
Mona Lisa (film) - Wikipedia
Mona Lisa is a 1986 British neo-noir [4] crime drama film directed by Neil Jordan, and written by Jordan and David Leland. It was produced by HandMade Films and stars Bob Hoskins, Cathy …
Mona Lisa (1986) - IMDb
"Mona Lisa" is a melancholic love story in an environment of low-lives and losers in the underworld of London. The beginning of this movie is a drama entwined with romance and …
Mona Lisa movie review & film summary (1986) | Roger Ebert
That’s the setup for “Mona Lisa,” a new British film set in the tattered precincts of Soho, where vice lords run sordid clubs in which young, bewildered provincial women sell themselves to …
Mona Lisa (1986) | The Criterion Collection
Jordan’s colorful dialogue and eye for evocatively surreal details lend a dreamlike sheen to Mona Lisa, an unconventionally romantic tale of damaged people searching for tenderness in an …
Mona Lisa (1986) Full Movie Summary & Plot Explained
Read the complete plot summary of Mona Lisa (1986) with spoiler-filled details, twists, and thematic breakdowns. Discover the story’s meaning, characters’ roles, and what makes the …
Mona Lisa - Rotten Tomatoes
Mona Lisa is an amazing film that somehow beautifully examines the horrific world of prostitution by putting you in the head of its confused and disoriented lead, played brilliantly by Bob...
Mona Lisa (1986) — The Movie Database (TMDB)
Sometimes love is a strange and wicked game. George is a small-time crook just out of prison who discovers his tough-guy image is out of date. Reduced to working as a minder/driver for …
Mona Lisa (1986) - BFI
Mona Lisa (1986) An ungainly cockney chauffeur navigates the seedy streets of London, gradually falling for the elegant and mysterious prostitute who is his passenger.
Mona Lisa - Apple TV
Writer-director Neil Jordan's breakthrough film is a brilliant, noir-infused love story.Mona Lisa is set in the seedy streets of Soho, where vice lords run sordid clubs in which young, bewildered …
Mona Lisa (1986) | agoodmovietowatch
The ending may be a tad abrupt, but Mona Lisa has a lot of compassion and hope for these two trying to make a better life for themselves, a lot more than expected from the genre.