Premium Content:

Review | It's a struggle to survive in 'Mona Lisa and the Blood Moon'

Mona Lisa and the Blood Moon | Dir: Ana Lily Amirpour | ★ ★ ★ ★ 

- Advertisement -

Mona Lisa Lee (Jeon Jong-seo) is the young lady with the mystical smile in Iranian-American writer/director Ana Lily Amirpour’s new film. Mona was born in Korea, and it is uncertain how she got to America, but after many foster fails, she has spent the last ten of her 22 years in a secure unit for “mentally insane” adolescents.

As the blood moon rises on a busy night in New Orleans’ French Quarter, Mona is in the centre of a padded cell, drooling and trussed up a straight jacket. Totally dispossessed of any control over her life, she finally uses her telepathic powers to manage a bloody escape from the mental institution.

Managing to avoid police who are trying to find her, but without any money and still wearing the dangling straight jacket, she is hungry and finding the neon-saturated chaos of the outside world difficult to navigate.

The outskirts of the city are inhabited by “degenerates, drunks and nut jobs” but there a couple of kind souls who offer help. Aging stripper Bonny Bells (Kate Hudson at her trashy best), who lives with her young son, offers her some clothes, food and a place to sleep.

As Mona soaks in the horrors of the world through late-night television, it is eleven year-old Charlie (Evan Whitten) who sees that his mother is exploiting her to get money out of all the pricks she has to deal with.

With so many people who want to take advantage of her, how is Mona going to work out who is helping her and who is just helping themselves?

While the intensely hypnotic synth soundtrack pulses and the neon lights throb relentlessly in this horror thriller with cutting dark humour, Amirpour makes sure that all the self-centred desperadoes and bullies suffer. Mona doesn’t find many answers to her dilemmas but she does manage to survive and those around her have the chance to make their lives better.

Lezly Herbert


You can support our work by subscribing to our Patreon
or contributing to our GoFundMe campaign.

Latest

On This Gay Day | The film ‘The Birdcage’ was released

The film was praised for its avoidance of gay stereotypes, and it was a box office smash.

Mardi Gras Film Festival comes to a close an announces award winners

The awards highlight some of the best short films being made in Australia with LGBTIQA+ themes.

Porn sites begin blocking Australian users as new laws come into effect

From Monday watching pornography in Australia will require age verification.

Cory Bernardi says he stands by his comments about gay marriage and bestiality

The former Liberal and Australian Conservatives politician is now with One Nation.

Newsletter

Don't miss

On This Gay Day | The film ‘The Birdcage’ was released

The film was praised for its avoidance of gay stereotypes, and it was a box office smash.

Mardi Gras Film Festival comes to a close an announces award winners

The awards highlight some of the best short films being made in Australia with LGBTIQA+ themes.

Porn sites begin blocking Australian users as new laws come into effect

From Monday watching pornography in Australia will require age verification.

Cory Bernardi says he stands by his comments about gay marriage and bestiality

The former Liberal and Australian Conservatives politician is now with One Nation.

Drag performers have legal win in long running case against Lyle Shelton

There has been a new development in the long...

On This Gay Day | The film ‘The Birdcage’ was released

The film was praised for its avoidance of gay stereotypes, and it was a box office smash.

Mardi Gras Film Festival comes to a close an announces award winners

The awards highlight some of the best short films being made in Australia with LGBTIQA+ themes.

Porn sites begin blocking Australian users as new laws come into effect

From Monday watching pornography in Australia will require age verification.