Monk, a brilliant detective with obsessive-compulsive disorder, returns to solve one last case involving his stepdaughter Molly who's a journalist preparing for her wedding.Monk, a brilliant detective with obsessive-compulsive disorder, returns to solve one last case involving his stepdaughter Molly who's a journalist preparing for her wedding.Monk, a brilliant detective with obsessive-compulsive disorder, returns to solve one last case involving his stepdaughter Molly who's a journalist preparing for her wedding.
- Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
- 12 nominations total
- Man on Elevator
- (as Nug Mike Nahrgang)
- Engineer
- (as Daniel De Santo)
Featured reviews
It ends on a good positive note and his relationship with his daughter was handled perfectly and she almost set herself up to be a perfect Sharona/Natalie style sidekick for a new series run if this happened.
Tony Shalhoub seems to fit the role like a glove and it doesn't feel like its been 13 years since his last episide. It just feels like it was a year or so ago he was last playing the role
If they could offer a new series of Dexter many years later they can easily do it with Monk.
All you need is to find a way to get Stottlemeyer into the fold.and you have perfect TV.
But, if we can't have the show returning, a TV movie is great, right?
Well, it could have been, but this has got to be the most lazy writing ever done for a movie.
Mr. Monk isn't quirky, he's just awkward.
He's not allowed to be clever and use his intelligence, because the case is so clumsy presented, that we all know who done it and how immediately.
That means, the entire movie we're just waiting for Monk to catch up on what we already know, because no one made the effort of making an interesting case.
Great to see all the belowed characters again, but man - I'm rage-writing this review because it's probably the only time the cast gets back together, and then they get a script written by a 10 year old.
'Monk' is the kind of character I could easily see myself spending a lot of time with and not getting annoyed by. He's quirky and unassuming and his condition leads to some great humour. The movie was funny, not spit out your drink funny, but clever and I found myself chuckling more often than i expected to.
The case they based the movie around was so-so. Probably more worthy of an episode than a 90 minute movie, but it had just enough to carry things through and keep it interesting. I also might've enjoyed it a little more if the film had held its cards a little closer to its chest. For the most part though I had a good time with this one. 7/10.
But that is not a bad thing, in fact it is a good thing. It is familiar, we don't need to get used to a whole host of new characters. This movie, at just over 90 minutes, is as good and entertaining as the typical 'Monk' TV show.
There is a death, made to look accidental, but some things just don't add up. It is a bungee jump gone wrong, the cord is six feet too long, but the experienced jumper is very meticulous in constructing his cord. "Measure twice and cut once" is his approach. (As it turns out I figured out pretty quickly how the crime was likely committed and it turned out I was right.)
So most of the second half of the movie is seeing how Monk will gather and piece together clues. His interaction with other characters is as much fun to watch.
No, this isn't a great or innovative movie but it is entertaining if you like 'Monk.' My wife and I watched it at home, streaming on Peacock.
In the movie, Monk, an brilliant ex-detective with diagnostically fuzzy OCD is at the end of his always short rope. But when murder happens close to home (I really hate "this time it's personal" plot lines, but what can you do?) Monk comes out of retirement for what he's determined to be one last time.
As always, Monk unsteadily treads the line between character-driven comedy and cartoonish laughs. Monk sometimes responds as someone trapped in a world of obsessions, and sometimes just acts like a weird two-year-old having a freak-out.
In short, the movie, like the series is sometimes smart, and sometimes irretrievably dumb.
The mystery itself is decent though unexception - I figured it out way before Monk. The returning characters are decent although underutilized (except Randy, who is overutilized). The new characters are bland and add nothing, which is unfortunate.
Shalhoub, though, is still great, and his dry, anguished weirdness is still funny, even if it is the same shtick he's always done.
If you're expecting more than an overlong episode of the series then you'll be disappointed, but if you just want to see one more episode of Monk, this is worthwhile.
Did you know
- TriviaHector Elizondo (Dr. Neven Bell) was actually retired and had to be convinced to come out of retirement by Tony Shalhoub to film their scenes together.
- GoofsMonk says that Captain Stottlemeyer's mother died 37 years earlier. However, in Mr. Monk and the Captain's Wife (2004), she was mentioned as still being alive.
- Quotes
Adrian Monk: For nearly a decade, that particular model... the Kitchen King 480 with the digital timer and self-cleaning oven... was the best-selling appliance in North America. I bought mine on March 1, 1985, from Carl's Appliances on Rockaway Boulevard. I had it for 22 years. It was one of the longest relationships of my life, and certainly one of the happiest.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 30th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards (2024)
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- Mr. Monk's Last Case: A Monk Movie
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- 1h 37m(97 min)
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