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Monos

  • 2019
  • R
  • 1h 42m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
20K
YOUR RATING
Monos (2019)
Official Trailer
Play trailer1:42
7 Videos
44 Photos
AdventureDramaThriller

On a remote mountaintop, eight kids with guns watch over a hostage and a conscripted milk cow.On a remote mountaintop, eight kids with guns watch over a hostage and a conscripted milk cow.On a remote mountaintop, eight kids with guns watch over a hostage and a conscripted milk cow.

  • Director
    • Alejandro Landes
  • Writers
    • Alejandro Landes
    • Alexis Dos Santos
  • Stars
    • Sofia Buenaventura
    • Julián Giraldo
    • Karen Quintero
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    20K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alejandro Landes
    • Writers
      • Alejandro Landes
      • Alexis Dos Santos
    • Stars
      • Sofia Buenaventura
      • Julián Giraldo
      • Karen Quintero
    • 115User reviews
    • 166Critic reviews
    • 78Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 39 wins & 70 nominations total

    Videos7

    Monos
    Trailer 1:42
    Monos
    MONOS Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:42
    MONOS Official Trailer
    MONOS Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:42
    MONOS Official Trailer
    Monos: Shrooms
    Clip 1:49
    Monos: Shrooms
    Monos: Swimming Pool
    Clip 1:01
    Monos: Swimming Pool
    Monos: Radio Call
    Clip 1:30
    Monos: Radio Call
    Monos: Roll Call
    Clip 0:36
    Monos: Roll Call

    Photos44

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    Top cast12

    Edit
    Sofia Buenaventura
    • Rambo
    Julián Giraldo
    • Lobo
    Karen Quintero
    • Leidi
    Laura Castrillón
    • Sueca
    Deiby Rueda
    • Pitufo
    • (as Deibi Rueda)
    Paul Cubides
    • Perro
    Sneider Castro
    • Bum Bum
    Moises Arias
    Moises Arias
    • Patagrande
    • (as Moisés Arias)
    Julianne Nicholson
    Julianne Nicholson
    • Doctora
    Wilson Salazar
    • Mensajero
    Jorge Román
    • Buscador de Oro
    Valeria Diana Solomonoff
    • Periodista
    • (as Valeria Solomonoff)
    • Director
      • Alejandro Landes
    • Writers
      • Alejandro Landes
      • Alexis Dos Santos
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews115

    6.819.6K
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    Featured reviews

    8Xstal

    Savagely Powerful & Extreme...

    The potential future leaders of the world and their citizens show us how much worse it could be when their time arrives - especially when left to their own devices, without safety nets, guidance and above all love.

    We corrupt our children at our peril but most of the time we're unaware of the damage done to them and to us as a result.

    Another great piece of thought provoking and engaging cinema - this time from Columbia but the message is universal.
    9evanston_dad

    Apocalypse Still

    Add "Monos" to the long line of movies that make me feel like I know very little about the world I live in.

    I wasn't sure whether this bizarre story about child soldiers in Colombia was based on real events or a fictional allegory for the state of the country. So I researched and found myself learning about the long history of armed conflict within Colombia, a country that has been at some version of war with itself for seemingly forever. Turns out children are conscripted to become soldiers, though I still feel like the specifics of this movie are a fever dream version of how these situations actually play out in real life.

    People have described "Monos" as being "Apocalypse Now" crossed with "Lord of the Flies," and I can't improve on that comparison. It's a stunning movie in all ways -- stunningly told, visually stunning, stunningly acted, by a cast of very young, mostly unknown actors at that. The word "visionary" is used to describe all sorts of films and directors who don't warrant the honor, but this movie is the real deal.

    Grade: A
    8TheDonaldofDoom

    War stripped of flags

    I see people saying you need to know about the Colombian context in order to truly understand this film. Maybe that is true to an extent, but the director deliberately removes any context that would tell you about the situation. That is for a reason. Because context is removed, you don't know who the characters are fighting for or why they're fighting. You can't say whether they are on the 'good' or 'evil' side, if there even is one at all.

