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“I’m Not Afraid of Death Anymore” – ‘Lisa Frankenstein’ and Learning How to Live Again

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Beneath its silliness and Lisa Frank shimmer, Zelda Williams’ Lisa Frankenstein examines death and the difficult task of overcoming it. When death preys upon your life, you lose your identity and who you once were – your life now splits into halves: the before and the after. For Lisa (Kathryn Newton), she finds herself sluggishly trudging through life in pursuit of something, anything to make her feel again. Nothing has any meaning, so she pulls away from her family and friends (if she had any) and instead finds solace in a nearby cemetery called Bachelors Grove. There, she enjoys the sunshine, the peace and the quiet, and turns to journaling and gravestone rubbings to pass her time. Other living people are the last things on her mind.

After a torrential downpour, Lisa, high on an accidental dose of PCP, wanders to the graveyard where she approaches her favorite gravestone, that of a young gentleman named Frankenstein. She wishes to be with him – that is, below the earth’s surface in the dirt and being eaten alive by maggots. And her wish comes true, in a way. A day later, the rigor mortis-stricken corpse (Cole Sprouse) revives from his grave and stalks her tracks, eventually making his way to her home where he hopes to woo her into his arms. Lisa initially freaks out; a monster has arrived on her doorstep, and she should be afraid, right?

But her fear soon washes away, just like the dirt and wiggling worms spiraling down the drain after Frankenstein takes a shower. He cleans up nicely, and Lisa makes him her pet project, even giving him some modern clothes. While Frankenstein can only grunt and grumble, Lisa completely understands and connects with him. It’s that “human” connection she’s so desperately needed since her mom died. 

To recover from her tragedy – Lisa courts death in any manner she can, even if that means making friends with a literal dead man. Perhaps, it’s only through unapologetically confronting death that you can actually heal and find your light again. When my mom died almost three years ago, I didn’t think I could ever recover; there are days still that feel as though death is following in my shadow, lingering just out of view for its moment to pounce, much like Frankenstein. When death preys upon your life, and it will sooner or later, it’s always when you least expect it. You can never be ready for it, even if the signs have already imprinted themselves upon your life.

LISA FRANKENSTEIN

Lisa, whose mother died at the hands of an ax-wielding maniac, begins sharing parts of her life with this flesh-dripping dead man. As the two grow increasingly intimate, Lisa opens up about her mother’s death in ways she probably didn’t expect. In one of the film’s most emotional scenes, Frankenstein sits down at Lisa’s grand piano and begins playing ‘Can’t Fight This Feeling,’ which her father hadn’t played since his wife died. As the song crescendos, you get the impression that Lisa is finally admitting to and accepting her mother’s death. “I forgot what I started fighting for,” Lisa sings.

She holds back tears, but Frankenstein can not. His odorous tears streak down his decaying face, leaving Lisa disgusted in one hilarious bit. Believing his tears to be the result of killing Janet (Carla Gugino), Lisa comforts him and reminds him that she had it coming. But I’d like to believe that Frankenstein felt Lisa’s misery throbbing in her chest, and his valid emotional response was a way to manifest Lisa’s own ownership over the pain.

It’s much later that Lisa exposes her darkest thoughts about death in the film’s most important scene. “After my mom died, everyone was in such a hurry to go back to normal. And they kept acting like I had a problem ‘cause I couldn’t stop missing her,” she says. “Started to feel like I was going crazy. I thought that was going to last forever, but it didn’t.”

“And pretty soon everybody seemed like they were almost excited to move on and forget about her. They kept saying, ‘Time heals all wounds.’ But that’s a lie,” she continued. “Time is the wound. It takes you further and further from that place when you were happy.”

Ultimately, it’s the fear of death that elicits such cold and detached reactions. “People are so afraid of death… cause they don’t know when it’s going to happen to them. It could be an ax murderer, could be the flu, but they don’t know and they hate that. So. I’m not afraid of death anymore.”

As Lisa and Frankenstein’s relationship flourishes, so does Lisa’s confidence. In wearing Taffy’s (Liza Soberano) clothes as a form of expression, she learns to live again and finally move on from her mother’s death. Grief will always follow her around, but she manages to wrangle it in healthy ways. She lets her heart open again, which is probably why she falls in love with Frankenstein. He’s the only person she’s been able to confide in. He’s a refuge, a place where she can be her most authentic, weird self.

LISA FRANKENSTEIN

When it comes down to actually dying herself, Lisa does so without hesitation. In the finale, she climbs into Taffy’s tanning bed and shares a bittersweet moment with her Frankenstein, both of them practically in tears. It’s a heavy, harrowing beat in the film that gives it necessary weight. Lisa comes full circle with her speech earlier in the film, and it’s a glorious payoff. “I’m not afraid of death anymore” rings truer than she could ever have expected it to. 

