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Mother (1996)

Mother (1996)

7.9

A sharp yet sweet comedy, Mother is a refreshingly clever entry into the dysfunctional family genre

Movie

United States of America
English
Comedy, Drama
1996

TLDR

After refusing to allow anyone to use "Mrs. Robinson" since The Graduate, Simon & Garfunkel let Brooks feature a parody version called "Mrs. Henderson" for this movie... quite the flex!

What it's about

Following his second divorce, an insecure writer (Albert Brooks) moves back in with his mother (Debbie Reynolds) to try and figure out why he has such a dysfunctional relationship with women and himself.

The take

Only a writer of Albert Brooks’ comedic and perceptive talents could turn the premise of an insecure middle-aged man having romantic trouble into something genuinely funny and poignant. Brooks appears as his signature brand of self-loathing boomer here: he plays John Henderson, a middling novelist who's recently gone through a second divorce. When he finds himself in the unenviable position of having to start afresh in his forties, John first decides he needs to get to the bottom of his recurring failures with women. In keeping with the neurotic preoccupations of his characters, Brooks has John take the psychoanalytic approach by going back to the source: his mother. 

To better get to the root of his hang-ups, John temporarily moves back in with Mrs Henderson, whom Debbie Reynolds plays as a hilariously blithe foil to her manic, insecure son. Brooks and Reynolds’ fractious rapport is tortuously true to life: John finds her petty habits maddening, while she doesn’t seem to understand his life or his work — an obliviousness that, it turns out, might run the other way, too. Cleverly turning the self-obsessions of its lead character on its head, Mother is a wry comedy full of insight and unexpected sweetness.

What stands out

Despite Brooks’ centrality behind and in front of the camera, this is really Reynolds’ movie. Her performance is a masterclass in line delivery and all the subtle notes that can reveal a sweet-seeming comment to be a secretly barbed critique. What’s more, Mother’s lens shifts in its third act to reveal her character as the real heart of the movie — a move that feels natural and right given the human depths Reynolds has thus far quietly folded into her apparently comedy-centric part.

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