Quinte Film Alternative

The Second Mother

FIRST RUN

FESTIVAL QUALITY

MUST SEE CINEMA

PAST FILM SCREENING

THE SECOND MOTHER

December 2 – 2PM + 7:30PM

Brazil, 2015 – Rated 14A – 112 minutes – in Portuguese with English subtitles
Directed by Anna Muylaert
Cast: Regina Casé, Helena Albergaria, Michel Joelsas

Director Anna Muylaert (The Year My Parents Went on Vacation, Smoke Gets in Your Eyes) skillfully renders generational, economic and social divides with humour and heart in her latest feature The Second Mother.

This class-critiquing charmer is centred on the endlessly endearing Val (Regina Casé, Me You Them, Central da Periferia), a tightly wound, middle-aged live-in housekeeper who works for a wealthy family in São Paulo. She has lovingly raised the family’s now teenaged son since he was only a toddler, while sending money back home to a small town in northern Brazil where her own estranged daughter, Jéssica, was being raised by relatives. The delicate balance of the household is thrown into chaos when Jéssica (newcomer Camila Márdila) comes to São Paulo to write her college entrance exams, marking the first time that she and Val have seen one another in over ten years. Val makes arrangements for Jéssica to stay on a mattress in the maid quarters, but the young woman instead accepts an offer from the homeowners to stay in the guest room – an offer that was designed to be politely refused.

The unspoken class barriers in the household quickly come to the foreground as Jéssica crashes through them with her candour and unflinching confidence. She speaks her mind, eats the boss’ gourmet ice cream, and even takes a dip in the pool (much to the horror of the lady of the house, who goes so far as to have it drained). Initially, Val is mortified that her daughter doesn’t seem to know her place, but she soon comes around to reconsidering her own.

A rich, complex and delightful comic drama, The Second Mother subverts the absurdity of the familial, generational and class constructs we all subscribe to. Culminating in a touching dénouement, the film underscores the importance of embracing your own inherent sense of self-worth.

All the elements of the story fit impeccably together for a humorous and occasionally wrenching examination of relationships. – Stephanie Merry, The Washington Post

SINGLE

TICKETS

ONLINE THROUGH THE EMPIRE THEATRE WEBSITE

  • Evening/ Matinee - $12
  • Student -$5
BUY TICKETS

BECOME A

MEMBER

DON'T MISS ANOTHER GREAT MOVIE

  • Membership Cards on Sale Now
  • Half and Full Season
LEARN MORE

Stay Informed

Sponsors, Service Providers and Community Arts Partners