The Cinematography Podcast

Cinematographer Dan Laustsen brings Frankenstein to life

Nov 7, 2025
Cinematographer Dan Laustsen, known for his captivating visuals in collaborations with Guillermo del Toro, delves into the transformative journey of bringing Frankenstein to life. He shares insights on how he designed a rich color palette to reflect character emotions and highlights his preference for practical effects over CGI to enhance realism. Dan emphasizes the film's narrative as a love story about father-son relationships, not just horror, and describes the importance of lighting and camera movement in creating intimacy and depth throughout the film.
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INSIGHT

Long-Standing Collaboration Sparked The Project

  • Guillermo del Toro championed Frankenstein for years and finally asked Dan Laustsen to shoot it, prompting Laustsen to reread Mary Shelley's novel.
  • Laustsen found the screenplay faithful but adapted for cinematic practicality, shaping his visual approach.
INSIGHT

Color Palette Is Integrated Design

  • The film uses a tightly controlled palette: red for the mother and steel-blue/cyan mixed with amber for much of the world.
  • Laustsen and del Toro avoid altering those colors in the DI to preserve the integrated design across lights, costumes, hair, makeup, and sets.
ADVICE

Favor Practical Sets Over Green Screen

  • Build practical sets and use real elements whenever possible to gain authenticity and actor interaction.
  • Opt for practical motion (gimbals, moving platforms) and miniatures for big effects instead of defaulting to green screen.
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