The Angry Black Girl and Her Monster is the kind of movie that looks you dead in the eye, announces, “I’m a bold, modern take on Frankenstein,” and then proceeds to trip over its own scalpels while insisting you applaud anyway.
On paper, it sounds incredible: a Black, teen girl genius named Vicaria (Laya DeLeon Hayes) decides death is a disease she can cure, resurrects her murdered brother, and accidentally creates a vengeful monster in the middle of a community already crushed by violence, drugs, and police brutality. It’s ambitious. It’s topical. It’s got layers.
In execution, it’s like someone took three strong movies—social drama, grief horror, and sci-fi tragedy—threw them in a blender, forgot the lid, and filmed whatever hit the ceiling.
Frankenstein, But Make It TED Talk
Vicaria is introduced as a hyper-brilliant, trauma-battered 17-year-old who’s decided that death is not a spiritual mystery or a natural inevitability, but a solvable problem. In a more disciplined film, this would unfold slowly. Here, she’s basically delivering sophomore philosophy, freshman biology, and Instagram trauma discourse all at once.
She keeps insisting “death is a disease,” which is a great thesis if you plan on actually exploring it. The movie instead treats it like a catchphrase—something to repeat, but not interrogate. We don’t really see her scientific process in any meaningful, grounded way. There’s some wiring, some stitching, some vague equipment, and boom: your brother is back and extra murdery.
Mary Shelley’s original story was a meticulous examination of ambition, responsibility, and monstrousness. This version sometimes feels more like, “STEM is power, and consequences are…a third-act issue.”
The Monster, the Metaphor, and the Mess
The resurrected brother, Chris, comes back as a hulking, broken, rage-fueled creature. There are genuinely great ideas here: Black bodies mutilated by violence and then reanimated into something the world fears; grief literally returning in a form you can’t control; systemic brutality turning victims into monsters.
But the execution can’t decide whether Chris is:
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A tragic symbol of what the world has done to him
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A scary, slasher-style threat
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A misunderstood soul who just needs empathy
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An excuse for gory set pieces
So he gets to be all of them, sometimes in the span of one scene. One minute he’s ripping people apart; the next, we’re asked to pity him; then we’re supposed to be terrified again. It could have been layered. Instead, it feels like the script is constantly yelling, “Look, he’s deep!” while also shoving him into whatever role the moment needs.
The result is that Chris never quite coheres as a character or a metaphor. He’s like a walking thesis statement that got edited by five different people with conflicting notes.
Vicaria: Brilliant, Traumatized, and Weirdly Underwritten
Laya DeLeon Hayes gives it everything she’s got. She’s clearly capable of carrying complex emotion—rage, grief, guilt, defiance. The problem is that the script keeps using Vicaria as a mouthpiece for Big Ideas instead of letting her be a fully realized person.
We’re told she’s a genius. We see her fiddling with bodies and wires and quoting her own theories. But we don’t really see a believable progression from “hurting teenager” to “I’m totally going to desecrate corpses and hack biology.” The leap is huge, and the film basically just shrugs and says, “Trauma did it.”
Her relationships—with her father Donald, with her community, with her own conscience—could have been devastating. Instead, they’re sketched out just enough to wave at: she’s misunderstood, she’s angry, she’s hurting, she loves her family. And then it’s back to blood and speeches.
She’s called a monster, a freak, a problem. The film wants to interrogate that. But it’s hard to feel the full weight when Vicaria often feels like she’s trapped in an outline instead of a finished draft.
Social Horror or Social PowerPoint?
The movie is set in a world of constant violence: drug dealers on the corner, cops who show up more as a threat than a help, kids trapped in cycles of trauma. That should be fertile ground for horror—systemic violence as the real monster, the creature as a symptom, Vicaria as both victim and participant.
But instead of weaving that context into the story, the film often just…announces it. A scene will pause so a character can state something that sounds like it belongs on a panel at a festival rather than in the organic flow of the narrative.
Yes, police brutality, poverty, and the devaluation of Black life are crucial topics. But horror works best when those themes are baked into the bones of the story—not when they’re pasted over it like post-it notes labeled “IMPORTANT.”
There are moments that hit, usually quiet ones where horror and reality blur—kids walking past bodies, families trying to breathe through grief. But those are often rushed, abandoned to get back to the louder, splashier stuff.
Tone: Choose One, Any One
The Angry Black Girl and Her Monster has a severe tone problem. It wants to be:
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A heartfelt drama about a family destroyed by violence
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A cerebral riff on Frankenstein
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A gnarly, blood-soaked horror movie
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A poetic meditation on Blackness, grief, and rage
All great goals. But like a student trying to answer four essay questions in one paragraph, it ends up doing none of them particularly well.
There are deeply earnest speeches followed by cartoonishly staged gore. There are intimate character beats immediately undercut by clunky exposition. There’s brutal violence that wants to be meaningful but plays like it’s chasing shock value.
It doesn’t help that the pacing zigzags: slow, talky stretches where everyone explains themes at each other, followed by frantic bursts of creature chaos. Instead of building dread, it feels like stop-start chaos: think Netflix buffering, but with more entrails.
Horror That’s More “Oof” Than “Oh God”
Visually, the movie has some striking moments: the creature’s design is unsettling, all scar tissue and haunted eyes; certain kills are framed with an almost mythic intensity. You can see the ambition.
But the scares themselves rarely land. Too often, it’s just “sudden violence” rather than actual horror. There’s not much suspense, not much creeping dread. It’s more like: talk, talk, talk—BAM, something awful—talk, talk, speech, speech—another burst of brutality. You don’t feel tension mounting so much as you feel like you’re on a seesaw between “message” and “mayhem.”
The movie clearly wants to disturb. Instead, it frequently just feels exhausting.
Everyone’s Trying. The Movie Isn’t Helping.
The cast is doing everything they can. Chad L. Coleman as Donald brings real warmth and sorrow. Denzel Whitaker’s Kango hints at a more complex, morally compromised character than the script gives space for. Amani Summer and Reilly Brooke Stith add texture where they can.
But they’re all fighting the same uphill battle: delivering heartfelt performances inside a story that keeps stopping to underline itself.
If the script had trusted its actors more and its audience more—letting us infer instead of being told, letting horror speak instead of explaining it—this could have been something special. Instead, it feels like everyone showed up to shoot a vital, urgent film and got stuck in a first-draft thinkpiece with blood splatter.
Final Verdict: Great Concept, Sloppy Creation
The Angry Black Girl and Her Monster is not lazy. It’s not hollow. It’s bursting with ideas, anger, and intention. But like Vicaria’s experiment, just because you can stitch the pieces together doesn’t mean what you bring to life is going to function.
It wants to honor Mary Shelley, dissect systemic violence, showcase Black pain and brilliance, and still deliver a gripping horror experience. That’s a massive load to carry. The movie stumbles under it, lurching unevenly from smart to clumsy, powerful to preachy, brutal to just…a lot.
If you squint, you can see the masterpiece it wanted to be. But on the screen, what we get is a flawed undead hybrid: occasionally sharp, often ungainly, compelling in flashes, and frequently out of control.
In a way, maybe that’s fitting for a Frankenstein adaptation: a creature built from good intentions, powerful pieces, and a mad desire to defy the rules—only to stagger into the world, terrifying and tragic, never quite becoming what its creator meant it to be.
The difference is, in the novel, that’s the point. Here, it’s mostly the problem.

