âI have always toyed with themes of transformation and reinvention,â says screenwriter Diablo Cody, who catapulted onto the Hollywood stage with 2007âs âJuno,â for which she won the Academy Award, BAFTA and Criticsâ Choice Award for best original screenplay.

âIn everything I write, someone is going through a dramatic change, whether itâs becoming possessed by a demon or dealing with a new stage of life,â continues Cody, who is also known for penning acclaimed film âYoung Adult,â starring Charlize Theron, and the Megan Fox-led cult-classic âJenniferâs Body.â âThe question Iâm always asking is: are we the same person after a profound change? How many parts can we swap or replace before weâre a totally new entity? This movie is a pretty literal interpretation of that!â
âLisa Frankenstein,â a sardonic spin on Mary Shelleyâs 1818 classic, tells the story of Lisa Swallows (Kathryn Newton), an awkward 17-year-old trying to adjust to a new school and a new life after her motherâs death and her fatherâs hasty remarriage. Despite the unwavering support offered by her plucky cheerleader step sister Taffy (Liza Soberano), Lisa only finds solace in the abandoned cemetery near her house, where she tends to the grave of a young man who died in 1837 â and whose corpse she unwittingly reanimates (Cole Sprouse). Feeling obligated to help the poor soul regain his humanity, Lisa embarks on a quest to breathe new life into her long-dead new companion. All she needs to succeed are some freshly harvested body parts and Taffyâs broken tanning bed.
âThe idea of using a tanning bed as the power source [to bring the dead back to life] was hilarious to me,â Cody says. Inspired by another off-beat spin on Frankenstein mythology, the 1985 John Hughes film âWeird Science,â Cody set her own take on the story in the 1980s. âIn that film, two teenage boys literally design their dream woman, animate her with electricity and watch in awe as she improves their lives,â she says. âI always thought it would be fun to see a female-centered take on that story.â
Playing the all-important role of Lisa Swallows is Kathryn Newton (âPokĂŠmon: Detective Pikachu,â âAnt-Man and the Wasp: Quantumaniaâ), who shares that one of the biggest influences for her portrayal was Gene Wilderâs performance in âYoung Frankensteinâ (1974). âGene Wilder was an incredible actor who was able to master that in-between of playing a character thatâs so over-the-top, but still grounded and pulling the audience in,â Newton says.
For Cole Sprouse (âRiverdaleâ), playing the creature reanimated by Lisa was the role of a lifetime, even though it meant having to act beneath layers of prosthetic makeup that had to be applied for hours each day and portraying the character primarily through moans, grunts and gestures. âHis inability to speak was what really excited me, just technically, and I knew it would be a heavy physical role,â Sprouse says. âFor me, it was an attempt to reach some more universal physical language about how we perceive emotions through gesture, through movement, which was fun.â

The Creature ignites the spark of life and love in Lisa, who now feels seen and heard. But Lisa has to keep it all hidden away and secret from her family, including kind, if somewhat clueless, step sister Taffy. âTaffy is my favorite character,â shares Cody. âSheâs a beacon of positivity, and even when sheâs unwittingly condescending or tone deaf, her intentions are always kind. Sheâs more protective of Lisa than anyone else in the film, other than the Creature. Lisa resents Taffy because sheâs effortlessly beautiful and popular, but Lisa eventually comes to realize that her ire is misdirected. I felt that having Taffy be a standard âmean popular girlâ would be uninteresting. Most of the queen bees Iâve known were more complex than that.â
âI had an instant connection with her,â says Filipina actress Liza Soberano (âMy Ex and Whys,â âAlone/Together,â âTreseâ) of Taffy, her first Hollywood film role. âSheâs such a fun character to play.â
Get ready for the funniest, goriest undead horror romance youâll see all year when âLisa Frankenstein,â directed by Zelda Williams (daughter of the late Robin Williams and herself part-Filipina) and distributed by Universal Pictures International, opens in cinemas February 7, just in time for Valentineâs Day! #LisaFrankensteinPH







