It’s been a bumpy road for Maggie Gyllenhaal’s second directorial effort, “The Bride!,” and the signs aren’t looking good.
Back in March, we reported that early test screenings for the film were met with mixed—if not outright puzzled—responses. Puck’s Matt Belloni echoed the sentiment, expressing disbelief at how Warner Bros. signed off on a $100M musical from a filmmaker whose only prior directing credit is “The Lost Daughter.” That film, though critically acclaimed, was a far cry from the high-budget, genre-blending Frankenstein musical Gyllenhaal is attempting here.
Then came the release date shuffle. Originally slated for a late September rollout, “The Bride!” was abruptly pushed back to March 6, 2026.
In an interview with Deadline, cast member Peter Sarsgaard, who is married to Gyllenhaal, added a curious wrinkle, hinting that the film might stir controversy upon release:
I’m going to say that it’s going to be controversial. I mean, it’s very punk. It’s very radical in some ways, and the main characters in it are very imperfect.
It’s hard to tell if that’s a bold artistic statement or a coded warning. It’s a little cryptic. When he says the film is “controversial,” he could be referring to any number of things: its politics, its tone, its treatment of classic source material, or even its depiction of gender and identity, which would make sense given that “The Bride!” is reportedly a feminist reimagining of the character.
Adding to the film’s string of woes is the departure of composer Jonny Greenwood (“There Will Be Blood”), who quietly exited the project. He’s being replaced by Hildur Guðnadóttir, the Oscar-winning composer behind Joker, though her most recent effort, ‘Folie à Deux,’ wasn’t exactly received with open arms. No explanation was offered for Greenwood’s decision to step away, but it only adds to the mounting sense of instability surrounding the production.
Belloni’s sources suggested the film was struggling in the editing room, with Warner Bros. co-chair Pamela Abdy reportedly stepping in to help get it over the finish line. But even she is said to be facing challenges trying to shape the film into something cohesive.
Shot in New York, “The Bride!” is a modern riff on “The Bride of Frankenstein” (1935), the iconic sequel to James Whale’s “Frankenstein.” The cast includes Sarsgaard, Christian Bale, Jessie Buckley, Annette Bening, Penélope Cruz, John Mulaney, and Jake Gyllenhaal. It’s the kind of ensemble that would normally spell Oscar buzz. Instead, the buzz right now is all about what’s going wrong.