

Something went wrong
Try again later.
Mojave
Armed with little more than a knife and two handles of vodka, an near-suicidal Hollywood director sets out to the Mojave Desert, where he finds his doppelganger-like antagonist, a homicidal drifter.



















9 March 1979, Guatemala



8 November 1979, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic

5 June 1971, Dorchester, Boston, Massachusetts, USA


13 July 1981, Los Angeles, California, USA


26 September 1985, Hertfordshire, England, UK


January 22, 2016
There is something kind of funny about these two bro-styled men arguing about the accuracy of a George Bernard Shaw quote while kicking the crap out of each other, but I'm not sure how much Monahan knows that, smart as he is.
February 04, 2016
A smudge on the writing record of William Monahan (The Departed), Mojave throws a Hollywood 'player' into the desert to meet the Devil with meandering and pointless results.
March 25, 2016
A spoiled melancholy Hollywood brat and a menacing drifter [engage in] a deadly d*ck-measuring contest... that you will hope neither survives.
March 27, 2016
Monahan won an Oscar for writing The Departed - what he is trying to achieve here remains a mystery.
April 22, 2016
Mojave is a wandering oddity that doesn't really go anywhere.
February 05, 2016
The screenwriter of The Departed aims for a statement about the perils of fame, but instead comes off as the poster boy for toxic celebrity narcissism.
March 25, 2016
Isaac's efforts can't help Mojave from becoming a bit of a mess and, ultimately, a little dull.
February 04, 2016
Writer/director William Monahan won an Oscar for penning The Departed and he obviously needs the discipline Martin Scorsese brought to that picture.
January 28, 2016
In his second directorial effort, "Mojave," Monahan has no ... map to follow, and he wanders in a land of sophomoric pretentiousness and banal profundities.
March 21, 2016
Might have made a good episode of 'Entourage'.
February 07, 2017
Trailing a whiff of sulphur every time he appears, Isaac injects real menace into his role, while Hedlund oozes entitlement and angst.