“Lisa Frankenstein” all in all is a campy, nostalgic film that fits right in with our most adored ’80s films. For anyone wishing they could time travel back to 1989, back to the days of iconically crimped hair, styled with scrunchies, timeless pop ballads and the occasional undead revenge plot, “Lisa Frankenstein” is the perfect film.
The latest brand of young adult romance seems to revel in the bittersweet tragedy of chronically ill teens falling passionately in love.
Five years ago, the adaptation of John Green’s “The Fault...