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- After the death of the baby, mother snaps and attacks the crowds. She eventually realizes the only way to stop the decimation of the home she's worked so hard on is to burn it down. She ignites the gas in the basement and incinerates herself, the building and all its inhabitants.
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Sep 15, 2017 · And what does the film’s punishing, final, 25-minute opus—in which Lawrence’s Mother Earth character is burned, beaten, and ravaged beyond recognition—mean?
- Has Said
Aronofsky’s careful wording was not inaccurate. Mother!...
- Jennifer Lawrence Was as Intimidated by Mother! Co-Star Michelle Pfeiffer as You'd Be
Last week, Darren Aronofsky dazzled the Venice Film Festival...
- Has Said
- Who Are The Couple and Why Don't They Come back?
- What Is The Poem and Why Does It Have Such An Impact?
- Why Does The Mob Kill The Baby?
- What Actually Is The House?
- The Time Loop Ending Explained
- What Kills The House?
- Mother! Is A Retelling of Creation
- Mother! Is Also About Darren Aronosky's Views on Art
As we start the film, Him (Javier Bardem) and mother (Jennifer Lawrence) live in relative harmony; He is a struggling writer who craves appreciation to continue his work, she's driven to restore the house, both are happy. Then the couple arrives. Two characters known only as Man (Ed Harris) and Woman (Michelle Pfeiffer) turn up separately at the ho...
The content of the poem Him writes that starts the final descent isn't revealed in the film. That is, of course, incredibly purposeful; the point isn't what it actually says, rather what it represents. When mother reads it, she sees a visual representation of the house's creation - Him and mother embrace in the clearing and their love gives the bui...
mother takes sanctuary in His office and has their child, who her husband wants to show to his acolytes. She refuses repeatedly but He eventually gets his way, leading to one of the film's most shocking sequences: the crowd surfs the baby and then begins tearing it apart. It's suggestive yet still incredibly gruesome and horrifying, amplified by La...
The entire film takes place in the house, which we see at the start given life when a glowing crystal is placed in a purpose-built stand by Him. We later have it stated that it was renovated by mother and see her around the house fixing it up. From the very start, this establishes the film's ethereal presentation and the strange connection between ...
After the death of the baby, mother snaps and attacks the crowds. She eventually realizes the only way to stop the decimation of the home she's worked so hard on is to burn it down. She ignites the gas in the basement and incinerates herself, the building and all its inhabitants. All except Him, who takes mother's charred remains to his office and ...
The other big question in regards to the loop is the point of no return - when is the death of mother and the destruction of the house set as a certainty within any given loop? Is it when the previous crystal is destroyed, necessitating a sacrifice to keep life going? Or is it brother killing brother, the action that leaves such a noticeable scar o...
You can read mother! totally literally as outlined already should you wish. Time loop aside, it has strong performances and character throughlines that make it fulfilling as a thriller that fits an overarching logic. But that's not what it's real purpose. Taking the baton from Noah,this is actually Darren Aronofsky's take on creation. The parallels...
It's not quite as unifying, but there's also a more meta reading of the film that links into Aronofsky's non-Noahrecent films. For starters, we can not ignore the parallels between the mother and Him characters and the actress and director themselves. Here Jennifer Lawrence is in a relationship with a man old enough to be her father who's a torture...
- Alex Leadbeater
- Content Director
Sep 15, 2017 · Lawrence’s Mother tells him to stop, warning that humanity will always do this—turn on its creator, itself, and of course the Earth.
- Adam Chitwood
Sep 15, 2017 · Still, the ending itself is a very straightforward conclusion, one that’s aided by an examination of the movie’s first frames: We see a woman burning up, her eyes closing as the flames swarm in,...
- Zack Sharf
Sep 15, 2017 · In the end credits of the film, only one character’s name is capitalized: Bardem’s “Him.” The rest of the characters, including Harris’ “man” and Pfeiffer’s “woman” are left uncapitalized....
Aug 28, 2024 · A house that was consumed by despair and hate is destroyed and reconstructed by the poet/God (Javier Bardem), and the mother (Jennifer Lawrence), who seems to have been here before, wakes up and admires the peace and beauty of her home until it is once again destroyed by outsiders.
Jennifer Lawrence's mother! has finally arrived in theaters, and the general reaction can be summed up in three letters: WTF?