The rise in population that has been going on for years, the nature that has been directly slaughtered by the hands of people, and the rapid depletion of all the resources necessary for life... although these things seem to be part of an ordinary fiction story, they are sadly the truth itself.
People who have seen this progress for years and who have not taken adequate measures in the face of it are taking care of this responsibility in different ways as follows: "I know but I don't care". Hollywood is trying to create self-awareness with a lot of work on this subject. What happened to Monday is a beautiful film that focuses on this subject.
The name of the film is Norwegian Director Tommy Werkola, who has been sitting in the director's chair for an original, rather amusing film, such as dead snow before. The work he has revealed is the kind that meets expectations thanks to the strong players at hand, the compelling story of strong performances.
The future is a process in which the population growth is raised, where resources are not enough, and the famine is going on all the way to large-scale epidemics. The human being is looking for a way out without knowing what to do. A woman named Nicolette Cayman (Glenn close)comes forward and tells us how to handle the problem. Every family has a right to one child. Those with two or more children will deliver them to the state. When we have a more beautiful and prosperous world, children who fall asleep will be awakened. That way, the system will be in order. When this system is activated, a woman who dies while giving birth to her seven daughters will bring a great danger to all of this progress. Grandpa Terrence Settman (Willem Dafoe) will secretly raise the seven sisters.
Seven completely different girls, whose characters are completely different from each other, are trained and prepared for the outside world with the support of their grandfather while offering a pleasant spectacle of the story that has been shuttled between the past and the future at certain intervals. We see both the challenges of Dafoe's charming character and how seven little ones are ready for the system. When seven women are left alone, they continue their lives, seven days a week, every day with a sister rule. Same job, same company, same name: Karen Settman. Noomi Rapace, who plays a lot of character alone, is in a solid confrontation with James McAvoy, the lead role of the film Split.
What happened to Monday consists of a struggle for survival of six characters that are endangered upon the disappearance of the first sister Monday and a lot of mystery. We're curious about the secrets that are hidden by Cayman, who is evil, and nerve-wrecking character of Close. At the same time, the six sisters keep the element of curiosity high with their opposite characters. An action above average, easy to set up empathy and conspicuous character portraits... Ever if mysteries behind the scenes are predictable, because of the wonderful act of Rapace, What happened to Monday is worth-watching.
The story may not bring great enlightenment, but it does not make such a claim. The goal is to keep the attention on top, not to keep the pace down, but to increase credibility through a depiction of a future that is not too volatile. As a matter of fact, all of these goals are reached more or less. It's exciting, fun, but it's little hard to stick in mind after years. An average film that needs to be given the chance to have a good time, watch solid performances, and witness an exciting chase.