Monsters of Man Movie - Random Users Review

Monsters of Man 2020 Original Poster

 

Title: Monsters of Man

  • Release: 2020
  • Imdb Rating:  null
Director

Synopsis:

A robotics company teams up with a corrupt CIA agent undergoing an illegal, unsanctioned military operation. Dropping four prototype robots into a suspected drug manufacturing camp in the Golden triangle that no one will miss. The mission is to prove the robotics company is worthy of winning a lucrative military contract. Six doctors on a good cause witness the brutal slaughter of an innocent village and are forced into a deadly game of cat and mouse as they become the new targets. —Mark Toia

User Review

Was hoping the robot would kill everyone within the first 10 minutes

Bottom line:Not terrible, not wonderful.Good:Effects (not saying much as most effects these days are believable)Best actor in the film was the little Cambodian kid. He had a couple of scenes which genuinely pulled at my heartstrings.Bad:Whiny, strident, screeching, 2-dimensional characters played by actors who think that hyperventilating is the best way to convey fear, excitement, and nearly every other emotion.I didn't care if anyone of them died. In fact, I was rooting for the robot to clean house and just blow them away.Some of the "acting" felt really forced and try-hard, like a 9-year-old was trying to impress their parents with a dramatic reenactment of what they saw an amateur do on TV.I've noticed this trend in recent movies - this forced kind of acting, even in huge budget movies like the most recent Star Wars installments. Take note of how many times the actors hyperventilate when they are afraid, excited or just trying to talk to someone. Forced and one-note.If you want examples of fear expressed wonderfully, watch Ripley in Aliens when she first discovers the queen, or the scene when Tom Cruise pulls off his mask in the middle of a gigantic room full of menacing masked onlookers in Eyes Wide Shut. These are great examples of believable fear emoted without having a damned asthma attack.I feel like writers and actors of today don't understand nuance or subtlety. It's all over-the-top popcorn variety schlock. Just fill the screen with screaming meat targets and that should be enough to make the audience to feel sorry for them when they die.They think the way to invoke tension is by directing actors to shriek and shout at everything when things get a little tense. They don't know how to balance it out with some humor or downtime.Millennial writers and actors could learn a lot from old school classics to learn how to better their craft and make characters relatable and even likeable.Movie wasn't terrible, but this trend of mediocre acting doesn't help the its rating.

Review by fostersforums

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