    From the get-go the film immerses you into their lives forcefully and vividly. You don't need to know what the wider context or motive is to understand the very human drama. What I see is children making decisions based on a range of factors: fear, power, pride. But I also see children who are missing vital components of a human's existence because of the war that forces them to think like robots at times. Paradoxically, they also have the freedom and lack of authority to let them run riot at times, manifesting in wild, irrational decisions and bizarre, disturbing rituals. This unnatural state of being, war plus lack of social structure, is the cause. Yet you do get glimpses of their youth being expressed in more innocent ways, that remind you that there is still some humanity buried in there.

    I like that despite the situations the characters are in, Monos isn't bothered with making you pity them. It's interested in things other than that well-worn trope. It doesn't try to make you hate them either. Rather, it shows how they can do evil things, irrational things, and occasionally, good things. But ultimately, child or adult, war makes demons of us all.

    Another thing that really hooked me into this film is the cinematography, which is at times beautiful but is foremost fixed on expressing the characters' emotions. During crazy ritualistic behaviour, it becomes frenzied. As the group becomes increasingly disjointed, the camera is increasingly disorienting too.
    7Bertaut

    A bleak allegorical study of war as seen through the eyes of children

    Heart of Darkness (1899) and Lord of the Flies (1954) by way of the mad folly of Aguirre, the Wrath of God (1972) and Apocalypse Now (1979) and the children-are-screwed nihilism of Pixote (1980) and Johnny Mad Dog (2008), garnished with the soul-shattering futility-of-war mentality of Come and See (1985), all wrapped up in a pseudo-fairy tale/fantasy aesthetic. Turns out an insane hodgepodge like that results in a completely unique film, quite unlike anything you're ever likely to have seen. Written by Alejandro Landes and Alexis Dos Santos, and directed by Landes, Monos (from the Greek "mónos", meaning "alone") is an uncategorisable film that moves from a mountain top which is literally above the cloud-line to a stifling jungle to a raging river to the edge of a city in the midst of war, whilst thematically travelling all the way from a tight-knit group of soldiers who would die for one another to a last-man-standing mentality bordering on insanity. Visually stunning, the plot is a little lacking, and sometimes the allegorical basis is a tad imprecise, but this is hugely ambitious and audacious filmmaking from a director we're going to be hearing a lot about in the coming years.

    In an unidentified country at an unidentified point in time, a war is raging between unidentified combatants for never-specified reasons. On a mountaintop, we're introduced to the MONOS unit, a small group of child soldiers with two tasks - to look after a conscripted milk-cow and to guard an American prisoner being held for ransom, referred to as Doctora (Julianne Nicholson). By day, they take their duties very seriously, but by night, they act more like the teenagers they are; drinking, eating mushrooms, having sex, goofing around. A tight-knit group, morale is high. That is until an accident has a series of knock-on effects that ultimately sees them abandon their mountain base, heading into the unforgiving jungle far below. Cut off from their chain of command, their discipline starts to break down and soon, they have come into violent conflict with one another.

    Although the film is very loosely inspired by the Colombian Conflict, a low-intensity, multi-sided civil war that began in 1964 and is still going on today, one of its most important aspect elements is a lack of political, historical, societal, and militaristic specificity - it could be an allegory for almost any conflict at any point in time. Rather than attempting to elicit pathos by evoking the horrors of a particular conflict, Landes treats the story as a universal allegory, facilitated by the lack of concrete contextualisation. In this sense, it has both a fairy-tale sensibility and a mythological underpinning, with the violence and brutality offset by a poetic tone that speaks to timelessness.

