This weekend we saw The Bride! (2026). I assumed that it would be a sequel to Frankenstein (2025), but it is not. The frenetic, lunatic ghost of Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, channeling Bellatrix LeStrange from Harry Potter, complains that she died before she had a chance to write anything meaningful (lady, you died at age 53, having published dozens of novels, short stories, essays, travel journals...) So she possesses a 1930s floozy named Ida, who starts a lengthy diatribe and falls down a flight of stairs. Frank the Monster (Christian Bale, left) convinces a mad scientist to revive her, and they go on a rampage, channeling the Joker and Harley Quinn, Bonnie and Clyde, and the Me, Too Movement.
There are a few nods to 1930s gay culture: Ida kisses a lady in the first scene, and takes Frank to a nightclub frequented by a few same-sex couples. But it is ruined by a monumental queerbaiting.
In the 1930s, all sheriffs were male. She very clearly and unambiguously states that he has sex with men.
But at the end of the movie he admits that he keeps letting Ida get away because he is in love with her; they used to be romantic partners, before her accident.
WTF? A real life person could be bisexual, of course, but in movies, a hetero-romance obliterates gay references. Myrna's statement was an outright lie, a nasty joke played on the audience.
This is not a review of the g*ddam monstrosity (it would get an F----). I was so angry that I looked through the entire cast list, hoping to find a gay person to profile. I finally found one, after researching a gaggle of straight hunks:
1. Christian Bale as Frank the Monster
2. Peter Sarsgaard as the queerbaiting Detective.
3. Jake Gyllenhaal as Ronnie Reed, a Fred Astaire-like dancer. Frank idolizes him, so they travel to all of the sites where his movies were filmed.
4. Zlatko Buric, on Nysocboy's Beefcake and Bonding, as mob boss Lupino. The Mafia is involved, too.
5. Will Dagger, left, as a guy at a movie theater who is trying to get with his girlfriend in spite of her protests. Frank and Ida intervene.
6. Louis Cancelmi as Officer Goodman, one of the cops that the couple kills.
7. Neil Vincent Smith as a patron in a restaurant that the two disrupt. Sorry, I couldn't find a photo where he isn't hugging a lady.
8. Antony Abbato, left, as another restaurant patron.
The gay guy after the break

















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