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What Happened To Monday Full Movie In Hindi Free Download

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Sep 18th, 2018
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  4. What Happened To Monday Full Movie In Hindi Free Download
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  57. In a not so distant future, where overpopulation and famine have forced governments to undertake a drastic One-Child Policy, seven identical sisters (all of them portrayed by Noomi Rapace) live a hide-and-seek existence pursued by the Child Allocation Bureau. The Bureau, directed by the fierce Nicolette Cayman (Glenn Close), enforces a strict family-planning agenda that the sisters outwit by taking turns assuming the identity of one person: Karen Settman. Taught by their grandfather (Willem Dafoe) who raised and named them - Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday - each can go outside once a week as their common identity, but are only free to be themselves in the prison of their own apartment. That is until, one day, Monday does not come home.
  58. The year is 2073, where overpopulation, limited fossil fuels and global food shortage have led to the biggest crisis in human history and the enforcement of the strict mandatory one-child-per-family policy, called the "Child Allocation Act". Under those circumstances, the ruthless political activist Nicolette Cayman promises a bright future in a brave new world, while at the same time, Terrence Settman decides to get around the government's decree, in a desperate attempt to hide his septuplet grandchildren. As a result, the siblings named after each day of the week will inevitably take turns impersonating their late mother, Karen Settman, going out in the world only on the corresponding days of the week, sharing information with the rest of the sisterhood every night. And then, one day, something happens to Monday.
  59. Political and social themes aside, this movie can&#39;t be taken seriously on any level, and I have to laugh when my fellow reviewers delve into such weighty topics as China&#39;s one-child policy and world overpopulation. At best, this was a &quot;made-for-TV&quot; movie, abounding in cheap production values, a ridiculous plot and just plain BAD acting.<br/><br/>Let me say that I&#39;m a big Noomi Rapace fan. From the Lisbeth Salander trio to Prometheus, I&#39;ve always enjoyed her performances, and that&#39;s why I watched this movie in the first place. But this movie didn&#39;t show off her talent. She didn&#39;t seem to inhabit the characters in any real way--she put on a blonde wig for one, wore a pixie haircut for another, and used the old trope of a pair of eyeglasses to act &quot;the smart one.&quot; I&#39;ve enjoyed other &quot;overpopulated dystopia&quot; movies such as Children of Men, and even the first Hunger Games film. And The Handmaid&#39;s Tale on Hulu (as well as the Margaret Atwood novel) is one of my favorites.<br/><br/>But if you&#39;re looking for an entertainment that includes one actress play multiple roles at once, lots of action and political commentary on everything from eugenics to the IRA, try watching Orphan Black. I don&#39;t normally recommend TV shows on this site, but Tatiana Maslany does a superb job creating completely distinct characters/clones without resorting to elaborate prosthetics or old tropes. Sure she uses cornrows for one character and a blonde wig for another, but the central core of each one consists in her fulfilling performances--each original, individual, heart-breaking and realistic as they come to grips with their fates as the victims of a power-mad corporation that believes Eugenics will save the world.<br/><br/>As for &quot;Monday&quot; the premise is stale and cheesy, and the script and acting don&#39;t measure up. Try Elizabeth Moss as Offred in The Handmaid&#39;s Tale or Maslany in Orphan Black, and you&#39;ll want to delve into the real politics of overpopulation in the world today, because they make it so pressing.
  60. Excellent performance by Noomi Rapace. Moreover, we all know how good Glenn Close and Dafoe can act. It&#39;s a sci-fi thriller, with drama, crime, and some explicit violence. One thing I found weird, is that most reviewers thought this was a great movie, yet we have a not-so- great rating (6.9) in this site. Maybe Netflix is not so welcome here? Anyway, I strongly suggest you watch this movie.
  61. Links between climate change, population growth, and a potentially catastrophic worldwide famine are reduced to background plot points. The moral/ethical conundrums of the “solution” are paid lip service but not aggressively integrated into the story.
  62. a5c7b9f00b
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