Despite its teeny tiny budget014 Archives Lucy Campbell and Matt Vesely's sci-fi mystery Monolithis a film of big questions.
Following a podcaster (Lily Sullivan) on the cusp of a seemingly global mystery, the movie brushes up against the edges of possible government conspiracy and alien contact without ever being explicit about either one.
So it is a film about extraterrestrial objects that are spreading a disease among the human population? Or something else? Let's dive in.
After being publicly shamed for writing a story about someone without fully backing up her sources, an anxious journalist retreats to her wealthy parents' Adelaide Hills house in the countryside to work on a new podcast. Her career is on the line and things are looking grim, but then a new lead lands in her inbox — a tip-off about a woman who suddenly came into possession of a mysterious black brick. The journalist starts digging and quickly discovers that there are more of these bricks, with the recipients all being connected by illness and strange visions. Soon, she finds out the bricks contain symbols that aren't from any known language — and that she herself may already be more involved in the story than she first realised.
The first person the journalist interviews after receiving her tip-off is a woman called Floramae (voiced by Ling Cooper Tang). Floramae's brick story started when her daughter, Paula (voiced by Ansuya Nathan), supposedly vandalised the furniture of the wealthy family Floramae worked for many years ago. The family (who had a daughter of their own) fired Floramae and brought legal action against her, and they ultimately took the black brick as payment, later selling it to an art collector.
The journalist eventually realises that it was her ownfamily who stole the black brick from Floramae, and it's implied that she herself vandalised the furniture which got Floramae's daughter in trouble. After this realisation, and her decision not to do anything about it (she deletes the interview in which her father confirms what happened), the journalist coughs up one of the black bricks. She then smashes it with a hammer, only for the pieces to morph together into a doppelgänger of herself. She has a final confrontation with the doppelgänger and one of the versions of herself is killed. Yep, it's a lot.
The answer to this question lies in another question, which is really at the heart of the film: Is this a story about aliens, mental illness, or both? The story deliberately treads an ambiguous line, particularly as we watch events unfold from the perspective of someone who is under severe mental stress.
On the one hand, it seems as though the black bricks are real. The journalist speaks to multiple people across the globe who have similar experiences with the prisms, she receives images of them, and she examines three dimensional scans of them which she sends to her scientist brother to corroborate. If there's a scam going on here, it's an impossibly thorough one. Given that the symbols inside the bricks aren't found in any human language, the implication is that these objects could be extraterrestrial in origin (a theory that could be supported by the shot of a giant black brick hovering in the sky above the journalist's house). Perhaps the bricks are being used by an alien force to spread a weird sickness throughout the population? Or maybe it's all some kind of experiment?
On the other hand, it would be just as easy to argue the black bricks are a metaphor for mental illness. Every person in the story that's encountered one has some kind of traumatic tale associated with the brick coming into their life — Floramae has the vandalism accusation and her subsequent firing; art collector Klaus (Terence Crawford) has a story of his brother's death; and the journalist herself has her own repressed childhood memories, along with the decision to keep them buried. Could the black brick be symbolic of her rapidly worsening mental health towards the film's conclusion?
Once again, this question goes back to the aliens vs. mental illness debate. One reading is that the doppelgänger that's born from the brick could be an actual alien — a physical manifestation of whatever extraterrestrial race is sending out these black bricks. Maybe the brick is some kind of vessel that's able to transport an alien within it, or maybe it's like a seed that grows inside a person, scraping their memories and DNA until it's born into a literal double of them.
Or, on the other hand, what if this is all in the journalist's spiralling mind? What if the doppelgänger marks her descent into psychosis, and her fight with it is actually an extended metaphor for her own internal struggles?
Because Monolithtreads this line so carefully, it's impossible to be certain about the journalist's fate. Either she's been replaced by something otherat the movie's conclusion, or she's suffered a complete mental break from reality. Like the film as a whole, the ending is left up to our own interpretation.
How to watch:Monolithis in theaters from Feb 16.
Literally every single rumour about the Queen's 'emergency meeting' at the palaceEmma Watson offers exam advice to surprised Filipino fan via FaceTimeSelena Gomez's mom seems totally cool with her dating The Weeknd'Handmaid's Tale' Season 2: Hulu renews Elisabeth Moss dramaSteve Bannon's master plans leaked in a White House selfieA woman filmed her driver's obscene harassment, but she ended up in jailGmail app for Android now blocks phishing attacksWatch NASA's spectacular home movie of the first dive between Saturn and its ringsWorld's smallest 4G phone has 3We made a 'Fargo' board game so you too can live a life of midwestern crimeChina ironically decides to clamp down on online news outlets on World Press Freedom Day'Dota 2' tournament organizer issues apology after airing creepy video of womenVery good doggo reminds us all to live a life where safety comes firstFinally, an app to restrict kids' smartphone time that they won't hateFacebook is so, so close to 2 billion usersWhatsapp is down, and the internet is freaking outA woman filmed her driver's obscene harassment, but she ended up in jailChina ironically decides to clamp down on online news outlets on World Press Freedom DayIdris Elba and Matthew McConaughey had an epic 'Dark Tower' Twitter exchangeEarly May weather pattern will be especially extreme in Northern Hemisphere In the Buff: Literary Readings, Pasties, and Jiggling Genitalia by Rae Bryant Think of Me Fondly by Matthew Smith March 5, 1815 by Sadie Stein Letter from Boston by Michael McGrath What We’re Loving: Underwater Photography, Semicolons, Rimbaud by The Paris Review Happy Birthday, Jack Kerouac by Sadie Stein Day of Kings by Sadie Stein The Joys of Yiddish Dictionaries by Ezra Glinter What We’re Loving: Crapalachia, Welty, Animalia by The Paris Review Fortress of Solitude: The Musical, and Other News The Underground Library by Sadie Stein W. Eugene Smith’s Forgotten Coast Happy Birthday, Robert Frost by Sadie Stein Save the Date: The Paris Review Revel by The Paris Review Fitness for Writers, and Other News by Sadie Stein We Have a Winner! by Sadie Stein Diego, Frida, and Me by Molly Crabapple Essex Girl by Zakia Uddin Barnaby Conrad: Author, Matador, Bon Vivant, and Thorn in Hemingway’s Side by Lesley M.M. Blume Sugar Rush: Letter from Cape Town by Anna Hartford
2.7702s , 10156.9453125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【2014 Archives】,Information Information Network