Director Vasan Bala's third feature 'Monica, O My Darling' is one of the marquee titles of the year for Netflix India.
But this character has no remorse whatsoever, for absolutely anything that she does – to enjoy that and still be at peace.” Like the femme fatale portrayed in that song, or indeed, in many noir films, the Monica in this film aims to be a survivor. Next up for Apte is spy thriller “Mrs. [Radhika Apte](https://variety.com/t/radhika-apte/) (“Raat Akeli Hai”) plays the police officer in charge of investigating the case. “Survival is across the human race, across genders, anyone in his position or her position would just do whatever it takes. So, the fun is in that spontaneity.”
Monica O My Darling review: Rajkummar Rao, Huma Qureshi, Radhika Apte's performances aren't enough to save this Vasan Bala thriller. | Bollywood.
And I don't see a point in making a film so predictable that the number of scenes and twists that you can predict actually make you want to give yourself a pat on your back. With Monica O My Darling, slightly better direction in terms of where the story is headed and how it was narrated could have helped its case. Comfortable in her skin, she absorbs the character to the T. Dialogues that Bala has co-written with Chandekar are quirky, peppered with comic tone, perhaps the high point of the film that can qualify as a dark comedy. Average because the moment it was revealed at the film's teaser launch that Andhadhun director Sriram Raghavan was to helm the film but Bala took over after five years, one expected a similar experience. Or at least that's what you'd like to believe until you actually sit through and watch this 2-hour-10-minutes long film and realise that it's so Bollywoodised that you just can't get over the plot twists and predictability of events, which make this Vasan Bala directorial a fun yet average watch.
Post Credits Scene: Director Vasan Bala's neo-noir crime comedy, starring Rajkummar Rao and Huma Qureshi as two duelling social climbers, is a sharp ...
Both Monica and Jayant behave in the kind of cutthroat manner that you’d expect people like them to. He knew that even if Khurrana didn’t understand the tone of the movie they were making, the audience would. Khurrana said that he was under the impression that they had made a ‘serious’ thriller. By allowing you to assume that Monica is a devious femme fatale, the movie is gently disrobing the ‘doglapan’ of Indian audiences, and setting up an act of massive subversion that is paid off towards the end. We assume that Monica is a mastermind because that’s what we’ve been conditioned to believe. The movie has great fun subverting the idea of heroes and villains, especially because it’s packaged like the kind of retro entertainment in which these roles were so clearly defined. More importantly, Monica joins a small-ish list of Hindi streaming movies that kind of capture what it is like to live in India today. But they also balance out their pessimism with progressive politics; these films understand that life is more difficult for minorities, and that they mustn’t contribute to the narrative of oppression. Anybody who says that Bollywood is flatlining needs to know that after starring in one of 2022’s worst Hindi movies, Rajkummar Rao has now also starred in one of the best. These movies are the worst-offenders; in their desperation to pander to the only audience demographic that is still resisting the internet age, they’re basically sullying the image of streaming as a whole. And even though they might share thematic overlaps with the similarly rebellious cinema of the 70s, the characters that populate them aren’t at all idealistic. These are movies that pretend to have been designed for the online crowd, but whose sensibilities would’ve been ancient even in the 80s — widely regarded as the most deplorable era in Bollywood history.
Rajkummar Rao is never off the boil. Huma Qureshi fleshes out Monica in all her splendour. Radhika Apte takes to the role of a chatty policewoman.
Radhika Apte takes to the role of a chatty policewoman who is always a step ahead of the rest like a fish to water. This gentleman from the fictional village of Angola (it certainly isn't the central African country) is appointed to the board of directors and given a share in the company's profits. Cinephilia is the binding agent in Monica, O My Darling. How, six months on, they discover the many layers of truth, falsehood and subterfuge that begin to unravel as the company is rocked by a series of murders. Is this film as good as Ek Hasina Thi and Johnny Gaddar, the first two entries in the oeuvre of Sriram Raghavan, a writer-director to whom Vasan Bala acknowledges a debt upfront? Monica, O My Darling begins with a prelude in which a murder is committed by a jealous lover (Susant Goel) who takes manual control of a robot in Unicorn's tech lab and eliminates a co-worker who reveals his desire to marry Shalu. Even when it is indicated who might be responsible for the rising body count, the guessing game and the surprises do not stop. Branded a pretender and a parasite by a rival within the company, he is drawn into a fiendish conspiracy that can only spell trouble. It is delightfully tricksy, transfixing concoction that probes the goings-on in a Pune-based company, a veritable viper's pit where nothing is what it seems. Huma Qureshi is Monica Machado, the top honcho's secretary, a femme fatale who employs her guiles to hold her ground on a slippery slope. Full of knowing winks thrown the audience's way, Netflix's Monica, O My Darling, is a wildly entertaining film packed with twists and turns that keep on giving until the final fadeout. He fears a deadly slip between the cup and the lip.
The movie is mainly about three men (played by Sikandar Kher, Bagavathi Perumal, and Rajkummar Rao) who work in the same office and plan to murder Monica, their ...