EARTH MAMA – Review

(L-R) Ca’Ron Jaden Coleman, Tia Nomore, Amber Ramsey. Credit: Gabriel Saravia/ Courtesy of A24

Sundance break-out EARTH MAMA spotlights to struggles of a pregnant Black young woman who is trying to regain custody of her two children from foster care, in a quiet, moving indie drama by former Olympic athlete turned writer/director Savanah Leaf. Set and shot in the San Francisco Bay area, this impressive feature film debut for the British-born, under-30 writer/director has garnered awards and promising buzz. Unlike other similar dramas, EARTH MOTHER has a remarkable realism and touching cliche-free drama along with a surprising artistry.

Gia (Tia Nomore) is in drug treatment for a drug addiction that led to her two children being placed in foster. The young single mother has a part-time job with a mall photographer and attends the mandated parenting and other classes yet never seems to quite get on top of all the things required to regain custody. She is frustrated and worried because the clock is ticking on her being able to get her kids back, just as it is ticking on the arrival of her new baby, due in a few weeks.

Gia’s love of her son and daughter is plain to see, when she has her supervised visits, and she is gentle with both her clingy son (Ca’Ron Jaden Coleman), who wants to go with her, and her angry daughter (Amber Ramsey), who resists even looking at her mother.

Outside, Gia lives a life on the edge, with a precarious living situation and very little help from family and no father for the kids in the picture. We follow the heavily-pregnant Gia as she goes through her days, meeting with caseworkers, going to work, attending classes and struggling to make ends meet. From time to time, she relaxes with friends Trina (Doechii) or Monica (Sharon Duncan-Brewster). What emotional support she finds comes from her friends, who have their own messy lives and issues, but mostly she is just coping day-to-day.

Writer/director Leaf cast non-professional actors for her feature debut, adapted from a short film she made with Taylor Russell, and starring popular Bay-area rapper Tia Nomore. While this is Leaf’s first feature, she grew up with a mother who was an animator and set decorator on animated films such as WALL-E, BABE: PIG IN THE CITY and RED. At 97 minutes, Leaf’s drama is as efficient as it is is moving.

A palpable feeling of realism, and a real individual. sets EARTH MAMA apart from any number of dramas about struggling impoverished young Black mothers caught up in the foster care system. Gia is not a flawless person – she makes mistakes, screws up, loses her temper, and sometimes her own worst enemy, but it is always clear she loves her two children and is truly determined to get them back. And Gia’s flaws are not cute little, easily forgivable ones, even though they are humanly understandable, but her determination to keep trying and her love for her kids are her most admirable traits, leading us to care about her.

Likewise, the people who either help and frustrate Gia in achieving her goal of regaining custody are not two-dimensional cliches either, neither angels nor demons, just people trying to help but not always succeeding. Gia faces false assumptions about herself, as well as overcoming her own pride and immaturity, and making her way in a landscape where survival is a daily struggle.

The description above might make this sounds like a grim film but it really isn’t despite its real world grittiness. In a way, EARTH MAMA is a coming-of-age film, where Gia, in her mid-20s, has to find a way to grow up and take control of her destiny, and be the mother she wants to be for her kids. We do see the many challenges Gia faces but we also see her determination to regain her kids, and there is a more hopeful turn later in the film. This affecting drama’s incredible realism is aided by the fine lead performance by Tia Nomore and Leaf’s sure direction and thoughtful, well-researched script.

The title might suggests someone living close to nature but Gia lives in an urban landscape where nature feels absent. The only hint of nature is in her dreams, where her inner life is revealed as she escapes to a peaceful world, and we see her surrounded by quiet forests or tranquil beaches, dressed in soft fabrics, sometimes with her bare pregnant belly displayed. These beautifully-shot, dream-like sequences show the hidden side of Gia hidden, as she grapples with her hard life. Dream-like sequences featuring close-ups of a cooing infant effectively transmit motherly feeling.

While all the characters are presented as fully rounded, good or bad, the flaws in the foster care system and the obstacles it creates for Gia are plain to see. At one point, Gia is pressed by her caseworker to work more hours, causing the young woman to angrily explode, saying she can’t take more hours because she has to go to so many required classes. She is also being required to fill out forms but given little guidance or assistance doing that. Gia’s pride gets in the way too, refusing to ask the caseworker for help.

As Gia’s due date approaches, a social worker more attuned to what Gia is experiencing, Miss Carmen (Erika Alexander) approaches her with the idea of adoption. Gia initially rejects it, even angrily, but as her situation becomes more precarious and the chance grows that her newborn will go straight to foster care, she reconsiders. Gia wrestles with the idea, meets a potential adoptive family, a Black family she selected, but continues to be ambivalent and indecisive. Her dilemma creates a tension in the drama, which culminates in a emotional scene with one of her best friends.

At one of her parenting classes, which Gia initially rejects the idea, even angrily. As her situation becomes more precarious, and the chance grows that the foster care system will take her newborn, she returns to that idea, with open adoption on the table, but still remains conflicted.

Tia Nomore gives a strong performance as Gia in her first acting role, projecting an appealing quietness and a sense she is holding things in and holding it together. Nomore’s steady, open gaze directly into the camera helps us connect with and care about Gia.

Leaf drew on her personal life as the older sibling to an adopted younger sister but the film is not autobiographical The director has said that she means the film as “an ode to mothers,” and she succeeds well in that. With this strong debut film, we look forward to more good films from both director Savanah Leaf and star Tia Nomore.

