Mothers have
historically been given the short end of the cinematic stick, drowning in their
male counterpart and typically a far more villainous portrayal of parenthood. In nearly every Disney princess film, it is the mother that is killed to leave a child
either orphaned or stuck with an evil step-mother. Mothers are an easy
scapegoat for any evil or bad behavior in offspring, occasionally even
encouraging it, as is the case with both versions of the film sharing the name
of the holiday celebrating them.
Apparently there have been so few
positive matriarchal portrayals on film that nearly every article listing the
best Mother’s Day movies is actually a list of memorably awful mothers. Three
of the top four films in the list by Time Out include Mommie Dearest, Psycho
and Carrie, and two of the top five
on the list from Oprah.com include Precious
and The Fighter. The Guardian and LA
Times online went a step further, titling the lists “10 Best... Bad Mothers on Film,” and
“Top 10 Worst Movie Moms.” I’m going a different direction with my list. Rare as they
may be, there have been some spectacular representations of maternal love in
the history of cinema, and I have gladly rooted them out in honor of a mother
deserving of the extra effort: my own.
It would be easy to start pointing
fingers, blaming Hollywood
for sexist tendencies in the favoring of film fathers. While this would not be
entirely incorrect, this is also only a portion of the greater picture. While
it is true that mothers have been neglected onscreen, there is a shining flip
side of the coin in the representation of parents in modern television. Long
gone are the days of “Father Knows Best,” replaced by Homer Simpson and Al
Bundy. At the same time, women have grown stronger, more intelligent, and even
increased independence in television programming. Sitcoms have seen a decrease
in intelligence and physical appearance for father figures, while the women
remain as beautiful as ever while nearly always outsmarting their male spouse
in a game of wits. In the 1950s Lucy unsuccessfully hid her harebrain schemes
from her judgmental husband, but the tables have flipped on Jim Belushi, Ray
Romano, Tim Allen and every other comedian given a sitcom in the last three
decades. Strong and beautiful mother figures have shown up in other genres of
television as well, from crime (“Weeds,” “Sons of Anarchy,”) to good old
fashion soap opera drama (“Desperate Housewives,” “Parenthood”). In other
words, the slang “boob tube” has never been a more accurate name for sitcom
television programming.
I’ve broken the films with positive
mother role models into five categories: Mother/Daughter
Bonding, Smothered Sons, Sacrificing Mothers, Aggressive Protectors, and Grieving Mothers. Rather than the
typical Desert Island list, I will simply list my
favorites within each category, and my reasons for appreciating the films often
correspond with similarities I see in my own mother. However, rest assured Mom,
none can hold a candle to the actual experience of having you for a mother.
Mother/Daughter Bonding
I will never
fully understand the relationship women have with their mothers, though I have
certainly seen enough films on the subject to imagine it is similar to what men
experience with their fathers. These films begin with opposition and dissention
and end in a bonding experience which allows mother and daughter to come to a
new appreciation of each other. This comes from each having an experience that
allows them to understanding each other better, happening in the most literal
sense with the plot twists of the body switch narrative. Freaky Friday is the best example of this, with a 1976 version
starring Barbara Harris and Jodie Foster, a 1995 remake with Shelley Long and
Gaby Hoffman, and the 2003 version with Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan.
Lohan’s best
career moves have been choosing to do films with talented veteran actors, and Georgia Rule (2007) is another example
of this, as well as another type of mother/daughter bonding film. This matriarchal
melodrama takes it a step further with three generations of women, co starring
Felicity Huffman and Jane Fonda as Lohan’s mother and grandmother. Other
entries in this sub-sub-genre would include One
True Thing (1998) with Renée Zellweger and Meryl Streep, Anywhere But Here (1999) with Natalie
Portman and Susan Sarandon, and Because I
Said So (2006) with Mandy Moore and Diane Keaton. The fact that I have
mentioned nearly every great actress over 50 and still working regularly is
evidence of how few roles like this there are to go around.
Smothered Sons
Occasionally the
mother/daughter films utilize comedy, but not nearly as common as with films
about mothers and their sons. A mother smothering their sons with love to the
point of irritation is comedic gold, and has become a staple stereotype in the
representation of the Jewish community as well. This was as clear with Albert
Brooks’ Mother (1996) as it was with
2012’s The Guilt Trip, starring Seth
Rogen and Barbra Streisand. Being a single parent is another constant character trait in a
cinematic mother’s smothering of her son, whether it is the bullied child of a
flower child in About a Boy (2002), or an aspiring writer working away from
home for the first time at a young age in Almost Famous (2000).
This is another
area which has succeeded in the realm of television more than the big screen,
which has never been more apparent than it is in current broadcasting. As well
as the television adaptation of the previously mentioned film, “About a Boy,”
there is a perfect depiction of the stereotypical over-eager loving mother in
“The Goldbergs.” Remove the plethora of tacky sweaters and Wendi
McLendon-Covey’s performance as Beverly Goldberg may closest resemble the type
of childhood my mother attempted to give me. Prior to this 1980s-based series,
I probably would have given “The Wonder Years” this distinction.
