Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein is drawing attention to its craft after the film’s prosthetics chief said Jacob Elordi endured a full-body build dozens of times without complaint. Mike Hill, who led the makeup effects department, described a regimen that could stretch to 10 hours in the chair, with Elordi encased in a system of silicone appliances tailored to evolve across the story.
Hill has said the team completed the Creature’s full-body application around 20 times, while separate behind-the-scenes features detail a 42-piece configuration for the complete look, including 14 for the head and neck. The approach was designed to balance period-accurate surgical scarring with a statuesque, almost sculptural beauty that reflects the character’s uneasy new life.
Del Toro, who has pursued the project for years, worked closely with Hill to settle on a silhouette that avoided past screen shorthand and tracked the Creature’s physical and emotional arc. Recent interviews with the director and cast emphasize that the design is meant to read as newly assembled flesh rather than a heavy, stitched mask, with Elordi exploring breath, posture and vocal timbre to keep the performance legible beneath the makeup. Production notes and cast conversations describe a creative environment where practical builds were prioritized over digital shortcuts to preserve texture under theatrical and streaming projection.
The rollout has extended beyond the screen. Netflix published detailed breakdowns of the build process and released time-lapse footage of Elordi’s transformation, while trade coverage highlighted Hill’s long collaboration with del Toro on creature-forward period dramas.
The film opened in limited theaters ahead of its streaming launch and secured a short IMAX window, a sign of confidence in the physical scale of Dan Laustsen’s photography and the tactile qualities of the makeup. For audiences familiar with Jack Pierce’s flat-top classic, the new Creature reads leaner and more human, its visible seams and pallor serving story beats about memory, abandonment and self-recognition.





















































