Mother’s Day: Mini-review


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Jennifer Aniston

Jennifer Aniston is the best mother in Mother’s Day

C-In case anyone has forgotten, Garry Marshall got his start on television, creating The Odd Couple, Laverne & Shirleyand Mork & Mindy, among others. His latest feature film, Mother’s Day, however, recalls a different popular series. Just imagine a holiday-themed episode of The Love Boat without Issac, Julie, Gopher, and the ocean, but with Julia Roberts wearing a ridiculous Buster Brown wig instead.

Mother’s Day has several intersecting story lines, all taking place immediately before the holiday. The most prominent story concerns newly single mom Sandy (Jennifer Aniston), who is upset after her husband Henry (Timothy Olyphant) leaves her for a younger woman that her two sons take to immediately, to her chagrin. Bradley (Jason Sudeikis) is also facing his first Mother’s Day as a single parent, but he’s still unable to come to terms with his wife’s death. Then, there are sisters Jesse (Kate Hudson) and Gabi (Sarah Chalke), who have married a man from India (Aasif Mandvi) and a woman (Cameron Esposito) respectively, and must break the news to their extremely intolerant parents (Margot Martindale and Robert Pine). 

Admittedly, you wouldn’t have seen a lesbian couple on The Love Boat, but the other crises in Mother’s Day are exactly the sort that got worked out over the course of a week’s cruise en route to a huggy-feely finale. Along the way to the film’s extremely predictable ending, the script (credited to Marshall and four other screenwriters with one previous credit among them) dispenses fortune cookie philosophy (“We’re not who the world thinks we are; we decide who we are”) and a mix of decades old humor (dad-buying-tampon jokes and an out-of-control RV) with lame social media riffs (“did she just say tweet at me”). Still, Marshall was smart enough to give Jennifer Aniston the most screen time, and she wears her emotions on her sleeve, overcoming the lame one-liners and establishing the one credible parent-child dynamic in the movie. The other effective (and generally funny) performer is British comic Jack Whitehall, who enters an open-mike comedy competition using some genuinely funny and heartfelt one-liners about his girlfriend and her special relationship with their daughter. The convenient story resolutions in Mother’s Day strain credulity to the breaking point, but Marshall understands his target audience (families looking for holiday schmaltz) and delivers a movie that’s like a Hallmark card. Mother’s Day is simplistic and only fitfully amusing, but it does allow the audience to reaffirm their own feelings about dear old mom. 
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Cake: Mini-Review


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Jennifer Aniston

Jennifer Aniston looks considerably more glamorous here than she does in Cake

BEvery year, when the Oscar nominations are announced, it seems that someone worthy winds up being snubbed. This year, that “honor” goes to Jennifer Aniston, whose widely acclaimed turn in Cake, a film unseen by most of the general public prior to the nominations, was ignored by the Academy. Sadly, the Oscar voters got it wrong; Aniston’s performance is stunning. The movie itself, however, is not so stunning.

Cake is a character study of Claire Bennett (Aniston), a woman in constant pain, both physical and mental, resulting from a sever auto accident. She’s hooked on pain killers, her marriage fell apart, and she often thinks about killing herself. Her maid and occasional chauffeur Silvana (Adriana Barraza) is the only person who still puts up with her. Ironically, though, it’s the suicide of Nina (Anna Kendrick) a young woman in her support group, that gives Claire some purpose in her life, as she becomes obsessed with finding out why Nina killed herself.

Aniston’s performance in Cake is masterful on a number of levels. Every movement Claire makes can be agonizing, so the character, and the actress, must carefully plan out simple actions like standing up to minimize the pain. Claire reacts defensively to her pain, with anger and caustic sarcasm, that quickly eliminates most sympathy for her character. But she still manages to show just enough glimpses of her former self to explain Silvana’s standing by her side. However, with the exception of Aniston’s and Barraza’s performances, Cake is often routine disease-of-the-week material that’s sometimes too whimsical for its own good. In particular, dream sequences in which Aniston talks at length with Kendrick’s ghost simply don’t work. Aniston’s performance is enough to keep viewers interested in Cake, but, like Claire herself, the movie seemingly tries to drive away viewers, in this case, by a storyline that’s not worthy of its lead actress.
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