“Make sure you set it to max bronze,” she tells Frankenstein, in a move so she can truly be with him forever. The two share a final kiss, and the lid closes over Lisa’s body. In mere moments, the contraption lights on fire and burns her body into charcoal. A smile crosses her face just before. She’s accepted not only her own death but her place in life, her last moments alive flashing in her mind.

Her dying is worth all the living. From a mousy recluse to a bodacious lover, Lisa’s transformation is the glue that holds the film together. Director Zelda Williams coats the story with a Lisa Frank-approved veneer, references to The Rocky Horror Picture Show and Mary Shelley, and infectious campiness. Fortunately, it doesn’t bury the film’s darker moments. In fact, it accentuates them and makes the film far more profound than it otherwise would be.

Lisa Frankenstein is far more than a silly horror-comedy. It’s a mediation on death and how many of us become consumed by it. Without her Frankenstein, Lisa would likely have lived a very sad life, forever wandering through existence without meaning or purpose. Instead, Lisa lives a life worth living – even as she’s dying.

She’s no longer afraid and ashamed of her grief, death, or her own inevitable demise. She embraces every facet of existence and teaches us how and why to do the same. It’s through its painstaking commitment to its themes that has made me reflect upon my own journey. It’s been tiring but I can now see the light at the end of the tunnel. 

While the film flopped in theaters, it’ll find its audience in the coming years and hopefully more people will discover its charm and needle-point precision in accepting the toughest part of life: death. And it might even change a few lives.

Lisa Frankenstein is now available on Digital at home.

Lisa Frankenstein Digital

Books

The Power of Believing: Diving into Stephen King’s Fictional Tabloid ‘Inside View’

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Pictured: 'The Night Flier'

Stephen King is an interesting follow on the site formerly known as Twitter. When not posting about politics or his latest literary find, he’s ranting about the state of the world and making observations that position him as a sort of elder statesman in the horror community. A recent tweet by the Master of Horror mentions a bygone era of salacious magazines that harkens back to his early career: “Hey, do you guys remember that supermarket tabloid that used to have stories about BatBoy? Man, I loved that shit.”

The world-famous author is likely referencing publications like The National Enquirer and similar periodicals that used to grab eyes in checkout lanes with claims of Elvis sightings and alien encounters. Frequently inspired by the world around him, King has his own literary brand of tabloid journalism with Inside View, a rag that has been appearing in his work for decades. 


The Dead Zone

‘The Dead Zone’

Inside View began its life in one of King’s early classics, The Dead Zone (1979). This political thriller follows Johnny Smith, a teacher who awakens from a four-year coma with a disturbing ability to see into the past and future. When news of his powerful gift makes its way outside of the hospital, it peaks the interest of a sleazy periodical. Richard Dees, a journalist for Inside View approaches Johnny at his home with a lucrative offer to exploit this ability in a salacious column filled with parlor tricks and outsized predictions. Smith and his father summarily dismiss Dees and throw him off of their porch, valuing their privacy over a lifetime of lucrative infamy. But with this one interaction, an entity was born.

Inside View would become a fixture in King’s interconnected literary world and continue to appear in his novels and short stories for the next 45 years. 


Danse Macabre

Criterion Collection October

‘Freaks’

But to truly understand the genesis of this fascinating magazine, we need to go even further back in time. King has always been fascinated by oddities and opens his first non-fiction work, Danse Macabre, with memories of childhood nightmares. In the first chapter, “Tales of the Hook,” King tackles the concept of monstrosity by exploring fascination with carnival sideshows and the impact of Tod Browning’s disturbing 1932 film Freaks. While much of this section would be considered problematic by today’s standards, it was an uneven contribution to early conversations about disability and acceptance. King also seems fully aware of the salacious nature of this exploitation. In a treatise on horror, he’s examining the concept of otherness and our tendency to fixate on physical differences as a way of reifying the social hierarchy. He insists, “it is not the physical or mental aberration in itself which horrifies us, but rather the lack of order which these aberrations seem to imply.” 

King credits The National Enquirer with sparking his own interest in monsters and even admits to being an occasional patron. In a footnote following a mention of the tabloid, he confesses, “I buy it if there’s a juicy UFO story or something about Bigfoot, but mostly I only scan it rapidly while in a slow supermarket checkout lane, looking for such endearing lapses of taste as the notorious autopsy photo of Lee Harvey Oswald or their photo of Elvis Presley in his coffin.” While King may cast slight judgment on the authors of these exploitative stories, he does not shame the readers themselves. He describes these stories with a mix of reverence, bemusement, and childish wonder. These grainy photos of alien autopsies, flesh-eating dogs, and grotesque physical anomalies once sparked his imagination and introduced a young horror fan to elements of the macabre that would inform his prolific writing career for decades to come. 


