Nicholas Vreeland walked away from a worldly life of privilege to become a Tibetan Buddhist monk. Grandson of legendary Vogue editor Diana Vreeland and apprentice of photographer Irving Penn, Nicholas' life changed drastically upon meeting one of the Dalai Lama's teachers. Soon thereafter, he gave up his glamorous life to live in a monastery in India, ultimately returning to his roots in photography to help his fellow monks rebuild their monastery.
Monk with a Camera has generally received positive reviews.
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Review of Monk with a Camera (2014)
By Diana Clarke (52) for Village Voice (8,525) on 18 Nov 2014
Review of Monk with a Camera (2014)
Review of Monk with a Camera (2014)
By Robert Horton (590) for Seattle Weekly (293) on 12 Nov 2015
Review of Monk with a Camera (2014)
By Joe Bendel (106) for Epoch Times (337) on 21 May 2016
Review of Monk with a Camera (2014)
Review of Monk with a Camera (2014)
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Review of Monk with a Camera (2014)
By Ben Kenigsberg (863) for The New York Times (9,847) on 20 Nov 2014
Review of Monk with a Camera (2014)
By Betsy Sharkey (695) for Los Angeles Times (12,977) on 11 Dec 2014
Review of Monk with a Camera (2014)
By Charles Bramesco (223) for The Dissolve (1,478) on 19 Nov 2014
More About This Page
Monk with a Camera was released in 2014 and has generally received positive reviews.
Online reviewers have written 13 reviews, giving Monk with a Camera (2014) an average rating of 65%.
Overall, cinema-goers much prefer the movie, giving it an average score of 100%, compared to film critics, who gave it a considerably lower average score of 65%. Amateur reviewers enjoyed Monk with a Camera a lot more than professional critics.
With a score of 65%, Monk with a Camera is above the average Cinafilm score for movies made in 2014, which stands at 58%.
Other movies from 2014 with similar scores include films like Non-Stop, The Boxtrolls and Camp X-Ray.
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