Mother: Look, Ma, No Therapist!

<i>Mother:</i> Look, Ma, No Therapist!

During Terry Gross’s 1996 radio interview with Albert Brooks, then promoting his droll comedy Mother, he helpfully explained that mothers come in two types. The first kind thinks “everything their child does is perfect.” Then he paused for a beat. “And [Mother] is about the other kind.” Funny, if not altogether accurate. While there is a mutual wariness between the film’s title character and her elder son, Mother is only in passing about how she has kept her distance from him and vice versa. This remarkable film is really about collapsing that distance, about reinforcing the bond between parent and child.

There was a moment when American comedians seemed to move from “Take my wife, please” jokes to “Take my ma, willya?” jests. I suspect the turning point was 1957, when Elaine May and Mike Nichols performed “Mother and Son,” a sketch in which a parent phones her son, a rocket scientist who has been preoccupied with a launch, guilt-tripping him for not returning her calls. A decade later, Nichols’s The Graduate—to which Mother pays homage—depicted a different kind of thorny relationship between an older woman and a younger man.

In film, the “Take my ma” plot generally involves an overbearing mother—such as Shelley Winters in Next Stop, Greenwich Village (1976) and Lainie Kazan in My Favorite Year (1982)—who overeats, overwhelms, and overdoes it, humiliating or embarrassing her son.

Mother is subtler, and more generous, than those other Mom narratives, and thus more engaging. For me, the film, with Debbie Reynolds in the title role and Brooks as her son, is the high point of her acting career and one of the peaks of his as a comedian, screenwriter, director, and actor.

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