You will fall in love
with The Second Mother, a charming
honest and hilarious Brazilian drama. Regina Casé – from the award winning film
Me You Them (2000), is a hoot as a gruff
lovable nanny working for a wealthy middle upper class family.
When her estranged teenaged daughter comes to stay with her at
the home of her employer where she works to search for an apartment in the city
of São Paulo while studying for the entrance exam to a prestigious school, a
tense social drama begins to unfold, exposing the social divide between generations with comic results.
The Second Mother
accurately reflects our current social media obsessed society with a keen
observant eye that allows us to see the absurd humor in our unconscious
behavior. The film is a scaled down modern version of Downton Abbey, showing us the vast psychological disparity between
the servant class and the household’s wealthy
family.
While revealing conflicting class values, filmmaker Anna Muylaert gives us a sensitive truthful story of a
mother who must come to terms with her guilt and angry teenage daughter who she
hasn’t seen in ten years while working far away from her family.
Regina Casé’s performance as Val the nanny is so convincing and
charming that she dominates the screen with her large spontaneous personality
and exuberant energy. She clearly enjoys her work and loves the family she
works for, but she knows her place and has no illusions about her station in
life as a servant.
She knows her limits but that’s not to say she doesn’t enjoy
being around the things she can never have. To Val this is just the natural way
of life and she just feels lucky to be trusted enough to be a part of the lives
of such grand wealthy people.
When Val’s daughter Jéssica arrives for a short stay, her
employers are more than happy to accommodate her seeing how happy it will make Val. But Val’s world is quickly turned upside down when it becomes shockingly
clear that Jéssica has no such illusions about life that her mother was born with.
Jéssica has much bigger ambitions than her mother and her
attitude is that if she studies hard she will have the same opportunities in
life as anyone. She thinks it perfectly normal to be treated as an equal guest
in the house regardless of her mother’s employment as a house maid.
It’s fascinating and entertaining to observe the tense
conflicts between mother and daughter as well as how the wealthy employer, who
wants to seem gracious but also preserve the status quo, suddenly feeling
threatened by the less fortunate but more determined and expressive lower class
guest.
This movie is well worth seeing for its amusing social
commentary and its wonderful ensemble performances which won the World Cinema
Dramatic Special Jury Award for Acting for its two lead actors at the 2015
Sundance Film Festival. The film also won the Panorama Audience Award at the
Berlin International Film Festival.
Brazilian cinema has steadily been gaining world attention
with such powerful, insightful and artful contemporary films as The Year My Parents Went on Vacation
(2008), Neighboring Sounds (2012) and
Brazilian Western (2013).
American Ultra is
a sweet tender puppy that becomes Cujo
the raging killer dog. It’s The Secret Life of Walter Mitty (2013) meets Jason Bourne with the ultra-violent
tactics of The Raid: Redemption(2011).
With the recent slew of spy films, this is a refreshing
humorous comic book take on the military sleeper agent experiment
gone rogue film. A Cohen Brothers Raising
Arizona (1987) inspired take on secret agent films.
It’s a hilarious and unexpectedly touching love story about
a young pot smoking couple, Mike Howell (Jesse Eisenberg) and Phoebe (Kristen
Stewart) who are trying to make their relationship work despite the personal
issues that threaten to keep them from maturing and fulfilling their dreams.
Mike is an imaginative nerdy timid guy who leads a mundane
dull existence while living out his fantasies through his drawings of a comic
ape astronaut superhero called Apollo Ape. His girlfriend encourages him to come out of his shell
and wants him to succeed at something he loves doing.
But Mike struggles with a panic disorder that prevents him
from traveling outside of his small town existence. Wanting more for himself
and Phoebe he decides to take her on a trip to Hawaii but is unable to go
through with it when he has a panic attack at the airport.
He wants to make it up to her by proposing marriage but
can’t decide on the right moment because, unknown to him, he suddenly becomes
the target of a top secret government operation to eliminate him from
existence.
American Ultra is
destined to be a cult classic with moments of delicate romance and reflection
punctuated by sudden absurdly funny action and violence. Throughout the mayhem the
film never loses sight of the couples’ relationship problems.
We are treated to typical arguments between two people who
love each other and we want to see their relationship succeed against seemingly
overwhelming odds, when Mike’s alter-ego is activated by a hypnotic password he
receives from a customer in the store where he works.
The film is done in a way that feels perfectly logical, as
if this could happen to anyone and Mike has no idea what is happening to him or
why. As the bad guys relentlessly come after him, the humor never lets up as
the crisis explodes around them.
Jesse Eisenberg and Kristen Stewart are brilliantly funny
and convincing, playing it totally straight as the confused couple at the
center of the storm while the supporting cast of John Leguizamo, Topher Grace
and Tony Hill are enjoyable to watch in their over-the-top performances.
Some of The Raid: Redemption
inspired graphic violence using everyday household items as weapons adds to the
bizarre hilarity of the situations and keeps us on the edge of our seats. The
cast and the filmmakers were clearly having a great time making this film and
it shows.
This is a fun action packed movie if you don’t take your spy
films too seriously and would make a great double bill with Raising Arizona, with which it shares
many comic elements.