In ‘What Happened to Monday’ Noomi Rapace Gives it Everything She’s Got

What Happened to Monday

Genre: Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi, Crime

Director: Tommy Wirkola

Starring: Noomi Rapace, William Dafoe, Glenn Close, Marwan Kenzari

Runtime: 2h 3mins

Harking back to 1970s thrillers like ‘Soylent Green’ and ‘Zero Population Growth’, ‘What Happened to Monday’ economically sketches the background to its dystopian tale. Catastrophic overpopulation has led to the introduction of a Child Allocation Act, supported by Dr. Nicolette Cayman (Glenn Close). No family is allowed more than one child. Any extra siblings are cryogenically frozen to be reawakened at a later date to a brighter, better world.

When his daughter dies in childbirth, Terrence Settman (William Dafoe) is left with seven identical granddaughters and vows to raise them all far from the prying eyes of the authorities. He names each of them after a different day of the week and thirty years later they have all survived.

They are now all played by Noomi Rapace who has an absolute ball defining each one with the enthusiasm of a child let loose in a dressing up box. Party girl Saturday is blonde, boozy and full of attitude. Friday is the nerd, looking mousey beneath a beanie hat and large glasses. Hair colors, lengths and style all help to differentiate the magnificent seven siblings but it is Rapace’s many performances that help to make them individuals. When they all sit down to dinner, chat and argue like a real family the effect is seamless and entirely convincing, a testimony to extraordinary technical advances since the days of Michael Keaton in ‘Multiplicity’ (1996).

What Happened to Monday Review

The women maintain a collective single identity of “Karen Steeman” and have one day a week in which to be Karen, leave their hiding place and interact with the world. How seven people remember what “Karen” has said and done is one of their biggest challenges.

There is some lip service paid to the emotional wear and tear on seven women never able to develop an identity of their own and locked in an eternal bond of trust with their siblings. Flashbacks reveal elements of their childhood, including the day that one of them recklessly left the building and wound up losing the tip of her finger. Inevitably, all of them were forced to endure the removal of the same tip of the same finger, underlining just how their destinies are linked.

Director Tommy Wirkola (also, directed ‘Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters’) doesn’t seem unduly concerned with existential worries and instead lets the action speaks louder than words. When Monday fails to return home, the remaining six must work as a team to uncover what has happened to her and evade capture by ruthless government forces. That mostly transforms the film into a chase movie complete with brutal fights, death-defying stunt-work and the kind of trigger-happy baddies who seem unable to hit the easiest target.

What Happened to Monday

‘What Happened to Monday’ has its fair share of cheesy dialogues, hard-to-swallow situations and cardboard characters, especially Glenn Close’s one-note villain. The plot does provide a few surprises, Dutch actor Marwan Kenzari makes an impression as Karen’s unsuspecting boyfriend Adrian, the pace rarely flags and Rapace gives it everything she’s got. It may have its failings but it is never less than entertaining.

Genre: Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi, Crime Director: Tommy Wirkola Starring: Noomi Rapace, William Dafoe, Glenn Close, Marwan Kenzari Runtime: 2h 3mins Harking back to 1970s thrillers like ‘Soylent Green’ and ‘Zero Population Growth’, ‘What Happened to Monday’ economically sketches the background to its dystopian tale. Catastrophic overpopulation has led to the introduction of a Child Allocation Act, supported by Dr. Nicolette Cayman (Glenn Close). No family is allowed more than one child. Any extra siblings are cryogenically frozen to be reawakened at a later date to a brighter, better world. When his daughter dies in childbirth, Terrence Settman (William Dafoe) is left with…
Director Tommy Wirkola doesn’t seem unduly concerned with existential worries and instead lets the action speaks louder than words

My Verdict

My Rating

3.5

Director Tommy Wirkola doesn’t seem unduly concerned with existential worries and instead lets the action speaks louder than words

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Saurodeep Basak

About Saurodeep Basak

A caffeine dependent life form. Full-time procrastinator. A man-child. I have this new theory that human adolescence doesn’t end until your early thirties. A man of mystery and power whose power is exceeded only by his mystery. The only thing stopping me from shining in life is my sheer lack of motivation.
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