Review of Monkey Beach

Monkey Beach (2020)
7/10
"A ghost isn't the same as a spirit."
8 November 2020
-- the difference being, that a ghost was once a human being, while a spirit is an elemental piece of nature. That's one thing I learned from this interesting indie film set in a Haisla peoples' village on coastal British Columbia. The protagonist of the story is young Lisa, played by the pretty and aptly named Grace Dove. She has the rather unwanted ability to experience both ghosts and spirits -- she sees dead people now and then, and has friendly chats with them (kind of like old Amarante in "The Milagro Beanfield War"), but the spirit world is a different and more threatening matter. She's constantly troubled by dream-visions of her brother Jimmy (Joel Oulette) drowning and is obsessed with how to prevent it. But there are worse omens: visits in the dark from a tiny, glowing man in traditional gear (as she refers to him, "the little asshole") who seems to be a portent of someone's death, as well as large dark figures in the woods that lurk barely out of sight.

What does it all mean? Her quest to save Jimmy is the simple, main thread of the film and takes us through scenes in and around her village, getting to know her extended family members and friends, and involves several flashbacks to when she was a girl (Zoey Snow) and later a teenager (a very striking Miika Bryce Whiskeyjack). It all reaches a resolution of sorts, though not an entirely traditional one. The final big sequence of scenes is Lisa's vision-quest that ties together elements of previous scenes and at least partly puts them into context; fair warning, there's one truly frightening piece as the climax. Not everything is all neat and tidy at the end, though (What just happened there??) It's not always spelled out for us, and that's OK -- i.e., the message being (I think) that the spirit-world is under no compulsion to explain itself to us, and it has its own drives that are not ours. Just let the mystery settle on its own terms.

The only one of this nice cast of First Nations actors I had seen before was Adam Beach (playing Lisa's uncle as a lively but troubled fisherman). One other character I liked a lot was her grandma, the only one who knows what Lisa is going through (played by Tina Lameman, who almost steals any scene she's in without fuss). One part of the ambience of this whole film that stood out for me was that all these strange experiences Lisa goes through are happening in resolutely ordinary settings -- a small village, beaches and fishing boats, very ordinary houses with very ordinary people just living their ordinary lives. But then, back in deep historical time when legends were born, the people there thought they were just living ordinary lives too.
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed