The Guardian (USA)

Monday review – hedonistic romance drama is a party worth avoiding

- Peter Bradshaw

Four years ago, the Greek film-maker Argyris Papadimitr­opoulos made a vivid impression with Suntan: a bleakly hilarious Death-In-Venice-type affair set in a seaside resort, featuring a sad middle-aged man who tortures himself with his tragic infatuatio­n with a beautiful young woman on holiday.

Here is his follow-up, in the English language, featuring Sebastian Stan (Bucky Barnes from Marvel’s Captain America movies) and the Irish stage star Denise Gough, with a script cowritten by the director with the awardwinni­ng British dramatist Rob Hayes (who worked with Michaela Coel on the TV comedy Chewing Gum). Sadly, despite all the talent involved, this is a disappoint­ment: an unconvinci­ng, undevelope­d and emotionall­y directionl­ess non-drama that just goes pointlessl­y around and around in circles. All of this film’s various moods – erotic, euphoric, tragic – are unearned and despite what is clearly strenuous effort from the performers themselves, the acting is hammy and undirected.

It is the story of a love-at-first-sight passion which has to face up to the tough reality of maintainin­g a relationsh­ip once the initial sexy rush is over: in other words, dealing with the “Monday” comedown following the “Friday” of carefree weekend partying. The movie is in fact pointedly divided into a series of sections each repeatedly labelled “Friday” leading to what is evidently to be the deferred “Monday” reckoning. But bafflingly, the relationsh­ip in question seems to be always facing terrible crises and brutal Mondays long before this, yet after some shouting and then some carefree laughing, the reset button gets miraculous­ly hit. It is a story which seems to be weirdly without penalty, without emotional consequenc­e.

Stan plays Mickey, an American guy in a Greek resort who is earning a living DJing in clubs and composing ad jingles, living a bleary hedonist lifestyle but secretly concerned about the serious musical career he self-sabotaged back in the US and the fact that he never gets to see his six-year-old son from a previous relationsh­ip with a Greek woman. Then at a party, he meets Chloe (Gough), a smart, sexy American lawyer who is just coming out of a painful situation with an abusive man. The spark is dazzling. They have nonstop wild sex, leading to waking up naked together on a beach and getting arrested – but it’s all just swept up in the uproarious swirl of their passion. But then they have to deal with their demons: namely, the sinister man that Chloe left behind and the fact that Mickey still has to have a difficult conversati­on with his ex-partner to get access to his son – a conversati­on which he leaves to Chloe,

like the emotionall­y avoidant guy that he is.

For me, this tense conversati­on between Chloe and Mickey’s ex-partner Aspa (played by Elli Tringou, who was the bewitching­ly unattainab­le woman in Suntan) is the one moment in the film that truly comes to life. It is the one speck of grit in the oyster, the one scene where something seems to be really at stake, where things can happen with irreversib­le results. And so it proves – in a way. Aspa icily confronts Chloe with the truth about how lazy and selfish Mickey actually is, but seems to have taken stock of how serious Chloe is.

Everything but the kitchen sink is thrown into this film: parties, clubs, arguments, embarrassm­ents, sex – and there’s even a full-on romcom rush to the airport. But I never got the impression of a genuine connection between the two stars. There was no chemistry. Gough works hard to make her role count, but she has not much to work with, and Stan is stuck with this exuberant, anarchic hipster role which reminded me weirdly of the cool Rat Pack guy with whom Alicia Silverston­e has her terrible date in Clueless. The party feels like it’s over before it’s begun.

Monday is showing at the Toronto film festival with a release date yet to be announced

 ?? Photograph: Toronto film festival ?? Denise Gough and Sebastian Stan in Monday.
Photograph: Toronto film festival Denise Gough and Sebastian Stan in Monday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States