TIFF ’09: Mother

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***/****

directed by Bong Joon-ho

by Bill Chambers Bong Joon-ho’s deliciously serpentine Mother is the story of an aging mom (Kim Hye-ja, awesome) who has supported her mentally-challenged son, Yoon Do-joon (Bin Won), into adulthood; monitoring him from afar while chopping roots, she’s so watchful that she doesn’t notice herself cutting off her own finger. She even sleeps in the same bed with him, though Bong doesn’t sink to Bad Boy Bubby depths of depravity. When Yoon Do-joon is scapegoated in the killing of a schoolgirl, Mother makes it her sole (soul? Seoul?) mission in life to prove his innocence, which gradually transforms her into a distaff Kyle MacLachlan as she goes sleuthing in the city’s Lynchian underbelly. (Much has been made of the murder victim’s archetypal resemblance to “Twin Peaks”‘ Laura Palmer (she’s the local teenaged Madonna/whore), but the picture’s most brazen homages are to David Lynch’s earlier Blue Velvet–and Bong is such a clever and enthusiastic pastiche artist that Mother is no less effective for it). It’s not as gonzo as The Host and not as unsettling as Memories of Murder, but its wizardly craft does provide further evidence that Bong is one of the most formidable filmmaking talents to have emerged this decade, and its vision of maternal instinct rings painfully true. Mother also begins to throw some of the director’s predilections and leitmotifs of Bong’s work into relief, including a Hitchcockian distrust of law enforcement (Memories of Murder is essentially Zodiac starring the Keystone Cops, and in Mother, once the police are finally right, they’re still wrong), vigilant parents, field imagery, unexpected humour, and, regrettably, a tendency to overstay his welcome. Just a smidge. Programme: Special Presentation (Originally published: September 19, 2009.)

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