Moving home to Mother

Direct To Video"Mother" (12)

Direct To Video"Mother" (12)

In her first substantial role for 25 years, Debbie Reynolds lights up the screen with a delightfully deadpan performance in Mother - the latest exercise in middle-age angst from writer-director Albert Brooks, who co-stars as a recently divorced science-fiction author having various problems with different women.

His relationship with another woman, his mother (Reynolds), has never been happy, and in an experiment to come to terms with her and with his past, he decides to move back in with her, despite her discouragement. His attempts at recreating his childhood extend to re-decorating his old bedroom with all the old 1960s paraphernalia which used to adorn those walls in his teens.

The repartee between Brooks and the perfectly deadpan Reynolds is sparkling in this very funny yarn which turns serious and sentimental in its later stages when the screenplay bows to Hollywood compromise. Rob Morrow also features as Reynolds's younger son, whom she much prefers, and it's he who gives her a video phone which sparks a witty running gag. And there is some amusing play on Simon and Garfunkel songs along the way.

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