Monday Morning

2012
8.1| 1h52m| en
Details

Thomas Bach is on top of his game. A popular right-wing radio talk-show host and a hero of the Tea Party Movement, he is hand picked to run for the U.S. Senate. But first he must fly to Los Angeles and clean up some dirty laundry that might damage his campaign. A victim of an attack, Thomas wakes up on the streets of Los Angeles without his memory. He is also unaware that he is a diabetic. He now wanders Skid Row, inevitably blending in with the homeless population, and without medication, his life is at risk.

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Reviews

ChicRawIdol A brilliant film that helped define a genre
Erica Derrick By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
Mandeep Tyson The acting in this movie is really good.
Josephina Great story, amazing characters, superb action, enthralling cinematography. Yes, this is something I am glad I spent money on.
Donald Kronos What can I say? Starts out a bit like a soap opera depicting a view of reality one might associate with the lifestyle of powerful upper class and upper middle class people, but leaves the viewer feeling like they just got to watch a true story that happened in a universe remarkably like our own... or maybe even identical. Anyway, you're going to want to see the sequel. That's what I felt at the end of it, as did the other people I spoke with who saw the screening. So when you get to see this movie, remember this simple chant for when the credits start... SEQEUL! SEQUEL! SEQUEL! SEQUEL! SEQEUL! SEQUEL! SEQEUL! SEQUEL!... Got it? Good!!!
HoustanHills Monday Morning definitely puts itself there to be loved or to be shot at. We loved it. I think about movies that I love. With most, whether they are comedies or dramas, thrillers or action movies, I usually walk away feeling that I saw something original or enlightened. Either in a very real way or superficially, whether or not the story has been told before. From Casablanca to Terminator 2. The Best Years Of Our Lives to Thor. There is always something there.Monday Morning pushes the envelope and forces us to either look or look away. I suspect that most look, and maybe more so with younger people. The movie shows the homeless situation like I've never seen before. And the scenes that would make those look away and maybe not give the movie a chance are the same reasons many of us look away when a homeless person approaches us (I'm guilty too). We just don't want to deal with the real reality of it all. So when a woman defecates on a sidewalk or a homeless woman gets raped or a man is set on fire, we don't really want to know that that is what is happening on our streets. It's easier to feel that they are down and out and we are kind enough to give them some money now and then. We probably also don't want to hear again that power is what counts in our free society, or to get rid of those that hate us and want to do us harm we should stop doing things that make people hate us (homeless people talking around a campfire). This threatens our stability. Not really, but it might seem to. And it's hard to take and some will probably take it out on the movie. And some will love the movie.Monday Morning is an important film. It illuminates. Entertaining yes in the sense that we follow a conservative player from MN to L.A. and walk through the streets with him when he loses his memory. Victor Browne gives us a wonderful characterization of the lead character, Thomas Bach. His romantic interest, is played honestly by Molly Kiddder. Jessica Spotts gives us a sincere and heart wrenching performance as a homeless woman. Beth. And Nat Christian brings some laughter along with empathy as a homeless man, Damn. Christian is also the writer-director and he is obviously taking a stand with this and putting up the mirror. He beautifully weaves in many of the horrific situations (that our homeless population encounters daily) with the story line. His actors deliver very real and organic performances. Notably (along with those already mentioned), Robert Axelrod, Cliff Sprung and Robert Pike Daniel. The editing (Peter Srinivasan, Jonathan Fung and Christian) mixed many different elements with the right doses.Christian also went for something here - a sort of "real" surrealism, making something very unusual fit within the very real world of the homeless in Los Angeles (for that matter the world).
TishInMich I agree without the other reviewer who said that images and some philosophies in Monday Morning will offend some to the point that it will affect their opinion of the movie. I know from the reactions of my two roommates. Two of us loved the movie. The other said he did not. But after some discussion about it, he said that he was actually moved by the movie and was drawn in, but that some of the images or scenes were so raw and realistic that it turned him off to the point that he took it out on the overall movie.This makes me wonder about the lines between art, realistic depictions and what is acceptable in today's society. There are images in documentaries or channels like National Geographic, or paintings in museums that, out of context, could be considered "hard core". But within their contexts, they seem perfectly normal.Monday Morning needs to depict what it shows uncensored. Too many times, in movies about this subject matter, some depictions are dealt with moor subtly. But to what effect? Certain movements in our times just lingered on and on until some noise was made by some. Then people took notice. Radicalism? Well, if it is cinematic radicalism, I'm all for it.Monday Morning is a fictional story about a right wing radio personality, popular primarily in Minneapolis, who is asked by prominent politicians to run for the senate. He accepts, but first must make a trip to L.A. in order to take care of some personal business. Once in L.A. he is knocked out and loses his memory and wanders the streets as a homeless person (he is also diabetic). During this journey, he meets several homeless people and develops and affinity towards them. He then has to make a decision about what to do with his lifeWritten and directed by Nat Christian, Monday Morning is a very personal story about its characters that plays like an epic. The theme is epic, while the personal relations that the hero has with the homeless is very personal. The images, that caused such an adverse reaction with one of my roommates, are necessary, potent and effective. I realized, as did others, that this stuff is going on with these homeless people everyday. Yes, they beg, but they also experience very real and horrific episodes every day. Christian knows this and does not hide from it. He'll probably take the bad with the good as a result of it. No matter what, Christian's story and visuals are haunting. His actors are terrific.Victor Browne plays the lead role of Thomas Bach with heart and honesty. He has the task of observing a lot of the time, and he does an effective job of allowing us to feel for what he sees. He is supported by a talented cast - Molly Kidder, who lends a sophistication reminiscent of some actresses from the past; Jessica Spotts, who delivers a powerfully sad picture of a homeless mom on drugs; and Christian himself who turns in a humorous and poignant portrayal of a homeless vet. Robert Pike Daniel and Robert Axelrod and Ken Melchior also turn in excellent performances.Monday Morning is the kind of movie that makes you think about it or still see the images after the movie is over.
ILoveMovies922 I should first warn all viewers that, in regard to explicit images, there are no punches pulled with some of the scenes in Monday Morning. However given the powerful story, direction and acting, I think that people will either love this movie or be very turned off by it, because of the imaging.I should also mention that what made me see this movie is that I am a fan of a Nat Christian movie. Simply put, he walks to the beat of a different drummer (when he wants to), and when he takes chances, I like to see what he does.I saw a showing at a small theater in Beverly Hills. Not too many in the audience, but those that were there seemed to be as affected as I was.Writer, director Nat Christian takes us. from what up front starts out like a quick- cutting romantic comedy with hints of some underlying political themes, and throws us into the most realistic scenarios of the incurable homeless population in Los Angeles. Through our shock and awe, we are also touched and moved by the story and images in this movie. Also playing the role of a homeless vet Christian explodes with the kind of rhetoric that we see from these characters on the street and touches us deeply in a very sensitive scene with the lead character of Thomas Bach, played beautifully by Victor Browne.As the lead actor, Browne convincingly journeys through a myriad of emotions covering romance, comedy, tragedy and deep conflict as only a wonderful actor can.He is supported by an excellent cast including Molly Kidder in the lead role of Bach's romantic interest, Jessica Spotts, Ken Melchior, Robert Pike Daniel and Cevin Middleton.I can't give out a spoiler, so I can only say that there is an intriguing situation with a Bag Lady, who Bach encounters. Something there, and I will have to see it again to figure it out.