The Monster Movie Review
The Monster Review
"The Monster" Overview

Rating: R
1994
Cast and Crew
Director : Roberto Benigni,Michel FilippiProducer : Yves Attal,Roberto Benigni
Screenwiter : Roberto Benigni,Michel Blanc,Vincenzo Cerami
Starring : Roberto Benigni,Michel Blanc,Nicoletta Braschi,Dominique Lavanant,Jean-Claude Brialy,Laurent Spielvogel,Ivano Marescotti,Franco Mescolini,Massimo Girotti
I suppose that the problem with subtitled films is one of being literary.
Sure, you can watch intelligent films until the cows come home, but the
passerby on CNN's Showbiz Today said it best when he said "I don't like to read
when I go to movies."
The fact is that most people don't like to read anymore. I am highly unusual
in my affinity for the written word (I not only read books, but write them as a
hobby), in my love of conversation as an art form. A small percentage of
America likes that. This is the latter half of the 20th century. The
information age where the only things that we like to read anymore are web
pages. Our stories are told to us through movies. Our book reports are done
courtesy of Cliffs (who, don't ask me why, did Slaughterhouse-Five, one of the
easiest reads ever).
Who really blames anyone nowadays for having "subtitle-itis?" I have a friend
who wouldn't see Life is Beautiful until his editor demanded it, and he's a
critic. Perhaps this is partially because we have this association in our
minds with subtitles being "high brow" and "intellectual" films that, much to
my personal pity, the general public is not interested in. Perhaps it is just
because literacy has been shelved.
Kurt Vonnegut said in Slapstick that in 20 years there would be scribes -- a
select few which would be able to read and write -- once again. Of course,
that book was written more than 20 years ago, but who cares?
Back to the subject of "subtitle-itis", this new epidemic has existed for
years. We have this expectation that we don't have to read more than a few
notes when we go to movies. Hell, some people have a problem that
Trainspotting didn't get dubbed into American English because of heavy
Edinburgh accents. The subtitle translates to the average person as a stay
away sign because it means that they'll actually have to use their brains at a
time when they normally wouldn't. Not to mention the films that people
associate with being translated are the ones that are touchy-feely stories
without any macho lines.
To address this I offer a film review and a factoid. The factoid, for guys who
think foreign films have nothing to offer them, is that 1939's Ecstasy, with
Hedy Lamar, was the first film to feature nudity. So there. The film review
is that of 1994's Il Mostro (The Monster), an Italian sex-comedy from the
director of Life is Beautiful.
Loris (Roberto Benigni) is a short con man who does odd jobs and slacks off on
his maintenance bill. Through a mishap with thinking an old lady is a
nymphomaniac and a later mishap with a chainsaw going out of control, Loris
becomes suspected of being Il Monstro, the serial killer stalking the streets
of the city. An obsessed detective assigns Jessica (Nicholetta Braschi) to
trap him by using her... charms to catch him red handed. As put by the
detective, "we need to trap his hand in the cookie jar, and one of you needs to
be the cookie."
Almost as childish as There's Something About Mary, I can assure you that there
is absolutely zilch that is high brow or ultra-intelligent about Il Mostro.
It's childish, it's fun, and you can get it without understanding a single word
of Italian... well, maybe not the third part but you still don't have to use
your brain all that much.
For those who didn't want to be depressed by the Holocaust in Life is
Beautiful, The Monster is the Roberto Benigni film you should check out. It's
a guaranteed cure for "subtitle-itis."
Aka Il Mostro.
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Review by James Brundage
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