Couverture de Frankenstein's Monster 2025: Oscar Buzz, Politics and AI Ethics Biography Flash

Frankenstein's Monster 2025: Oscar Buzz, Politics and AI Ethics Biography Flash

Frankenstein's Monster 2025: Oscar Buzz, Politics and AI Ethics Biography Flash

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Frankenstein's Monster Biography Flash a weekly Biography.

Look, so this week has been absolutely wild for our fictional monster friend, and I mean that literally—we're talking about a character who's been dead for over two hundred years but somehow keeps finding ways to trend. Which, honestly, is more relevance than most of us will ever have, so good for him.

Let's start with what's got everyone talking in the literary and film world. Guillermo del Toro's Frankenstein adaptation, which dropped in January, is still absolutely dominating the conversation, and it's not just because the production design is gorgeous. Jacob Elordi's portrayal of the Creature has been generating serious Oscar buzz for Best Actor in a Supporting Role—we're talking actual consideration from people who matter. According to recent takes from film critics, Elordi brings devastating emotional intelligence to the role, making the Creature a being who reads, thinks, and demands to be recognized as a person. Which, yeah, that's kind of the whole point that Mary Shelley made in 1818, but apparently we needed del Toro to remind everyone in 2025.

But here's where it gets interesting from a broader cultural perspective. Our monster friend has become the unexpected centerpiece of this massive conversation about otherness, belonging, and what we're actually afraid of. A fascinating piece from the Carolinian traced how the Frankenstein narrative is connecting directly to contemporary politics—specifically, the backlash against Bad Bunny's Super Bowl performance last year. And I know that sounds completely insane, but stick with me. The argument is that Victor Frankenstein's logic—destroying what threatens your idea of purity—has just moved into the public square. The creature becomes a metaphor for anyone deemed "other," and suddenly you're seeing the same pattern of fear and exclusion playing out in real time.

Meanwhile, over at the UN, there's this whole other angle where Frankenstein's Monster has become the go-to metaphor for AI development. The High Commissioner for Human Rights literally warned that developers without ethical grounding risk creating a "Frankenstein's monster." Because apparently nothing says "we're worried about our creation" quite like invoking the world's most famous cautionary tale about creation gone wrong.

So there you have it—our guy is simultaneously an Oscar contender, a political allegory for modern xenophobia, and a warning symbol for existential technological risk. Not bad for someone who doesn't technically exist.

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