Maggie Gyllenhaal directed The Bride!, a reimagining of the 1935 film Bride of Frankenstein, featuring her husband Peter Sarsgaard and brother Jake Gyllenhaal in key roles. At the New York premiere, she discussed the casting process and the film's feminist themes, drawing from Mary Shelley's original novel. Her godmother Jamie Lee Curtis has publicly championed the project as a major supporter.
Maggie Gyllenhaal's The Bride! reimagines the 1935 classic Bride of Frankenstein as a punk horror film with a $90 million budget. The story centers on the Bride, played by Jessie Buckley, who was brought back to life without consent to be the wife of the monster, portrayed by Christian Bale. Gyllenhaal, reuniting with Buckley from her directorial debut The Lost Daughter, described the Bride's situation as finding herself "in such an insane situation" during a press conference.
At the New York premiere on Tuesday night in March 2026, Gyllenhaal reflected on casting Bale, her Dark Knight co-star: "It was almost like meeting him again... I needed his whole heart, his whole mind." Her husband Peter Sarsgaard contributed to the script and workshopping, while brother Jake Gyllenhaal plays Ronnie Reed in his first role directed by Maggie since their 2001 breakout in Donnie Darko. She explained, "I always had him in mind for Ronnie Reed... I just needed to make sure that it was really the right thing for us in our hearts."
The supporting cast includes Penélope Cruz, Annette Bening, and Julianne Hough, who returns to acting after an eight-year hiatus from films like the 2011 Footloose remake. Hough stated, "This is the movie for them. Go and see this movie. You will feel so fucking fired up!" The film draws from Mary Shelley's 1818 novel, conceived in 1816, emphasizing themes of creation and female agency. Scholars like Barbara Creed note the original Bride's silence as a rejection of male-dominated order, while Gyllenhaal aims for "a celebration of all of the parts of all of us that will not fit into the box."
Jamie Lee Curtis, godmother to both Gyllenhaal siblings, saw an early cut and has promoted it on social media, calling it a "masterpiece" and "original punk feminist opera love story!" Gyllenhaal expressed interest in future collaboration: "Oh, I’d love it."
The film fits a wave of feminist horror, alongside works like Poor Things and The Substance, exploring artificial women's autonomy.