B. Monkey | |
Director: | Michael Radford |
Producer: | Nik Powell Colin Vaines Stephen Woolley |
Screenplay: | Chloe King Michael Radford Michael Thomas |
Starring: | Asia Argento Jared Harris Rupert Everett |
Music: | Luis Enríquez Bacalov Jennie Muskett |
Cinematography: | Ashley Rowe |
Editing: | Joëlle Hache |
Distributor: | Miramax Films |
Runtime: | 92 minutes |
Country: | United States United Kingdom |
Language: | English Italian French |
Gross: | $39,371 (USA)[1] |
B. Monkey is a British-American 1998 neo-noir crime film directed by Michael Radford. Originally, Michael Caton-Jones was attached to direct the adaptation of the homonymous 1992 book by Andrew Davies, but left over creative differences.
Alan (Jared Harris) is a schoolteacher in London who also moonlights as a jazz disc jockey for a hospital PA system. One night after work, he goes to a bar and sees Beatrice (Asia Argento) a beautiful woman who is arguing with two men. Alan is immediately captivated by Beatrice and begins to pursue her. What Alan doesn't know is that Beatrice is an infamous thief known to the police as "B. Monkey" (named for her ability to break into anything) and the men she was arguing with were Paul (Rupert Everett) and Bruno (Jonathan Rhys Meyers) a homosexual couple who are her partners in crime. When Alan becomes aware of Beatrice's secret, he tries to lead her into a safer and more honest way of life, even as she lures him into the thrilling existence he's been dreaming of.
In her autobiography, Asia Argento said she had an affair with director Michael Radford during filming.[2] She had earlier accused Harvey Weinstein of sexually assaulted her during the same time period.[3]
Film review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes gave the film a rating of 60% based on 20 reviews.[4] Metacritic has the film listed as a 49 out of 100, indicating mixed reviews, based on 10 critics.[5]
Anita Gates of The New York Times had a mixed review of the film but thought highly of the actors:
In October 2017, Michael Caton-Jones revealed that he had chosen Sophie Okonedo, to star. However, the producer, Harvey Weinstein, decided the actress wasn't "fuckable". Caton-Jones and Weinstein discussed the matter heatedly, and Caton-Jones said, "'Don't screw up the casting of this film because you want to get laid', whereupon he went mental." Weinstein then leaked to Variety that Caton-Jones had walked off the movie due to "creative differences". Argento, who replaced Okonedo, was one of three women who in 2017 were reported in The New Yorker to have been raped by Weinstein; she said that she submitted to Weinstein because, "I felt I had to, because I had the movie coming out and I didn't want to anger him."[6]