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The Girl from Monday

 
Movies:

The Girl From Monday

  • Director: Hal Hartley
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Science Fiction
  • Movie Type: Sci-Fi Comedy
  • Themes: Future Dystopias, Benign Aliens
  • Main Cast: Bill Sage, Sabrina Lloyd, Tatiana Abracos, Leo Fitzpatrick, DJ Mendel
  • Release Year: 2005
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 84 minutes

Plot

Independent auteur Hal Hartley wrote and directed this satirical exercise in what he calls "fake science fiction." In the near future, following a violent overthrow of the American government, the United States has come under the rule of the MMM, a Multi-Media Monopoly which runs the country as a business. Every citizen now has a personal bar code, which is used to monitor his or her consumption of practically everything, including sex, now that aphrodisiacs have become the nation's biggest consumer product. Jack (Bill Sage) and Cecile (Sabrina Lloyd) are two MMM executives who are vying for the same level of advancement within the organization, while William (Leo Fitzpatrick) is a member of the Partisans, a cadre of anti-MMM activists who are attempting to bring down the corporation's rule, though they are regarded as both dangerous and powerless by MMM's leaders. In the midst of this situation comes a beautiful woman from the planet Monday (Tatiana Abracos), who knows about Jack's little secret -- he's a fellow alien hiding out on Earth. The woman has come to Earth to bring Jack back to planet Monday, but given the currently miserable state of Jack's life, he's more interested in having a relationship with her than heading back home. The Girl From Monday has its world premiere at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Bill Sage - Jack Bell
  • Sabrina Lloyd - Cecile
  • Tatiana Abracos - The Girl From Monday
  • Leo Fitzpatrick - William
  • DJ Mendel
James Urbaniak; Juliana Francis; Edie Falco

Credit

Inbal Weinberg - Art Director, Lisa Ann Porter - Associate Producer, Ryan Bronz - Casting, Virginia Cook - Costume Designer, Hal Hartley - Director, Steve Hamilton - Editor, Hal Hartley - Composer (Music Score), Sarah Cawley-Cabiya - Cinematographer, Hal Hartley - Producer, Steve Hamilton - Producer, Richard Sylvarnes - Set Designer, Jeff Pullman - Sound/Sound Designer, Justin Kawashima - Sound/Sound Designer

Similar Movies

Sleeper; THX 1138; Brazil; Alphaville
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Wikipedia: The Girl from Monday
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The Girl from Monday
Directed by Hal Hartley
Produced by Steve Hamilton
Written by Hal Hartley
Starring Bill Sage, Sabrina Lloyd, Tatiana Abracos, Leo Fitzpatrick
Release date(s) 2005 (U.S.)
Running time 84 minutes
Country United States
Language English

The Girl from Monday is a film made in 2005. The film deals with the consequences of business monopolization and globalization. Filmed in New York City and Puerto Rico, the film was first shown at the Sundance Film Festival. After a limited run in New York, it was shown at various festivals in America and Europe.

Contents

Plot summary

A being from another planet (Abracos) arrives on Earth and takes human form.

In voiceover, Jack Bell (Bill Sage) explains how his ideas came to bring the "triple M" into power and reduce human beings to mere consumers, pawns of the corporation.

Jack tries to hook up with Cecile (Sabrina Lloyd) but fails, leading the insurance company to investigate why this happened. The insurance agent decides it's not Cecile's fault and her premium remains the same, while Jack's is raised.

By chance Cecile meets up with a teenager in the counter-revolution, who takes her to a place where people have sex because it feels good. Cecile is arrested and sentenced to "two years hard labor... teaching high school."

At the high school, Cecile reads Thoreau's book Walden and is inspired to join the counter-revolution.

Meanwhile, Jack finds the girl from the planet Monday (named after its discoverer, Vincent Monday, explains Jack in voice-over) and teaches her how to fit in in human society. But the girl, who refers to herself as 'nobody', just wants to go home. Jack, it turns out, is also from that planet, and has tried and failed to go home. They go to the ocean, where the girl walks into the ocean. Jack says he doesn't know if she made it or not.

Themes

Almost all of the themes of the film are given in Jack's voiceovers. Society is too commercial, there is no privacy on the Internet. Children are given attention-deficit drugs and taught through "virtual playstations" supervised by convicts because too many of them bring guns to school.

Criticism

Stephen Holden, writing for The New York Times, opines that "Like so many science fiction fantasies, Hal Hartley's new film begins with a clever satirical premise, then stumbles all over itself trying to tell a coherent, original story." Peter Hanson, writing for Film Threat, called it "A profoundly unnecessary movie."

In comparison to Hartley's earlier work, this film and No Such Thing "may have lacked the impact of his first features, [but] they certainly demonstrate that Hartley is a director still unafraid to take apart and reassemble the medium."[1]

DVD release

The region 1 DVD release came out on November 7, 2006 and was made available to Netflix customers to rent.

Quotes

  • Cecile: "Let's fuck so we can increase our buying power."

References

  1. ^ Jason Wood, Talking Movies: Contemporary World Filmmakers in Interview London: Wallflower Press (2006): 104

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

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