Monkey Shines By Jim Gay
George A. Romero monkeys with nature in this gripping and fearful tale
based on the novel by Michael Stewart. Allan Mann (John Beghe) is a law
student who's hit by a truck while jogging, leaving him a quadriplegic.
Luckily, his scientist friend Geoffrey (John Pankow) is experimenting with
capuchin monkeys, making them smarter with injections of human genetic
material. Geoffrey arranges with Melanie (Kate McNeil)--who's working on
an experimental program that matches monkeys with paraplegics to perform
guide-dog functions--to train his prize subject, Ella (Boo), to act as
Allan's helper. Allan is paralyzed from the neck down, confined to a
wheelchair he moves by working a lever with his mouth. He's really
vulnerable. Ella can fetch things and do errands, and a real emotional
bond develops between Mann and monkey. Too strong a bond, it turns out, as
Allan begins to experience dreams from the monkey's-eye view
(capuchin-cam), Ella's boosted intelligence giving her the residual
benefit of a telepathic ability in which the monkey begins to act out
Allan's subconscious rage. Allan's nurse, former girlfriend, doctor, even
his mother are terrorized by the creepy capuchin, leading to a showdown
between Ella and Allan himself. With Allan trapped in a house, alone with
a super-intelligent and malevolent monkey, there is plenty of suspense to
make you rip holes in your upholstery. But perhaps even more tension could
have been wrung out of this story if Ella had been more sympathetic (being
as she was the victim of a scientific experiment gone bad), her wicked
antics the acts of a kind of exterminating angel. Performances are
brilliant by both Ella and Jason Beghe, who turns in one of cinema's most
accurate and intelligent depictions of a high-level quadriplegic
character.
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