Monster
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Monster is essentially a love story; a love story involving a sexually inhibited socially awkward lesbian daughter of a fanatical Christian and a serial-killing prostitute traumatized by a lifetime of abuse—on roller skates—but nonetheless a love story.

The film opens as Aileen (Charlize Theron), a homeless prostitute teetering on the verge of suicide, meets Selby (Christina Ricci), a young, naïve woman whose equally naïve father is bent on deprogramming her lesbian tendencies. These two lost souls, rejected and damaged by the world, form a desperate union. On the night Aileen is to have her first official date with Selby, she turns one last trick to scrape up enough money for a hotel room—a decision that changes the course of her already tragic life. Aileen is raped and brutalized and kills her attacker in self-defense. And after surviving the ordeal, she embarks on a rampage, murdering men to steal their cars and money.

Written and directed by Patty Jenkins, Monster is loosely based on Aileen Wuornos, America's "first female serial killer," who has been the subject of two Nick Broomfield documentaries, several “true crime” books, and even an opera (I'm not making this up). Here, the story is delivered as a dramatically fictionalized, deeply compassionate portrayal of her life events—illustrating the human aspects of the "monster" through the intimacy she shares with her lover as well as the victimization that created a killer. Aileen was sexually abused from the age of 8, prostituting and pregnant at the age of 13, and perpetually victimized by men throughout her life. Her crimes appear as more of an occupational hazard for a prostitute suffering from rape trauma syndrome than they do cold-blooded murder. Jenkin's film does an exceptional job of simultaneously mustering sympathies for both Wuornos and her victims—but at times departing from the reality of the case to do so.

While elsewhere the majority being written about Charlize Theron's Oscar-caliber performance centers on her physical transformation from one of the most beautiful women in Hollywood to the gnarly toothed, eyebrow-less, and bedraggled killer, far more noteworthy is that her every gesture and physical mannerism emanates authenticity. Theron demonstrates her character in subtleties. When she initially is on the receiving end of Selby's advances—despite the fact that she insists she is not a lesbian and it’s made obviously clear that she is no stranger to sexual advances—she shifts her weight uncomfortably, smiles girlishly, and fiddles distractedly. As the character's relationship with Selby grows more intimate, her mannerisms become more masculine—and Theron never once appears insincere in exhibiting them. More so, the character's descent into madness, her desperate attempts to rationalize her actions, and the agonizing distress of rape trauma syndrome are expressed flawlessly. Her presentation is so extraordinary, in fact, that it overshadows Ricci's otherwise excellent characterization as the emotionally stunted, socially challenged love interest.

In short, Monster is a stunning drama composed of superb storytelling and perfect performances.

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