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Monica Poster

Monica

2023 | 113m | English

(1702 votes)

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Popularity: 2 (history)

Details

After years of estrangement, a trans woman returns home to help care for her dying mother.
Release Date: May 12, 2023
Director: Andrea Pallaoro
Writer: Andrea Pallaoro, Orlando Tirado
Genres: Drama
Keywords forgiveness, dying mother, lgbt, acceptance, mother daughter relationship, transgender
Production Companies RAI, The Exchange, Varient, Fenix Entertainment, Alacran Pictures, Solo Five Productions, Propaganda Italia, Melograno Films, Cinetrain, Hudson Entertainment
Box Office Revenue: $182,000
Budget: $1,700,000
Updates Updated: Aug 03, 2024
Entered: Apr 20, 2024
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Full Credits

Name Character
Trace Lysette Monica
Patricia Clarkson Eugenia
Emily Browning Laura
Joshua Close Paul
Adriana Barraza Leticia
Vladimir Perez Car Repairman
Ali Amine Man Getting Massage
Lucia Ramos Woman at Gas Station
Leland Pittman Benny
Brennan Pittman Benny
Ruby James Fraser Britney
Graham Caldwell Brody
Jean Zarzour Doctor
Angelique Archer Waitress
Bobby Easley Trucker
Bryant Bentley Mechanic
Chelo Ontiveros Hairdresser
Name Job
Andrea Pallaoro Writer, Director
Emily Schweber Casting
Giuseppe Squillaci Visual Effects Supervisor
Orlando Tirado Writer
Katelin Arizmendi Director of Photography
Paola Freddi Editor
Andrew Clark Production Design
Daniel Adan Baker Set Decoration
Patrik Milani Costume Design
Chelo Ontiveros Makeup Department Head, Hair Department Head
Jason Ervin Makeup Artist, Hairstylist
Laura Klein First Assistant Director
Daniel Mulvaney Second Second Assistant Director
Luigi Cippone Sound Effects Editor
Francesco Di Mauro Dialogue Editor
Marcos Molina Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Mirko Perri Supervising Sound Editor
Paul Fierst Grip
Jake Lyon Gaffer
Chenney Chen Line Producer
Ortensia Ontiveros Assistant Makeup Artist
Cheyenne Wright Makeup Artist, Hairstylist
Ashley Meenach Peter Makeup Artist, Hairstylist
Roger Mendoza Second Assistant Director
Name Title
Andrea Pallaoro Producer
Andrey Epifanov Executive Producer
Steve Stanulis Executive Producer
Janek Ambros Co-Executive Producer
Trace Lysette Executive Producer
Gabriele Oricchio Co-Producer
Gina Resnick Producer
Christina Dow Producer
Eleonora Granata Producer
Karen Tenkhoff Executive Producer
Christina Sibul Executive Producer
Dru Davis Executive Producer
Marina Alessandra Marzotto Co-Producer
Mattia Oddone Co-Producer
Riccardo Di Pasquale Co-Producer
Antonio Adinolfi Co-Producer
Barbara Assante Co-Executive Producer
Julien P. Bourgon Executive Producer
Anthony Burns Executive Producer
Stephanie Castagnier Dunn Executive Producer
Eric Cook Executive Producer
Amy Gilliam Executive Producer
Joana Henning Executive Producer
Ali Jazayeri Executive Producer
Matteo Jenkinson Executive Producer
Giorgia Lo Savio Co-Producer
Nat McCormick Executive Producer
Brian O'Shea Executive Producer
Torrey Peters Associate Producer
Eric Schnedecker Executive Producer
David Schwarz Executive Producer
Caddy Vanasirikul Associate Producer
Theo Vieljeux Executive Producer
Viviana Zarragoitia Executive Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 8 17 3
2024 5 8 15 3
2024 6 7 17 3
2024 7 7 19 2
2024 8 8 18 4
2024 9 4 7 2
2024 10 5 12 3
2024 11 4 6 2
2024 12 3 6 1
2025 1 6 11 3
2025 2 3 6 1
2025 3 2 5 1
2025 4 1 2 1
2025 5 1 2 1
2025 6 1 2 1
2025 7 1 1 0
2025 8 1 1 0
2025 9 1 2 1
2025 10 1 2 0

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Reviews

Brent_Marchant
8.0

Acceptance, reconciliation and forgiveness are arguably among the hardest feelings for many of us to deal with, but coming to terms with them is by no means impossible. When Monica (Trace Lysette), a transgender woman kicked out by her family as an adolescent, leaves her Midwestern home and heads to ... California to start a new life, she struggles to get by. And, after years of effort, she indeed manages to work it out for the most part. But, years later, when Monica’s sister-in-law (Emily Browning) informs her that her long-estranged mother (Patricia Clarkson) is terminally ill, she’s torn about what to do. Should she ignore the news or step up as a dutiful child? She reluctantly relents and heads back to Ohio to help care for the woman who threw her out of the house, a situation made more complex by the fact that her mother’s malignant brain tumor has seriously affected her memory, leaving her unaware of the identity of the new caregiver who has suddenly appeared in her life. Writer-director Andrea Pallaoro’s third feature outing presents a deftly nuanced, sensitively handled story of a family painfully torn apart trying to put itself back together again under trying circumstances and while there’s still time. The pacing comes across as somewhat slow (undoubtedly by design), so those expecting material that moves along at a brisk, breezy may not find it to their liking, but, given the profound nature of the subject matter, it suits the narrative perfectly. There are admittedly a few plotline gaps here and there, but they’re more than adequately compensated for by the film’s superb ensemble cast, razor-sharp writing and gorgeous, atmospheric cinematography. “Monica” may not have received much fanfare upon its theatrical release earlier this year, but this fine streaming offering is well worth the time, providing viewers with a moving cinematic experience that many of us can probably relate to – and whose wisdom should be thoughtfully considered should the need arise in one’s life.

Jun 26, 2023
Geronimo1967
6.0

Trace Lysette is quite effective here as the eponymous woman who returns to her family to help care for her terminally ill mother "Eugenia" (Patricia Clarkson). She's a trans woman, is "Monica", and it's been more than twenty years since she left. Needless to say, there are adjustments a-plenty to b ... e made by all concerned, and given the imminence of the impending demise, the story gains an added potency putting things and erstwhile priorities into sharp new perspective. Gradually we discover that the scenario of estrangement wasn't caused they way we might have expected, and as the narrative develops we realise that lives have been traumatic for all concerned over the intervening decades. What's also pretty clear from the outset is that "Monica" has self-esteem issues, and the near constant references to her friend "Jimmy" whom we never meet does make you wonder of he is real or a place to put her soul - but I doubt both. What does rather let this down badly is the pace and the standard of the writing. It's a slow burn, but that needn't have mattered if the dialogue could have been a little more considered and punchy. As it is, I found it developed in an almost languid fashion. That's not to say that at times it's not poignant, and there are some very emotional scenes between mother and daughter, and between sister and brother (Joshua Close) that cut very close to the bone. Though it's essentially a story about acceptance - and it's not just the trans elements that require that - it's about a family coming to terms with loads of errors of judgement and rash decisions that with just a slightly more assured and focused hand at the tiller, could have delivered much better.

Dec 24, 2023