The Movie Waffler New Release Review - YOUR MONSTER | The Movie Waffler

New Release Review - YOUR MONSTER

Your Monster review
A struggling actress has a new lease of life when she falls in love with a monster.

Review by Eric Hillis

Directed by: Caroline Lindy

Starring: Melissa Barrera, Tommy Dewey, Meghann Fahy, Edmund Donovan, Kayla Foster

Your Monster poster

On paper the premise of Your Monster reads like the basis for the sort of sitcom that wouldn't have made it past six episodes in the '90s: a struggling Broadway performer befriends and eventually romances the monster she finds living in her closet. But writer/director Caroline Lindy's expansion of her 2019 short doesn't play its setup entirely for laughs. It's arguably closer to what most of us expected from Joker: Folie รก Deux once we heard the shock news of that sequel's musical elements. The monster here functions in similar fashion to Joker's Harley Quinn, giving our sad sack protagonist a new lease of life by bringing out her aggressive side. Lindy's film is also something of a gender-reversed Fight Club, with the monster, whom we surmise is a figment of the anti-heroine's troubled mind, a stand-in for Brad Pitt's Tyler Durden, the confident figure she wishes she could be.

Your Monster review

As played by Melissa Barrera, Laura Franco is dogged by health issues of both the physical and mental varieties. The movie opens with her leaving hospital after a year of battling cancer, during which she was coldly dumped by her Broadway director boyfriend Jacob (Edmund Donovan). While together, Laura and Jacob had collaborated on penning a musical, with Jacob promising Laura the lead role. On release from hospital, Laura finds that not only has Jacob jettisoned her from his romantic life, but also from his play, giving the role to popular star Jackie Dennon (Meghann Fahy).


Moving into her vacant childhood home, Melissa spends her days moping around, gorging herself on cakes, ordering Amazon products she doesn't need and crying at Fred Astaire musicals. Hearing strange noises from her childhood bedroom, she's shocked to discover a monster (Tommy Dewey) living in her closet, the very same one that she presumed was imaginary when she was a kid. The monster gives her two weeks to leave the house, and in classic sitcom style the pair have an initially abrasive relationship, largely represented through montages of Laura and the monster fighting over the thermostat and TV remote. But the monster eventually reveals a sensitive side and the two become friends. Encouraged by the monster's philosophy of refusing to conceal anger, Laura decides to stand up for herself. She even auditions for a role in Jacob's play, and is awarded the position of understudy to Jackie. But the influence of the monster begins to send Laura down a dark path.

Your Monster review

Your Monster finds itself caught between two very different movies. One is a light and breezy sitcom-esque rom-com, the other a much darker exploration of a troubled young woman's fractured psyche. Barrera's adorable performance makes it very easy to empathise with Laura, perhaps too easy. If the genders were reversed I'm not convinced that we would view Laura as anything other than yet another self-pitying young male sociopath (we're never given any real evidence that Laura deserves the lead role in Jacob's play). Laura's history of cancer is a cheaply manipulative way of getting the audience onside (albeit inspired by the director's own medical history). Remove it and the movie would arguably become more interesting, certainly more nuanced, than the simple female empowerment/revenge fantasy Your Monster is content to settle for. In the closing scenes the film dares to take a darker turn, but by that point it jars with the largely treacly film with which we've been relatively engaged. I couldn't help but compare Your Monster with Jill Gevargizian's The Stylist, which is similarly a female rage fantasy but one that makes it clear that violent fantasies make for grim reality when acted upon (and crucially it puts innocents in its protagonist's firing line, something even this year's light-hearted Lisa Frankenstein, which shares a similar premise to Lindy's film, was willing to do).


You probably won't think about Your Monster's narrative flaws until the end credits begin rolling, as its light approach makes it an easy, undemanding watch. Even if the script never makes Laura as complex and interesting as she really should be, Barrera covers some of the flaws in the writing with the best performance of her career to date. The actress has vacillated between scream queen (Scream; Abigail) and musical star (In the Heights; Carmen), and Your Monster gives her the opportunity to indulge both of her established personae. Her comic timing and facial expressions often make up for the lack of sufficiently witty dialogue, and she's equally convincing as the initial put-upon victim and the assertive figure she grows into, along with displaying some impressive vocal chops when she's required to belt out a tune.

Your Monster review

Barrera shares a charming chemistry with Dewey as her unconventional lover, and if the movie were a more conventional rom-com we would have no problem rooting for this unlikely couple. But Your Monster complicates things with reminders that Monster is just that, a monster. Again, this is an aspect the film never quite interrogates fully, the idea that Monster presents himself as a "nice guy" who says all the right things Laura needs to hear, but could tear her apart if he turns on her. Your Monster brushes up against some uncomfortable truths regarding relationships, but it ultimately sweeps them aside for a broadly played "slay queen" fantasy.

Your Monster is in UK/ROI cinemas and on VOD from November 29th.



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