Monster Movie Review
Monster Review

"Monster" Overview

Rating: R
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Patty JenkinsProducer : Mark Damon,Andreas Grosch,Charlize Theron,Brad Wyman
Screenwiter : Patty Jenkins
Starring : Charlize Theron,Christina Ricci,Bruce Dern,Scott Wilson,Lee Tergesen,Pruitt Taylor Vince
Thank God that Monster, the fictionalized story of serial killer Aileen
Wuornos, wasn’t made back in the 1990s, when filmmakers just couldn’t fetishize
mass murder enough. Wuornos’s story would have been “loosely adapted” so that
they could have cast someone attractive in the role, there would have been a
slick grunge soundtrack and plenty of hipster humor amidst the bloodletting.
That’s not to say that movies haven’t stopped their love affair with the serial
killer, but Monster shows that it is possible to make a gripping, yet still
dispassionate and non-exploitative film on the subject.
Wuornos is famous not just for the fact that she killed seven men in Florida in
1989 and 1990, but for being pretty much the only female serial killer of note
in recent American history. A troubled girl who had been on her own since she
was 13 and had survived by prostitution, Wuornos claimed, up until her
execution in 2002, that she had acted in self-defense each time.
Writer/director Patty Jenkins’s script manages to show how self-serving and
untrue this story ultimately became while at the same time acknowledging how
Wuornos’s past and profession led to her killing spree. There’s a wonderful
moment in a dingy biker bar where a self-pitying Wuornos is consoled by her
friend Thomas (Bruce Dern), a Vietnam veteran; they take turns volleying
variations on “What choice did I have?” back and forth in an attempt to escape
culpability for any of their actions.
The smartest decision made by Jenkins was not to make a serial killer movie,
but to play Monster as a doomed romance that leads into murder. There’s only a
brief voiceover as introduction before the film shows us Wuornos meeting her
future girlfriend, Selby Wall (Christina Ricci) in a gay bar. Wuornos and Wall
are a couple of misfits who fall in love almost because they each may be the
only person who really likes talking to the other. Wuornos keeps hooking
because it’s all she knows how to do, and one night shoots a john after he ties
her up and brutalizes her. Soon after, the odd couple hit the road, settling in
a dingy rented house. After some painful job interviews, Wuornos goes back to
hooking on the highway, her self-loathing quickly boiling over. It’s not long
until pretty much every john looks like a hateful rapist to her, and as the
bodies start to mount.
Jenkins’s second smartest decision was to cast Charlize Theron as Wuornos. This
is a revelatory movie for Theron, best known up to now as moderately-talented
blonde eye candy. She has always had a chameleon-like quality which made it
easy to pass her off as a typical model-turned-actress. But her transformation
into Wuornos is complete, with waxy-looking, spotted skin, stringy hair,
prominent upper teeth and blazing dark eyes. It would have been easy for most
actresses to simply hide behind the hideous prosthetic, and there are times
when Theron does seem to be acting into a mirror with exaggerated mannerisms,
but it’s overall an engrossing performance alternating wounded rage with
childlike enthusiasm.
Monster does take some missteps, relying far too much at times on Theron’s
voiceover to fill in gaps in the story, and not really showing us much of Wall’
s character. And although Jenkins does seem to be hip to the fact that Wuornos
was lying about her supposed motivations for all the killings, the film has a
tendency to let her off the hook. Ultimately, though, this is a film with a
story, concerned much less with shocking audiences than with showing how a
brutalized childhood can result in a brutal adult.
Roarrrr!
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti





