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A Monster Calls (film)

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox film

| name = A Monster Calls

| image = A Monster Calls poster.jpg

| caption = Theatrical release poster

| director = J. A. Bayona

| producers =

| screenplay = Patrick Ness

| based_on =
from an idea by Siobhan Dowd

| starring =

| music = Fernando Velzquez

| cinematography = scar Faura

| editing =

| production_companies =

| distributor =

| released =

| runtime = 108 minutes

| country =

| language = English

| budget = $43 million

| gross = $47.3 million

}}

'A Monster Calls' is a 2016 dark fantasy drama film directed by J. A. Bayona and written by Patrick Ness, based on his 2011 novel of the same name, which in turn was based on an original idea by Siobhan Dowd. The film stars Sigourney Weaver, Felicity Jones, Toby Kebbell, Lewis MacDougall, and Liam Neeson, and tells the story of Conor (MacDougall), a child whose mother (Jones) is terminally ill; one night, he is visited by a monster in the form of a giant anthropomorphic yew tree (Neeson), who states that he will come back and tell Conor three stories. The film is an international co-production between Spain, United Kingdom and the United States.

'A Monster Calls' premiered at the 2016 Toronto International Film Festival on 10 September 2016. It was then released in Spain on 7 October 2016, and in the United Kingdom on 1 January 2017. In the United States, the film began a limited release on 23 December 2016, followed by a wide release on 6 January 2017. It received positive reviews, being praised for its themes, directing, performances and visual effects, but underperformed at the box office, grossing $47 million worldwide on a budget of $43 million.

Plot





12-year-old Conor O'Malley has a close bond with his seriously ill mother, and maintains the household during her regular chemotherapy treatments at the hospital. His grandmother often visits, and suggests he come live with her in the event of his mother's death. Conor doesn't warm to her due to her coldness.

At school, he is regularly tormented by his classmate Harry. He is also plagued by a nightmare in which the old church near his house collapses into a hole, where he tries to prevent someone from plummeting to their death by trying to hold onto them. Conor vents his emotions by drawing, a talent inherited from his mother.

One night, exactly seven minutes past midnight, he sees the large yew tree next to the church transform into a gnarled Monster that approaches his home. The Monster says it will tell Conor three stories during their next meetings, after which Conor must tell the Monster a fourth tale in return.

In the Monster's first story, a prince escapes from his stepgrandmother, the supposedly-evil queen. He then kills his sleeping bride under a yew tree and makes the queen the scapegoat so the people drive her away and make him king.

As Conor's mother worsens, he moves in with his grandmother. In the evening, Conor summons the Monster by forcing the hands of the clock to show 12:07. He appears, and tells the second story. In the tale, a hard-hearted parson forbids an apothecary from extracting medicine from an old yew tree, only to rescind this measure when his own children become ill. The apothecary refuses to help him, and the Monster begins to destroy the parson's house as punishment. Conor enthusiastically joins in on the destruction, but he suddenly finds he has angrily destroyed his grandmother's sitting room and valuable grandfather clock instead. His grandmother, while shocked and bitter, does not punish Conor.

The doctors turn to a final treatment involving yew wood. Conor implores the Monster to heal his mother, only for the Monster to dismiss the matter as outside of his responsibility. At school, Harry proclaims he will no longer bother Conor because he "no longer sees [him]". The Monster tells the third story of an invisible man who did not want to be so. With his support, Conor angrily attacks Harry, hospitalizing him. To his astonishment, the headmistress refrains from punishing him as she comprehends his current home situation.

When it becomes clear his mother will die, Conor runs to the yew tree, where the Monster forces him to relive his recurring nightmare. This time we see it's his mother, dangling for her life over a precipice, holding onto Conor's hand. He slowly loses his grip until his mother disappears into the enormous sinkhole. The monster then confronts Conor and repeatedly demands he tell his fourth tale, as it's the only way for him to be set free. Conor pleads not to, believing that the truth would kill him.

Eventually, Conor tells his own tale, admitting that he had long suspected his mother would not survive and secretly hoped the pain would end soon. In his recurring nightmares, he subconsciously let go of his mother's hand, which fills him with guilt. The Monster commends Conor for his bravery and tells him he did not truly want his mother to die, but simply to end the suffering.

