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Monolith was originally called Tucker and Flynn but the name was changed as presumably this made it sounded like even more of a human-canine pairing than the buddy cop and dog partner comedy Turner and Hooch (1989). (Unfortunately, no one seems to have realized the inappropriateness of the new title in that there are no monoliths in the film). Nevertheless, the buddy cop element works well. Bill Paxton and Lindsay Frost are a pairing that one could credibly believe together as the leads in a tv cop show he playing (quite well) the macho individualistic slob, she playing (equally well) the aggressively determined go-getter who operates by hunch. If Monolith had stayed as merely a buddy cop film, it could have been quite good. Unfortunately, Monolith falls down completely in trying to be an science-fiction film as well. Certainly, it is marginally more credible than John Eyress previous science-fiction film the preposterous Project: Shadowchaser. However, the science-fiction angle seems almost to have been written in as an afterthought. It is supposed to be the central drive of the film but the devious dealings of the sinister government agency take up more running time than the alien threat itself does. The sinister government agency angle is pure cliche Monolith gives the indication of also trying to jump on the bandwagon of tvs The X Files (1993-2002), which was hitting its peak of popularity when the film came out. Here John Hurt is horrendously miscast. Hurts fruity delivery is not at all suited to the role of a villain (who is given the laughably unsubtle name of Villano), while Hurts diminutive height mitigates against any threat. It all mounts to an unremarkable climax Bill Paxton must fight between his human and alien natures, human feelings win out and everything goes up in explosion. Ho-hum. John Eyres other genre films, mostly action hybrids, are: Goodnight, God Bless (1987), Project: Shadowchaser (1992), Project Shadowchaser II (1995), Project Shadowchaser III (1995), Judge and Jury (1996), Octopus (2000) and Ripper: Letter from Hell (2001). Eyres also produced Dark Planet (1996), The Apocalypse (1997) and Spoiler (1997).
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