox every day Subscribe Sign Up The Tale of Silyan IDA Documentary Awards: 'The Tale of Silyan' Wins Best Feature Timothée Chalamet Timothée Chalamet Dances to "Crank That," Wears Fan-Made Flag of His Face in High-Energy Brazil Visit Sorry Baby 'Sorry, Baby' Filmmaker and Star Eva Victor Kept a Box of Agnes' Clothes After Filming Wrapped Saudi Arabia Red Sea's Fionnuala Halligan on Nurturing Saudi Film Culture With Respectful and "Strange" Programming THR Presents "I Wanted to Dismantle Their Victimhood": 'THR Presents' Q&A With 'Homebound' Director Neeraj Ghaywan and Stars Ishaan Khatter & Vishal Jethwa Heat Vision Box Office: 'Five Nights at Freddy's 2' Opening to Historic $57M, Scares Off Post-Thanksgiving Slump The Tale of Silyan IDA Documentary Awards: 'The Tale of Silyan' Wins Best Feature Timothée Chalamet Timothée Chalamet Dances to "Crank That," Wears Fan-Made Flag of His Face in High-Energy Brazil Visit Sorry Baby 'Sorry, Baby' Filmmaker and Star Eva Victor Kept a Box of Agnes' Clothes After Filming Wrapped Saudi Arabia Red Sea's Fionnuala Halligan on Nurturing Saudi Film Culture With Respectful and "Strange" Programming THR Presents "I Wanted to Dismantle Their Victimhood": 'THR Presents' Q&A With 'Homebound' Director Neeraj Ghaywan and Stars Ishaan Khatter & Vishal Jethwa Heat Vision Box Office: 'Five Nights at Freddy's 2' Opening to Historic $57M, Scares Off Post-Thanksgiving Slump
The Hollywood Reporter
Hollywood Flashback: When Robert De Niro's Creature Captivated the Academy
December 6, 2025
12 days ago
11 celebrities mentioned