Conor's grandmother finds him asleep under the yew tree and on the drive to the hospital, Conor reconciles with her. At the hospital, he embraces his mother one last time and as she passes she glances at the Monster, dying at exactly seven minutes past midnight. Conor returns to his grandmother's house, where his mother's old room is refurbished for him. There, he finds his mother's childhood art book, which depicts the stories that were told to him by the Monster, and a drawing of his mother as a child on the Monster's shoulder.

Cast



* Lewis MacDougall as Conor O'Malley

** Max Golds as 5-year-old Conor

* Liam Neeson as the "Monster" (voice and motion capture), a giant humanoid yew tree.

** Neeson also appears uncredited in a photograph as Conor's grandfather.

** Tom Holland served as the stand-in for the Monster during one week of production.

* Sigourney Weaver as Mrs. Clayton (credited as "Grandma"), Conors strict grandmother who has a tense relationship with him.

* Felicity Jones as Elisabeth "Lizzie" Clayton (credited as "Mom"), Conors mother who is diagnosed with an unspecified terminal illness.

* Toby Kebbell as Liam O'Malley (credited as "Dad"), Conors father who is divorced from Lizzie and now lives in the United States.

* James Melville as Harry, a school bully who frequently targets Conor.

* Geraldine Chaplin as the head teacher of Conors school.

Production



Focus Features bought the rights to the book in March 2014. Patrick Ness, the book's author, served as the film's screenwriter, with J. A. Bayona hired as director. On 23 April 2014, Felicity Jones joined the film to play the boy's mother. On 8 May, Liam Neeson was cast to voice the Monster, and on 18 August, Sigourney Weaver joined to play the boy's grandmother. On August 19, Toby Kebbell was also cast in the film. On 3 September, author Ness tweeted that Lewis MacDougall had been set for one of the lead roles as the boy in the film. On 30 September, Geraldine Chaplin joined the cast.

Filming

Principal photography began on 30 September 2014, in Spain and Britain. On 9 October, the filming began on location in Glossop, Preston, Lancashire, Rivington Pike (Chorley/Horwich), Blackpool Pleasure Beach, and Marsden, West Yorkshire.

Liam Neeson, who voices the titular tree creature, was not on set throughout the shooting process, and completed his motion-capture performance during a two-week period beforehand, with MacDougall in the room. Actor Tom Holland, who worked with Bayona on 'The Impossible', worked on set as The Monster on a week when Neeson was absent.

Release



Originally scheduled for an October 2016 release, the film was delayed in order to avoid competition from 'Jack Reacher: Never Go Back', 'Boo! A Madea Halloween', 'Ouija: Origin of Evil', and 'Keeping Up with the Joneses'. It was rescheduled for a limited roll out on 23 December 2016, followed by a wide release on 6 January 2017. The film was released in the United Kingdom on 1 January 2017, by Entertainment One and Lionsgate, and in India on 6 January 2017, by B4U Relativity.

Reception



Box office

'A Monster Calls' grossed $3.7 million in the United States and Canada and $43.5 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $47.2 million, against a production budget of $43 million.

In North America, the film had its wide release alongside the opening of 'Underworld: Blood Wars' and the wide expansions of 'Hidden Figures' and 'Lion', and was initially expected to gross around $10 million from 1,523 theaters over the weekend. However, after making just $659,000 on its first day, weekend projections were lowered to $2 million, which it ended up grossing, finishing 13th at the box office. In its second weekend of wide release it grossed $537,262 (a drop of 74.2%) and in its third week made just $19,080 (a drop of 96.4%) after being pulled from all but 42 theaters, one of the biggest third week theater drops in history.

Critical response

The aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes gives the film an approval rating of 86% based on 266 reviews, and an average rating of 7.6/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "'A Monster Calls' deftly balances dark themes and fantastical elements to deliver an engrossing and uncommonly moving entry in the crowded coming-of-age genre." At Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 76 out of 100, based on 40 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale.

Accolades

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="font-size:small"

|- style="background:#ccc; text-align:center;"

! colspan="6" style="background: LightSteelBlue;" | List of awards and nominations

|- style="background:#ccc; text-align:center;"

! Award

! Date of ceremony

! Category

! Recipient(s)

