Parents' Guide to

Blonde

Movie NC-17 2022 187 minutes
Blonde Movie Poster

Common Sense Media Review

Jennifer Green By Jennifer Green , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 17+

Film mixes fact, fiction; abuse, nudity, sex, language.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 17+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 18+

Based on 10 parent reviews

age 18+

Not appropriate for kids.

This movie is based off of Marylin Monroe’s life. Definitely not meant for children. The use of drugs is all through out the movie. Violence, while there is no guns in this movie there was a lot of violence within it such as Marylin’s mother attempting to drown her daughter, and the abortion scenes. Sex is all throughout the movie.
age 18+

the worst movie in the world

do not watch this.

What's the Story?

As a young girl, when BLONDE begins, Norma Jean (Lily Fisher) suffers abuse from her unstable mother (Julianne Nicholson) and, absent a father in her life, is sent to live in an orphanage. When she grows up, Norma Jean transforms into Marilyn Monroe (Ana de Armas), first as a pin-up model and eventually as a movie star and celebrity icon known to millions. But for Norma Jean, Marilyn is a construction, a character she turns on when the cameras light up. The dichotomy of her two personas, and the ways Marilyn is exploited and abused by almost everyone around her, ultimately wear Norma Jean down. She's unsuccessful in her constant search for a father figure and someone to respect and love her for who she is when the cameras are turned off. Norma Jean can't escape Marilyn, so Marilyn must escape.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (10 ):
Kids say (9 ):

Director Andrew Dominik has crafted an ambitious and daring but overly long fictionalized biopic centered around a remarkable lead performance from Ana de Armas. Dominik clearly intended for Blonde to overwhelm and even feel cruel at times, ostensibly to mirror the life experiences of the fictionalized Marilyn Monroe/Norma Jean. De Armas is excellent in the role, embodying Marilyn to a tee. If anyone complains about her (very slight) Cuban accent, just remind them of the countless times American actors have played other nationalities. But this Monroe is essentially one-note: she's anxious, vulnerable, emotionally tortured, always unsatisfied, abused, and misunderstood. She moves from man to man (calling them all "daddy") and seems on the constant verge of a nervous breakdown.

Many scenes in Blonde are both fantastical and intentionally provocative. The film is narratively and visually inventive, including a sex scene where bodies appear to be floating, stretching, and melting, or camera angles meant to be looking out from inside a vagina or a toilet. Camera angles, focus, color, and sound all conjure Marilyn's mindset and mood. Some of these techniques are quite effective and memorable, others just feel showy and more about form than content. Ultimately, for the viewer, less would have been more. At almost three hours long, the exercise is exhausting. Perhaps we are meant to feel as disoriented and drained as this fictionalized Marilyn, who asks where dreams end and madness begins?

Talk to Your Kids About ...

  • Families can talk about the ethical issues involved in fictionalizing the lives of real people, as in Blonde. Where can you go to find out which parts of this movie are based on fact and which parts are made up? How do you think the relatives of the real people portrayed here might react?

  • What do you think of the choice of Ana de Armas to play Marilyn Monroe? Did she look, sound, and behave like Monroe? How do you think an actor prepares to play a real or famous person?

  • What other films have you watched that were longer than two or two and a half hours? What are the pros and cons of cutting films down to a more typical two hours?

  • This film received an unusual NC-17 rating. Do you think that was justified? Why or why not?

Movie Details

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