    On top of this, the film examines the chaos and absurdity of war through the lens of adolescence; although the members of MONOS can be violent, so too are they teenagers, a duality that informs the entire film. The opening scene, for example, depicts the group playing football, but wearing blindfolds, thus encapsulating both the seriousness with which they regard their training, but also acknowledging that play is still an important part of their lives. Indeed, the film could even be interpreted as an allegory for adolescence itself - a group of teenagers unsure who they are, experimenting with drugs, alcohol, and sexuality, not entirely thrilled about being told what to do by adults, and convinced that they can do a better job of running things.

    Monos's most salient aesthetic characteristic is its dream-like quality, walking a very fine line between the gritty realism of a war drama and the hallucinatory feel of a fever-dream (in this, it very much recalls Apocalypse Now). This sense of existing just slightly outside reality is aided in no small part by the discordant and dislocating score by Mica Levi, which is built around whistling and timpani percussion. Also important here is the lush and saturated photography by Jasper Wolf. On the mountain, Wolf often shoots scenes with the characters dwarfed in a small corner of the frame, filling almost the entire screen with vegetation and sky. Such compositions suggest life lived at the edge of the world, existing outside society, existing outside even time. However, once we relocate to the jungle, Wolf goes in the opposite direction, shooting in tight close-ups, frequently handheld, suggesting both claustrophobia and the loss of the near-omniscient control seen earlier in the film.

    If I were to criticise anything, it would be the plot, which is very slight, even by allegory standards. Indeed, regarding that allegory, although I certainly admire Landes's steadfast resistance to specificity, sometimes he's almost too successful in rendering the non-specific and universal, leaving you wondering what exactly he is trying to allegorise (even the title can't be locked into a single meaning - apart from the Greek word for "alone" and the name of the unit itself, it's also the Spanish term for "monkey"). And although the theme of child soldiers is a weighty enough issue on its own, it's something with which Landes seems uninterested for its own sake. This can lead to a lack of emotion, which is almost certainly by design, but it makes it difficult to feel empathy for any of the characters, even Doctora.

    Nevertheless, this is hugely ambitious cinema with a lot on its mind. Straddling the line between the surreal and the barbaric, realism and fantasy, the seriousness of the adult world and the innocence of childhood, it's a singularly unique viewing experience, as beautiful, lyrical, and abstract in some places as it is ugly, crude, and realistic in others. Both a dire prediction for where an increasingly divided world may be heading and a foundation myth, Monos speaks as much to our future as it does to the legends underpinning our present.
    7elybuttons

    Good story about kids of war.

    A bit slow at times and confusing as to where the plot is headed but overall it's mix between Lord of the flies meets red dawn. Sort of a solid 7 as far as characters, storyline and production.

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    Related interests

    Still frame
    Adventure
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Cho Yeo-jeong in Parasite (2019)
    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Wilson Salazar, who plays the Messenger, was an actual soldier of the FARC from 11 to 24. Director Alejandro Landes found him at a reintegration program and hired him initially as a consultant, before deciding to cast him in the film as well.
    • Goofs
      In the making of the bed for Wolf and Lady, the troop of Monos used machetes and axes; but the wood they created is clearly made of sawed logs.
    • Crazy credits
      One of the opening credits reads "a la tierra de Laura" which means "Dedicated to the land of Laura"
    • Connections
      Featured in Ralphthemoviemaker: Joker - ralphthemoviemaker (2020)

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Monos?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 15, 2019 (Colombia)
    • Countries of origin
      • Colombia
      • Argentina
      • Netherlands
      • Germany
      • Sweden
      • Uruguay
      • United States
      • Switzerland
      • Denmark
      • France
      • Spain
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official Instagram
    • Languages
      • Spanish
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Монос
    • Filming locations
      • Chingaza National Park, Cundinamarca, Colombia(The abandoned fortress were Doctora is initially being kept captive by the Monos. Training camp, night party and the cow sequences)
    • Production companies
      • Stela Cine
      • Bord Cadre Films
      • Caracol Televisión
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $1,800,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $406,473
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $49,843
      • Sep 15, 2019
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,929,915
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 42m(102 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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