Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaIn an effort to turn her life around, a young indigenous woman returns to her hometown and discovers how dysfunctional her family has become.In an effort to turn her life around, a young indigenous woman returns to her hometown and discovers how dysfunctional her family has become.In an effort to turn her life around, a young indigenous woman returns to her hometown and discovers how dysfunctional her family has become.
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- 10 vitórias e 17 indicações no total
Miika Bryce Whiskeyjack
- Teen Lisa
- (as Miika Whiskeyjack)
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I don't get people who criticize a movie adaptation because it didn't present a literal recreation of a book they liked. Adaptations are things in themselves that evolve from the need to fit ideas, characters, commentary, internal dialogue and spoken dialogue and more into a different medium with many constraints, not the least of which may be budget.
The only movie I know that almost completely follows the book is the Maltese Falcon -- good book, good movie. One of my favourite books, Catch 22, could never become a movie that way, and yet I have enjoyed both the movie and the short TV series based on it.
The same with Monkey Beach, a book I've read and loved at least three times. But I don't know how you could ever put the literal book on screen. And so I dropped my preconceptions about what it 'should be' and simply watched the movie -- and was mesmerized.
I loved the cinematography, I loved the music and soundtrack and the non-linearity of the storytelling. I found the movie both funny and moving and was knocked out by how good the acting was. I'm not a huge fan of Adam Beach, but he was perfect for the role of Uncle Mick. Glen Gould perfectly portrayed Josh, a traumatized man lashing out at everyone around him. I loved Mama-oo, and young Lisa and can't say enough good things about how right Grace Dove was carrying Lisa's story to its bitter-sweet conclusion.
What can I say? A movie adaptation is like an impressionist painting -- it's not a photograph, it's an experience and a feeling and I'm feeling very good about Ms. Todd's impression of Monkey Beach.
The only movie I know that almost completely follows the book is the Maltese Falcon -- good book, good movie. One of my favourite books, Catch 22, could never become a movie that way, and yet I have enjoyed both the movie and the short TV series based on it.
The same with Monkey Beach, a book I've read and loved at least three times. But I don't know how you could ever put the literal book on screen. And so I dropped my preconceptions about what it 'should be' and simply watched the movie -- and was mesmerized.
I loved the cinematography, I loved the music and soundtrack and the non-linearity of the storytelling. I found the movie both funny and moving and was knocked out by how good the acting was. I'm not a huge fan of Adam Beach, but he was perfect for the role of Uncle Mick. Glen Gould perfectly portrayed Josh, a traumatized man lashing out at everyone around him. I loved Mama-oo, and young Lisa and can't say enough good things about how right Grace Dove was carrying Lisa's story to its bitter-sweet conclusion.
What can I say? A movie adaptation is like an impressionist painting -- it's not a photograph, it's an experience and a feeling and I'm feeling very good about Ms. Todd's impression of Monkey Beach.
-- the difference being, that a ghost was once a human being, while a spirit is an elemental piece of nature. That's one thing I learned from this interesting indie film set in a Haisla peoples' village on coastal British Columbia. The protagonist of the story is young Lisa, played by the pretty and aptly named Grace Dove. She has the rather unwanted ability to experience both ghosts and spirits -- she sees dead people now and then, and has friendly chats with them (kind of like old Amarante in "The Milagro Beanfield War"), but the spirit world is a different and more threatening matter. She's constantly troubled by dream-visions of her brother Jimmy (Joel Oulette) drowning and is obsessed with how to prevent it. But there are worse omens: visits in the dark from a tiny, glowing man in traditional gear (as she refers to him, "the little asshole") who seems to be a portent of someone's death, as well as large dark figures in the woods that lurk barely out of sight.
What does it all mean? Her quest to save Jimmy is the simple, main thread of the film and takes us through scenes in and around her village, getting to know her extended family members and friends, and involves several flashbacks to when she was a girl (Zoey Snow) and later a teenager (a very striking Miika Bryce Whiskeyjack). It all reaches a resolution of sorts, though not an entirely traditional one. The final big sequence of scenes is Lisa's vision-quest that ties together elements of previous scenes and at least partly puts them into context; fair warning, there's one truly frightening piece as the climax. Not everything is all neat and tidy at the end, though (What just happened there??) It's not always spelled out for us, and that's OK -- i.e., the message being (I think) that the spirit-world is under no compulsion to explain itself to us, and it has its own drives that are not ours. Just let the mystery settle on its own terms.
