So far, we’ve been lucky enough to see a nice hodge-podge of pics come to life thanks to Leigh Whannell’s latest pairing with ...
Hal soon discovers that it's his estranged twin Bill who now has the monkey and is responsible for the deaths. Bill has been ...
The actor discusses playing twins in Osgood Perkins’s horror film, finding humor in dark situations and why that monkey is so, so creepy. Q&A The actor discusses playing twins in Osgood Perkins ...
Bill's goal is to get Petey to keep turning the key until the monkey kills Hal, so that Petey will be responsible for Hal's death the way Hal was responsible for their mother's. 'The Monkey ...
I was like, ‘It’s a toy monkey, for one thing.’ It has this impish quality to it from the get-go, so it should have a sort of a sense of humor. The monkey would have a sense of humor ...
Osgood Perkins' The Monkey essentially asks 'what if the Final ... She embodied everything that he missed and lost and everything. So it makes sense that… yeah, like, it's not a revenge, it's ...
As a fun addition, though, as the monkey plays, someone in the general vicinity dies gruesomely. Very gruesomely. The deaths are so grisly and sudden and weird that they end up being hilarious ...
In theaters. Meet Injurious George. The supernatural villain of “The Monkey,” writer-director Osgood Perkins’ one-note followup to last year’s surprise horror hit “Longlegs,” is a toy ...
He doesn’t always handle the balance of tone effectively, so while ‘The Monkey’ is a barrel of fun for much of its relatively brief running time, it’s a bit less memorable than some of the ...
Even so, and even with structural echoes of the “Final Destination” movies, “The Monkey” suggests little of that franchise’s rote determinism. Perkins gives us the randomness of ...
This particular monkey is slightly different from your typical ... of decapitations and bloody messes in the first place, so: Here’s your money’s worth! Wind it up and have fun!