Nightmares and Dreamscapes

Nightmares & Dreamscapes: From the Stories of Stephen King

While King’s work has always centered on the exploration of monsters, both fantastical and human, he dove head-first into this interest with his third short story collection Nightmares and Dreamscapes (1993). Akin to a curio shelf of horrific objects, this assortment of 23 unnerving tales features a number of dangerous oddities and unexpected monsters. Subjects range from a massive finger growing out of a toilet and a pair of murderous wind-up teeth, to bat people masquerading as powerful businessmen and killer frogs raining from the sky. His introduction – King’s beloved way of speaking directly to his Constant Readers – mentions freakish tales from paperback compilations of Ripley’s Believe It or Not!, a publication he fondly remembers devouring in his youth.

Rather than factual evidence, it’s belief that seems to interest King most. In a subtle nod to the climax of his magnum opus It (1986), King muses on the power of believing in myths like poisonous gas at the center of tennis balls and the ability to sever a shadow by piercing it with a stake. Similar to urban legends that shape our interactions with the larger world, King notes the importance belief in these imaginative legends has had in his own life. “This made for more than a few sleepless nights, but it also filled the world I lived in with colors and textures I would not have traded for a lifetime of restful nights.” Rather than cast a baleful eye on journals that traffic in the sensational, King’s collection highlights the power of believing in the “unseen world all around us.” His introduction concludes with an invitation to suspend disbelief and venture into a world where anything is possible. 


The Night Flier

‘The Night Flier’

Given this fantastical focus, it’s no surprise that Nightmares and Dreamscapes features King’s most overt exploration of Inside View. The collection’s fourth story “The Night Flier”  follows Dees, now a veteran reporter, on the trail of a “vampire” traveling the country in a small private plane. It’s a grim story with a true crime feel and a fascinating approach to vampire lore. The titular pilot may wear the black cape made famous by Bela Lugosi, but he has a hideous face with two large, bore-like fangs that puncture the necks of his victims and cause their blood to spurt out like crimson guisers. Dwight Renfield is not an elegant killer, but a ripper-like psycho leaving grisly crime scenes and dismembered corpses in his wake – the perfect subject for Inside View

Rather than focus solely on the monster himself, King spends just as much time exploring Dees’s own ethical code. Far from the ambitious hack that once knocked on Johnny Smith’s door, this Dees has been curating the publication’s scandalous content for decades. He operates on the iron-clad directive to never print anything he believes and to never believe anything he prints, an interesting subversion to King’s earlier introduction. I won’t spoil one of the collection’s best entries, but “The Night Flier” plays with the price of disbelief as Dees is forced into a world where the stories he’s been spinning for decades might actually be real. 


Modern Mentions

‘Doctor Sleep’

King presents Nightmares and Dreamscapes as the concluding chapter in a trilogy of short story collections and it does feel like the end of an era. The author’s next literary phase is much more experimental, playing with formats, bending genres, and moving further away from the hallmarks of classic horror. Inside View remains a constant, but the author’s perspective seems to gradually shift. Tess, the heroine of his 2010 rape-revenge novella “Big Driver,” chooses not to report her assault in part because she fears the magazine would blame her for the crime. In Doctor Sleep (2013), Abra’s mother keeps her daughter’s psychic abilities a secret for fear that, like Johnny Smith, she would become fodder for the tabloids. This shift may have something to do with King’s own time recovering from a near-fatal highway accident. During his lengthy recovery, the world-famous author may have imagined pictures of his own mangled body appearing in publications willing to disregard ethics in favor of a massive payday.  

Though mentions have decreased since the ’90s, King has not stopped writing about Inside View. Billy Summers (2021) and Fairy Tale (2022) both include references to this fictional tabloid. Inside View also makes an appearance in You Like It Darker, now available. The eagerly anticipated collection revisits Cujo, another Castle Rock story from King’s early catalog. 

King’s intro for Nightmares and Dreamscapes extols not only the virtues of short stories, but also their ability to save the world. “Good writing–good stories–are the imagination’s firing pin, and the purpose of the imagination, I believe, is to offer us solace and shelter from situations and life-passages which would otherwise prove unendurable. I can only speak from my own experience, of course, but for me, the imagination which so often kept me awake and in terror as a child has seen me through some terrible bouts of stark raving reality as an adult.” With the world seeming to come apart at the seams, perhaps it’s time to renew our faith in the fantastical, suspend our disbelief, and once again venture with King into the world of the seemingly impossible. 

‘The Night Flier’

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