The only one of this nice cast of First Nations actors I had seen before was Adam Beach (playing Lisa's uncle as a lively but troubled fisherman). One other character I liked a lot was her grandma, the only one who knows what Lisa is going through (played by Tina Lameman, who almost steals any scene she's in without fuss). One part of the ambience of this whole film that stood out for me was that all these strange experiences Lisa goes through are happening in resolutely ordinary settings -- a small village, beaches and fishing boats, very ordinary houses with very ordinary people just living their ordinary lives. But then, back in deep historical time when legends were born, the people there thought they were just living ordinary lives too.
What does it all mean? Her quest to save Jimmy is the simple, main thread of the film and takes us through scenes in and around her village, getting to know her extended family members and friends, and involves several flashbacks to when she was a girl (Zoey Snow) and later a teenager (a very striking Miika Bryce Whiskeyjack). It all reaches a resolution of sorts, though not an entirely traditional one. The final big sequence of scenes is Lisa's vision-quest that ties together elements of previous scenes and at least partly puts them into context; fair warning, there's one truly frightening piece as the climax. Not everything is all neat and tidy at the end, though (What just happened there??) It's not always spelled out for us, and that's OK -- i.e., the message being (I think) that the spirit-world is under no compulsion to explain itself to us, and it has its own drives that are not ours. Just let the mystery settle on its own terms.
The only one of this nice cast of First Nations actors I had seen before was Adam Beach (playing Lisa's uncle as a lively but troubled fisherman). One other character I liked a lot was her grandma, the only one who knows what Lisa is going through (played by Tina Lameman, who almost steals any scene she's in without fuss). One part of the ambience of this whole film that stood out for me was that all these strange experiences Lisa goes through are happening in resolutely ordinary settings -- a small village, beaches and fishing boats, very ordinary houses with very ordinary people just living their ordinary lives. But then, back in deep historical time when legends were born, the people there thought they were just living ordinary lives too.
What a journey. Monkey Beach is so deep and profound. So many movies from Canada are not very cinematic. Not Monkey Beach. It is rich in story - of course, because of the book it is based on. But also because how the actors are so epic in their roles. Not to compare to other films, but so many are about despair and stereotypes. No stereotypes here. Adapting a novel is always a challenge. So much has to be left out. But here you feel like you are part of a story that builds and builds and moves like the ocean and the tides. If you loved the novel, you will love the movie. And it will appeal to so many people - young and mature, literary and someone who just wants to be entertained. The music is amazing. And the special effects. And the camera. And the directing. It was all so amazing. And village where they filmed and the land around is so beautiful.
I don't agree with the other reviewers here. Monkey Beach is magical realism. The movie doesn't deal with an urban native girl learning about her culture. She is like a superhero, like one reviewer in the media said. No melodrama here. And choppy dialogue. I read the book a few times and I think some of the dialogue is right from the book. Didn't think the book's dialogue was choppy.
I don't agree with the other reviewers here. Monkey Beach is magical realism. The movie doesn't deal with an urban native girl learning about her culture. She is like a superhero, like one reviewer in the media said. No melodrama here. And choppy dialogue. I read the book a few times and I think some of the dialogue is right from the book. Didn't think the book's dialogue was choppy.
Loretta Todd did an amazing job of directing a particularly complex script. A young Haisla woman with the ability to perceive spirits and future events, returns home to reconnect with her family and community. While grappling with the darkness that is so common in Indigenous communities, she finds her power from the interactions with her people and through ceremony and spiritual journeying, the magic of her spirit powers are fully realized. The spirit world reveals her shamanic ancestral roots. The imagery is breathtaking and captures the natural beauty of northern BC. What better way to the oppressors than to find your own power.
I saw this film at the Vancouver International Film festival. This film is very beautifully shot portraying the area in and around Kitimat. The beauty of the natural landscape is one aspect but generally the the cinematography throughout the film is in line with the natural beauty of the area, especially the shots on the water. The performances by all of the indigenous actors are great some of the best in recent memory. The supernatural scenes are so powerful, I had chills! The post credit scene brought tears to my eyes, this film is not to be missed and as an indigenous person it was so nice to feel the sense of community in the film. GO SEE THIS FILM!
Você sabia?
- ConexõesReferences A Família Addams (1964)
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- How long is Monkey Beach?Fornecido pela Alexa
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- Orçamento
- CA$ 3.000.000 (estimativa)
- Tempo de duração1 hora 45 minutos
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