The Mother 2003

It can take a lifetime to feel alive.

6.0 / 10   52 vote(s)
R
Drama Romance

A grandmother has a passionate affair with a man half her age, who is also sleeping with her daughter.

Homepage http://www.sonyclassics.com/themother/
Release Date 2003-11-14
Runtime 1h 52m
Directors Roger Michell, Alwin H. Küchler
Producers Stephen Evans, Angus Finney, Kevin Loader, Rosa Romero, Tracey Scoffield, David M. Thompson
Writer Hanif Kureishi

This is quite a tough film to watch. Not so much because of the subject matter, but because you just know there is an inevitability about the conclusion which is going to leave everyone damaged! Anne Reid is good as the eponymous character ("Mary") who loses her husband and finds that she just cannot go home. She spends her time between her son and his family and with her daughter and her young son. The former is having his house extended, and so has employed "Darren" (Daniel Craig) - who just happens to be the married boyfriend of her daughter "Paula" (Cathryn Bradshaw). Lonely and craving human companionship, "Mary" gradually becomes infatuated with this hunky tradesman, despite him being half her age, and he is all too willing to help her out. Obviously, her family find out and that's when it all goes awry. It's also when the plot heads full speed into melodrama. This already pretty dysfunctional family sees the wheels come off and the nuanced, emotional and sensitive elements are jettisoned for anger and an sense of the truly unpleasant and course develops. Reid and Craig have a couple of decent scenes together, but for the most part the remaining cast are all pretty lacklustre and the longer it goes on, the more desperate it seems to shock - for the sake of it. The age-gap relationship/sex storyline could have delivered something more here had director Roger Michell not just chickened out.

CinemaSerf