The Dark Truth of Frankenstein

The Dark Truth of Frankenstein

Imagine if a person defeats death, but that person is alive, and instead of being a human, it becomes your biggest mistake. A shell trapped in the Antarctic ice kills a man. A man, and behind him, a shadow that never dies. This is the story of Victor, who science transformed into a human, like Frankenstein. But he didn't love him. The world told him to kill. Years later, the hunter and the prey stand face to face, where there's no question of who will kill. If you want to know who the true master was. Where even complex stories are easy to understand. So, at the beginning, we see a ship trapped in the ice on a freezing night in the Antarctic Ocean. The captain finds a half-dead man who pleads for help, but at that very moment, a mysterious, terrifying shadow attacks him head-on from the darkness of the ice. Bullets do not affect him. After a great struggle, the shadow falls into the ocean through the crumbling ice. In the morning, everyone is alive, but the terrified Captain asks the man why the shadow was following him. This is where the film's true arc begins, and to find out, you'll have to watch the entire film. But moving forward, Victor falls silent at the Captain's question, and the story shifts to the past. Victor, the 12-year-old son of a great scientist, is devastated by his mother's death. When his father declares that death is impossible, Victor decides to challenge death itself. For years, isolating himself from the world, he works on a single question: Is death the last thing? Victor conducts terrifying experiments. Using electricity and the human body, he makes the impossible possible. The scene cuts to the object emerging from the icy sea again. Cold darkness, nothing but death has any effect on it. From here, the story becomes even darker. And then, Victor tells his story again. In the process, he brought an incomplete human to life. That incomplete human moves and speaks. Everyone realizes that Victor isn't challenging Sinus, but God. Fear drives them away, and Victor is cast out. The life he created is left alone and in pain. The world fears. If Death loses, the balance will be shattered. But a wealthy businessman becomes Victor's last hope. He had no shortage of money but simply wanted to live longer, as he was soon to die. He wanted Victor to experiment on him and keep him alive forever. For the first time, Qatl recognizes himself as a hope, not a madman. Overjoyed, he goes to his brother William's house, where a woman named Elizabeth warns him that the line between Sinus and the Guardians is very thin. Twitter smiles, but he doesn't realize the path he's treading. Now, to escape the world, Victor converts a deserted mansion into a laboratory. The massive antennas atop it were designed to harness lightning, as he had realized that ordinary strength wasn't enough to defeat death. With Will and Elizabeth at his side, Victor begins to break down from his repeated failures. Elizabeth then tells him to make him the way he is. Heeding her advice, Victor begins anew. Understanding the human body, he creates a complete structure of bones, muscles, and movement. The body could move, but it wasn't yet alive. He now needed the parts that truly make a person human: the heart, lungs, and organs. From here, Victor's journey descends into even more terrifying darkness. In the movie, we see that a war was raging at the time, and Victor brings organs from the battlefield to LA. He creates a body from the parts of several deceased humans, calling it Frankenstein, and then connects the heart to an electrically powered machine. Then, on a stormy night, lightning strikes the sky.

The entire lab trembles. Just then, a wealthy businessman arrives and demands to be kept alive for years to come. A scuffle ensues, resulting in the businessman's death. Lightning strikes, but Frankenstein remains unmoved. Victor accepts this as his greatest defeat, and the one he thought dead is soon to prove himself. This is an even more terrifying passage between life and death. Devastated by his failure, Victor falls asleep. Awakening in the morning, he finds Frankenstein alive. His tall, broad figure, his strange gait, and his face, fashioned from parts of different people, frighten even Victor. Terrified, he locks him in a secret room. Gradually, he realizes that despite his large body and mind, Victor teaches him to speak. He asks for his name, says, "I'm Victor," and after a while, the same heavy voice repeats, "I'm Victor!" Victor trembles. He wants his creations to become humans, but he forgets that humans are created through love, not fear. He possessed science, but humanity was lost, and this mistake would soon have a terrible price to pay. Some time later, William and Elizabeth visit Victor. Victor is alarmed because Elizabeth's uncle died in that very mansion. A noise is heard, and Elizabeth goes downstairs, where she meets Frankenstein. Surprisingly, she isn't afraid; instead, she explains things to him like a child. Stein also begins to learn from her. Watching all this from a distance, Victor realizes that Frankenstein understands Elizabeth's words, not his. Enraged, he tells William to take Elizabeth away immediately. Victor reveals the truth: the Creature caused his uncle's death, and forbids him from telling Elizabeth. After the frightened William leaves, Victor sets the entire mansion on fire. The massive explosion reduces the mansion to ashes. Victor is injured, but William refuses to let him go and takes him to the city. But the question remains: did everything perish in the fire, or did something else survive that night? The story returns to the present, to the ship sunken in the icy sea, from which Frankenstein emerges alive. Now, there's no fear in his eyes, only anger and revenge. He attacks the survivors. Frankenstein asks, "Why are you doing this?" Frankenstein replies that Victor told him half the truth. He didn't kill anyone, but he wants revenge on Victor. He then explains that after the fire, he escaped into the forest. For years, he wandered alone, where humans considered him their king. Hunters would shoot at him. Once, wounded, he fell near a house. There, he found a loving family, quietly learning their language, manners, and humanity. Gradually, he began to help them, silently leaving behind wood and prey. People began to believe that a divine being was helping them. It was at this moment that Frankenstein realized he wanted a family, too. But he didn't know that the human world was about to take everything from him. After some time, the family moved to the city, but one of the old men didn't stop. They knew that Frankenstein lived with them, and he never belonged to them. After the family left, Frankenstein appeared before them for the first time. The old man accepted him without fear. It was here that Frankenstein learned to live like a human, to read, speak, and understand. The old man's question revealed his true identity: he wasn't born, but created. He decided to meet Victor and create a companion like himself. He went to meet Victor and offered to create a companion like him, but Victor refused. When Frankenstein returned, he found the old man being attacked by wolves.
Frankenstein saves him, but the old man's sons arrive and, mistaking Frankenstein for a hero, shoot him. Everyone thinks he's dead, but he's only fainted. At that very moment, the innocent child within him is silenced forever. The Creature is completely shattered, having once again lost a man who never considered him a master. Years later, Victor and Frankenstein no longer have any relationship. It's only that of prey and predator. Victor searches for a way to kill the Creature he created. One day, he himself appears and challenges Marx to test him, or else Victor will be next. Victor delivers the final blow, causing a powerful explosion. Everyone thinks everything is over, but Frankenstein survives, and the game turns around. Now, Victor is no longer the hunter, but the prey. Amidst all the chaos and regret, he seeks help from others. And this is where the story connects to the present day, with a strange twist. Frankenstein himself sits and narrates the entire story. Without anger, without revenge, just like a tired man. He says he doesn't want to kill; he just wants someone like him. A broken Victor admits his mistake. He distrusted the life he created. Before dying, he apologizes and says that Frankenstein will now have to live in his place. For the first time, Frankenstein forgives someone. He helps everyone out of their icy prison, only to move forward and be free, but he remains on the sidelines. He neither runs away nor complains. He accepts that he must live this life alone, and the story ends with this silence.

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