Es muy buena la película pese a que es muy predecible , y la gente en las críticas solo saben decir pésimos efectos , pero me parece algo genial me recordó a el Frankenstein de Van Helsing , que el solo quería vivir y no ser tratado como un mounstro , además me pareció increíble está película, no entiendo porque ha está la critican tan mal .
Rating: 0.5 out of 5 stars
Terrible movie looks lika a dvd released movie
Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars
I skipped I, Frankenstein when it was released in theaters. I had heard it wasn’t very good, so I avoided watching it. However, I must say that it’s not as bad as some other film adaptations of Frankenstein I’ve seen. It’s still not that good, though. This movie is like a reanimated corpse, lumbering along a pre-determined path of predictable plot points and cliched dialogue in order to get to the next computer-generated action sequence. Aaron Eckhart tries his best to give his brooding character life, and there are some entertaining visual effects, but all that is not enough to save I, Frankenstein.
Rating: 0.5 out of 5 stars
It only took four minutes into the film for me to realize that the writing was bad, the special-effects were bad and the choreography was bad, and then shut the movie off and run to RT to drop a review.
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
If you use your imagination sit back and try to enjoy the movie you will enjoy this movie don't read the reviews or low stars just watch the movie and try and just use your imagination
Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
This bad. Really bad.
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
Even though the film felt like another Blade/Underworld remake, I enjoyed the gargoyle order addition. I wish the storyline moved faster through Adams creation & why he was being hunted by demons so there could be more action packed scenes. All in all, it wasn't a waste of time to see. I do hope for a future Frankenstein film that WOWS me!
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
Action Monster movie, enjoyable, and not ment to be some highbtow epic. It is good for what it is and what it was meant to be.
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
Such a low so-called "critics" ratings - that I HAD to watch!
Excellent movie!
Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
Based on Kevin Grevioux's digital graphic novel, I, Frankenstein is a sci-fi fantasy film from 2014 about Frankenstein's Monster getting dragged into a war between gargoyles and demons. The film was critically panned and failed to make much of a profit at the box-office.
Aaron Eckhart stars as Adam, Frankenstein's Monster, in a movie that, unsurprisingly, aimed for potential Underworld crossovers down the line. This is very much the same kind of movie with its modern-day action take on classic horror monsters, CGI creatures, comic-book style visuals and rock soundtrack. I, Frankenstein, being released over 10 years after the first Underworld and other similar movies (Van Helsing, LXG) were a big thing, unfortunately feels old hat as it, almost proudly, decides to bring nothing new to the table.
The plot sees gargoyles, who were created by an archangel, rescue Frankenstein's Monster/Adam from a demon attack then try to hire his help in this war between good and evil. Adam grabs a couple of weapons, declines the offer and walks away in typical reluctant anti-hero fashion. Cut to a mere 200 years later and the war continues but now a demon prince called Naberius (Bill Nighy) is plotting to revive human corpses using Frankenstein's secret in order to possess them with an army of demons.
It doesn't get much more ludicrous than this here plot, of course, and the writing is about as slight, clichéd and predictable as it gets. There's nothing tongue-in-cheek about this movie, however, as everyone from Aaron Eckhart to Jai Courtney and Bill Nighy takes their roles seriously, with barely any humor present in the entire film. That said, there is something enjoyably cozy about a straight-up B movie like this one, which is as earnest as possible and acts like it's the first of its kind. Its lack of self-awareness is arguably more entertaining than the action sequences themselves with actors saying the silliest lines with a straight face. One scene even makes sure to emphasize the Frankenstein Monster's six-pack, which is exactly what Mary Shelley had in mind, I'm sure.
There's frankly not much else to say about I, Frankenstein: this is a CGI-heavy, quite ridiculous and not very good gothic action flick with enough amusingly dated tropes, bad dialog and straight-up nonsense to keep you entertained but if you're looking for a somewhat decent and recent enough Frankenstein movie, I'd opt for Victor Frankenstein instead.
Every bit as goofy as it sounds.