72
Metascore
27 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 100Los Angeles TimesKevin ThomasLos Angeles TimesKevin ThomasEvery element of The Mother, directed by Roger Michell and written by Hanif Kureishi, fits together with perfection. The film's staging -- the way its settings create a world that allows for striking images that echo the psychological interplay of its people, the way in which every performance could not be any better -- is awe-inspiring.
- 80The New York TimesStephen HoldenThe New York TimesStephen HoldenThe screenplay bluntly faces anxieties of aging that are rarely voiced in the movies, and it is too hard-headed to offer comfy palliatives.
- 80SalonStephanie ZacharekSalonStephanie ZacharekReid is stunning here.
- 75New York Daily NewsJami BernardNew York Daily NewsJami BernardTurns out to be a thoughtful, beautifully acted story about feeling alive before it's too late to feel anything.
- 70Village VoiceDennis LimVillage VoiceDennis LimBy turns expansive and astringent, The Mother is a portrait of a woman who, with the dazed courage of someone finally awakened to the world after decades of passivity and repression, keeps on walking.
- 60TV Guide MagazineKen FoxTV Guide MagazineKen FoxThe film is marvelously acted all around, and the fact that there isn't a false note in the entire film is especially impressive given Kureishi's melodramatic contrivances and the fact that his characters are clichés whose behaviors are predictable at nearly every turn.
- 60New York Magazine (Vulture)Peter RainerNew York Magazine (Vulture)Peter RainerThere is in The Mother a rich understanding of where old age takes you. Along with the myth that seniors don't have sex drives, the film dispels a larger one: that the years bring wisdom.
- 50VarietyDerek ElleyVarietyDerek ElleyA portrait of a contempo British family drifting apart because of generational differences, The Mother ends up an uneasy brew of too many competing tastes and themes.
- 50L.A. WeeklyElla TaylorL.A. WeeklyElla TaylorThe Mother winds up unpersuasive, in large part due to writer Hanif Kureishi, who visits on all his mopey characters such calculated savagery, it's hard to care much for them or to get onboard for the hope implied in the hastily stitched-on ending.
- 50New York PostMegan LehmannNew York PostMegan LehmannA promising film that is dragged down by the weight of its gray morbidity.