Sacrificing Mothers
These cinematic
mothers are the ones who put their own needs and wellbeing aside in order to
care for their children. This includes the ultimate sacrifice of life, as the
unforgettable death of the title fawn’s mother in the classic Disney film, Bambi (1942). More often than death,
however, the mother’s sacrifice was seen in her ability to do whatever
necessary to see her child cared for. This martyrdom has come in several forms
over the years.
In the 1930s,
this melodrama genre often saw the mother forced to step away from her child as
a way of allowing her a chance at a higher social standing. This is often due
to the mother’s need to work for a living in order to support her child, a double-edged
sword which caused society to look down on her. The best examples of this
include the several adaptations of Stella
Dallas (1925, 1937), Imitation of
Life (1934, 1959) and Mildred Pierce (1945,
2011), which makes a villain out of the ungrateful daughter.
More often than not, however, the
sacrifices made are purely due to financial need. In order to ensure her
children’s needs are met, cinematic mothers are willing to do whatever is
necessary. This meant taking whatever jobs available in order to raise the
needed funds, either through creative means such as entering jingle contests in
The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio
(2005) or even turning to a dangerous life of crime such as the smuggling done
by the mother played by Melissa Leo in Frozen River
(2008). Japan
also saw a consistent number of films with this theme as well, including Every-Night Dreams (1932) Mother (1951) and Sansho the Bailiff (1954), among others.
Desert Island Favorite: The Prize Winner of Defiance, Ohio (2005) Directed by Jane Anderson,
Starring Julianne Moore and co-starring Woody Harrelson as the abusive
alcoholic husband.
Aggressive Protectors
The difference
between this category and the previous comes down to a more proactive approach
by the mothers. Mothers in the last section were defensive of outside
harm, whereas these mothers take a more offensive approach to the protection of
their offspring. This can be seen in the most obvious form of physical
aggression, as is the case with robot-fighting mother of John Connor in the Terminator franchise, the superhero
mother of Pixar’s The Incredibles
(2004), or the bully-killing mother in John Waters’ Serial Mom (1994).
Sometimes they
aren’t violent, but manage to break laws and dismiss morals in order to cover
up for the violence of their child. The mother played by Tilda Swinton in The Deep End (2001) never even asks her
son about his implication of a murder, but merely covers it up as quickly as
possible in order to avoid any chance of his culpability being questioned. In
yet another film titled Mother
(2009), this time from South Korean director Joon-ho Bong (Memories of a Murder, The
Host, and the upcoming Snowpiercer),
a mother searches for the real killer after her son is arrested for a murder.
Then there are
the mothers who offer a different type of protection, aggressively fighting for
a child’s basic rights and doing whatever possible to shield them from future
emotional suffering. These include defenders against bullies, such as biker mom
played by Cher in Mask (1985), and
activists against insufficient school systems, including the crusade led by the
mothers in Won’t Back Down (2012)
played by Maggie Gyllenhaal and Viola Davis. Then there is the simple act of
comforting, an innate way that every mother is able to protect their child and
my favorite depiction of parental love in a film from this section or any.
Grieving Mothers
Sadly, this is
probably the most common depiction of a mother’s love onscreen. The examples of
grieving mothers onscreen are far more common than fathers, across a number of
different narratives. The most difficult ones are the films that deal with this
loss head on, such as Things We Lost in
the Fire (2007), Bella (2006), Secret Sunshine (2007), Rabbit Hole (2010), Beautiful Boy (2010), Still
Walking (2008), Changeling (2008)
and In the Bedroom (2001). Then there
are films which simply use the loss as a character developmental devise for
other elements of the film, seen most clearly in Sandra Bullock’s performance
this past year in Gravity as a mother
in who must fight the grief and make the decision continue to live.
This section merely motivates me to
stay alive, because I would never wish this kind of suffering on the mother who
has so graciously given me so much. So, here’s to living. And here’s to all of
the mothers who resemble and surpass those in cinemas and on television, none
more impressively than my own. Happy
Mother’s Day, Mom. Nearly everything else in life appears better onscreen
to me, but your daily devotion to my happiness far exceeds anything that can be
glamorized by Hollywood .
Desert Island Favorite: Moonlight Mile (2002), Directed by Brad Silberling,
Starring Susan Sarandon and Dustin Hoffman as grieving parents, as well as Jake
Gyllenhaal as the former fiancé of the deceased daughter. Holly Hunter and
“Grey’s Antomy” star Ellen Pompeo also co-star.
I'm glad that women have everyone kissing their fat, lazy, self-absorbed, selfish asses now. I think it's great that no one gives a damn about raising or praising good fathers today. Yes, feminism has really helped everyone become less sexist against women. That's just great. Ladies, you might as well castrate your sons and make them into girls as soon as they come out. That's how much boys mean to society today. According to society, all men are just evil rapists and wife-beaters by design... despite all of the statistics proving that women can be just as vile and dangerous.
ReplyDeleteYou may have a valid point or two hidden amidst your anger, Mr. Anonymous, but my mother is not fat, lazy, selfish, or self-absorbed in any way, shape or form. I don't think a single person in her entire life has ever used any of those words to describe her, and she was the one I wrote the article for. I'm sorry you didn't have the same experience, but judging by the mass of articles about bad mothers on film, it seems you are not alone. Which makes me all the more grateful for the mother I have. So...thanks for you comment?
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