The Sundance promo image for horror-comedy Little Monsters features a blood-stained Lupita Nyong’o protecting a small group of children from what we know is some kind of zombie attack. Um, check please. The Oscar-winner’s career has been marked by serious dramatic performances; even her role in Black Panther is pretty damn straight, and I wanted to see her do something that was way outside of her comfort zone. Let’s just say Nyong’o doesn’t disappoint.
Josh Gad is the sourness tossed into all this sweetness. He gets the film’s funniest role as Teddy McGiggle, a kids’ TV show personality as over-the-top annoying as Barney. When the zombie attack traps him with everybody else, his vile side emerges and we see how terrible he truly is. When he starts chugging hand sanitizer for the alcohol kick you see how far the TV star has fallen, but it’s only just the start. He’s the source of the film’s most vulgar lines, and if there’s anything that keeps this film from being fairly wholesome (despite all the gore) it’s the character of Teddy. But he’s also necessary as a counterbalance to Dave, who starts off pretty unlikable, too.
The movie belongs to Nyong’o, though. As Miss Caroline she plays an angelic figure, almost too good to be true, which is exactly why Dave falls so hard for her. But we also see the lengths she’ll go to protect the kids, and it gives Nyong’o some cool shit to do. The best action sequences belong to her, as she fights through hordes of zombies and realizes she’s pretty good at killing them, better than you’d expect out of a schoolteacher. It’s in large part to Nyong’o’s performance that we get a sense of the stakes involved. If Miss Caroline fails, everybody is going to die.
Little Monsters is one of those Sundance movies I don’t see enough of. It’s not trying to be anything more than what it is, which is a chance to watch Lupita Nyong’o decapitating zombies. If that floats your boat, this is a film you’ll want to take a stab at.