! Result

! class="unsortable"|

|-

| rowspan="2"| AARP Annual Movies for Grownups Awards

| rowspan="2"| 6 February 2017

| Best Supporting Actress

| Sigourney Weaver

|

| rowspan="2"|

|-

| Best Intergenerational Film

| 'A Monster Calls'

|

|-

| Camerimage

| 19 November 2016

| Golden Frog Award for Best Cinematography

| scar Faura

|

|

|-

| rowspan="2"| Critics' Choice Awards

| rowspan="2"| 11 December 2016

| Best Young Performer

| Lewis MacDougall

|

| rowspan="2"|

|-

| Best Visual Effects

| 'A Monster Calls'

|

|-

| Detroit Film Critics Society

| 19 December 2016

| Best Supporting Actress

| Felicity Jones

|

|

|-

| rowspan="2"| Empire Awards

| rowspan="2"| 19 March 2017

| Best Sci-Fi/Fantasy

| 'A Monster Calls'

|

| rowspan="2"|

|-

| Best Male Newcomer

| Lewis MacDougall

|

|-

| Evening Standard British Film Awards

| 8 December 2016

| Breakthrough of the Year

| Lewis MacDougall

|

|

|-

| rowspan="10"| Gaud Awards

| rowspan="10"| 29 January 2017

| Best Film

| 'A Monster Calls'

|

| rowspan="10"|

|-

| Best Non-Catalan Language Film

| 'A Monster Calls'

|

|-

| Best Director

| J. A. Bayona

|

|-

| Best Production Director

| Sandra Hermida

|

|-

| Best Art Direction

| Eugenio Caballero

|

|-

| Best Film Editing

| Jaume Mart and Bernat Vilaplana

|

|-

| Best Cinematography

| scar Faura

|

|-

| Best Art Direction

| Eugenio Caballero

|

|-

| Best Sound

| Peter Glossop, Marc Orts and Oriol Tarrag

|

|-

| Best Special Effects

| Felix Bergs and Pau Costa

|

|-

| rowspan="2"| Golden Tomato Awards

| rowspan="2"| 12 January 2017

| Best British Movie 2016

| 'A Monster Calls'

|

| rowspan="2"|

|-

| Best Kids/Family Movie 2016

| 'A Monster Calls'

|

|-

| rowspan="12"| Goya Awards

| rowspan="12"| 4 February 2017

| Best Film

| 'A Monster Calls'

|

| rowspan="12"|

|-

| Best Director

| J. A. Bayona

|

|-

| Best Supporting Actress

| Sigourney Weaver

|

|-

| Best Adapted Screenplay

| Patrick Ness

|

|-

| Best Original Score

| Fernando Velzquez

|

|-

| Best Cinematography

| scar Faura

|

|-

| Best Editing

| Jaume Mart and Bernat Vilaplana

|

|-

| Best Production Supervision

| Sandra Hermida Muniz

|

|-

| Best Art Direction

| Eugenio Caballero

|

|-

| Best Makeup and Hairstyles

| Marese Langan and David Mart

|

|-

| Best Sound

| Peter Glossop, Marc Orts and Oriol Tarrag

|

|-

| Best Special Effects

| Felix Bergs and Pau Costa

|

|-

| London Film Critics' Circle

| 22 January 2017

| Young British/Irish Performer of the Year

| Lewis MacDougall

|

|

|-

| rowspan="7"| Premios Feroz

| rowspan="7"| 23 January 2017

| Best Drama Film

| 'A Monster Calls'

|

| rowspan="7"|

|-

| Best Director

| J. A. Bayona

|

|-

| Best Screenplay

| Patrick Ness

|

|-

| Best Main Actor

| Lewis MacDougall

|

|-

| Best Original Soundtrack

| Fernando Velzquez

|

|-

| Best Trailer

| 'A Monster Calls'

|

|-

| Best Film Poster

| 'A Monster Calls'

|

|-

| San Diego Film Critics Society

| 12 December 2016

| Best Visual Effects

| 'A Monster Calls'

|

|

|-

| rowspan="2"| Saturn Awards

| rowspan="2"| 28 June 2017

| Best Fantasy Film

| 'A Monster Calls'

|

| rowspan="2"|

|-

| Best Performance by a Younger Actor

| Lewis MacDougall

|

|-

| St. Louis Gateway Film Critics Association

| December 18, 2016

| Best Visual Effects

| 'A Monster Calls'

|

|

|-

| rowspan="4"| Washington D.C. Area Film Critics Association

| rowspan="4"| December 5, 2016

| Best Youth Performance

| Lewis MacDougall

|

| rowspan="4"|

|-

| Best Adapted Screenplay

| Patrick Ness

|

|-

| Best Voice Performance

| rowspan="2"| Liam Neeson

|

|-

| Best Motion Capture Performance

|

|-

|}

See also



* I Kill Giants

References




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