HomeEntertainmentMoviesMonkey Man review: Dev Patel's directorial debut is a political allegory bathed in blood
Trending Topics

Monkey Man review: Dev Patel's directorial debut is a political allegory bathed in blood

Co-written and directed by Dev Patel, Monkey Man stars Patel, Sikandar Kher, Ashwini Kalsekar, Makarand Deshpande, Sharlto Copley and Sobhita Dhulipala. It releases in theatres on April 5 globally. In India, the release is delayed; it will likely release on April 26.

April 04, 2024 / 12:19 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Dev Patel arrives at the Los Angeles premiere of "Monkey Man" on Wednesday, April 3, 2024, in Los Angeles.
Monkey Man is a convincing display of Dev Patel's still-expanding power and tenacity as a performer. (Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP)

Has there been a more satisfying actor to watch mature on screen in recent years than Dev Patel? The endearingly earnest, scrawny kid of Slumdog Millionaire has steadily grown into a singularly intense and sensitive leading man. It's a transformation that, for anyone who missed Lion, The Personal History of David Copperfield or The Green Knight, may be especially jarring in watching Patel's new film, Monkey Man.

Like Slumdog Millionaire, the film is set in Mumbai and has a touch of fable to it. But in tone and texture, it could hardly be more different. Bathed in blood and fury, Monkey Man is one gory coming-out party for Patel, who also directed and co-wrote the film. He kicks so much butt in this movie — at one point he punches a punch — that it's enough to make you wonder if the search for the new James Bond ought to be redirected.

Story continues below Advertisement

Monkey Man, produced by Jordan Peele, is aiming for something grittier, though — more in Bruce Lee territory or the neighborhood of Park Chan-wook's Oldboy — wild, kinetic places to be where martial-arts action turns mythic and feverish. At its best moments, Monkey Man does that tradition justice. But at all its moments, the movie is a convincing display of Patel's still-expanding power and tenacity as a performer.