EARTH MAMA opens Friday, July 28, in select theaters for a limited run.

RATING: 3.5 out of 5 stars

PARALLEL MOTHERS – Review

Penélope Cruz as Janis and Milena Smit as Ana in PARALLEL MOTHERS.
Photo Credit: El Deseo D.A. S.L.U., photo by Iglesias Mas. Courtesy of Sony Pictures Classics.

Pedro Almodovar is famous for Oscar-winning dramas like TALK TO HER and ALL ABOUT MY MOTHER but the brilliant Spanish writer/director alternates those dramas with lighter fare, soapy melodramas, sometimes with a campy mystery/thriller side. In his latest, PARALLEL MOTHERS, Almodovar re-teams with favorite collaborator Penelope Cruz for a drama that combines these two film types running on parallel tracks, in which a drama about the devastating impact Spain’s political history on families serves as a kind of framing story for another one, a soapy mystery thriller about two mothers, although the two threads come together in the end.

It begins with two expectant mothers, one older and the other younger, sharing a room in a maternity hospital. Both are single and their pregnancies are accidental but while Janis (Penelope Cruz), a successful photographer approaching 40, is delighted by the prospect of motherhood, 17-year-old Ana (Milena Smit) is terrified. An unexpected bond forms between them, with the older one offering encouragement and support to the teen mother, who seems to get little of that from her narcissistic mother, Teresa (Aitana Sanchez-Gijon), an actress more focused on her career than her daughter. When the two new mothers part, each with a newborn daughter, they exchange phone numbers with promises to stay in touch.

Penelope Cruz gives one of her best performances as Janis, a photographer at a high-end women’s magazine run by her best friend Elena (frequent collaborator Rossy de Palma), played with de Palma’s usual bold flare. During a photo shoot, Janis meets a handsome forensic anthropologist and archaeologist, Arturo (Israel Elejalde). After the shoot, Janis asks him to exhume the mass grave where her great-grandfather, an early victim of Franco’s death squads, is buried, and he agrees to push for the project with the non-profit he works for, which is investigating the history of the mass killings under Francisco Franco’s fascist rule. The disappearance of her great-grandfather and others in the small village where she was raised by her grandmother has haunted both her and others in the village for decades and they want the right to recover and properly re-bury the bodies. Janis and Arturo also start an affair but when she becomes pregnant, she breaks it off, as he is married and his wife is battling cancer at the time.

The story about Janis’ missing great-grandfather and, more broadly, Spain’s legacy from Franco’s fascist regime, starts the film but then recedes as we focus on the story of the two mothers. That central story is both a soapy mystery/thriller and a drama exploring the challenges of motherhood, balancing work and family, and the connections between women. The more political framing story also explores family connections across generations, particularly between women, and the importance of history.

The soapy thriller starts after the two women leave the hospital. When Janis gets home, Arturo gets in touch with her, asking to see the new baby. She agrees but when he does see her, reacts to the baby’s swarthy appearance with questions. Although Janis quickly attributes the baby’s looks to the Venezuelan grandfather she never saw, and is offended by Arturo’s questioning, it still raises doubts in her mind, eventually leading to a shocking discovery.

Although Janis and Ana eventually lose touch, they reconnect when Janis spots Ana working at a nearby cafe. While Cruz is marvelous, young Milena Smit holds her own, with a finely crafted performance as Ana. One reason for the lack of connection between Smit’s Ana and her ambitious actress mother Teresa is that Ana has been living with her father, mother’s ex-husband, but he sent their daughter to her when she became pregnant. While Cruz’ character is emotional, confident and optimistic, Smit’s performance is more understated. Yet Smit masterfully takes the character from a frightened teen dependent on her emotionally-distant mother, to a more confident young woman, ready to face the world on her own.

While the central thriller story is soapy, it is never campy, handling the story’s twists and surprises as drama. Like all Almodovar films, strong color and design elements suffuse this film. Cruz often appears in red, signaling boldness, while quieter Ana is often in green or blue. The string-heavy music soundtrack, by composer Alberto Iglesias, frequently recalls Hitchcock films, particularly VERTIGO, as does the use of color in the central mystery story, The film also has one of the best uses of Janis Joplin’s “Summertime,” as Janis, who was named for the singer, describes her complicated family history, including the death of her hippy mother from an overdose at age 27, like Joplin.

While the mystery is not very hard to figure out, it does create a dilemma for Cruz’s Janis, a situation that is resolved in a pivotal scene in the second half of the film. However, that scene begins with Janis confronting Ana about Spain’s troubled history, after Ana, parroting her presumably-conservative father, says that the past does not matter, leading a fiery Janis to tell her to find out what her father did during that time. The scene is a crucial moment in the central story but also serves to tie the personal drama and the historical themes together by the film’s end.

Almodovar’s films are always about his unique, striking characters, which is true for this film as well. Almodovar’s ability to tell women’s stories is remarkable as always, and he puts that message right out there, on a tee-shirt Cruz wears in one scene, reading “we should all be feminists.” However, in PARALLEL MOTHERS, the director uncharacteristically dips a toe into the political, by focusing on the lingering pain of Francisco Franco’s fascist regime, during which 100,000 people went “missing,” a regime under which Almodovar grew up. But it is just a toe in the those troubled waters, raising the topic rather than exploring it deeply, and more focused on human rights than anything. Still, the film ends on a strong image of the opened mass grave, and a powerful quote on screen: “No history is mute. No matter how much they burn it, no matter how much they break it, no matter how much they lie about it, human history refuses to shut its mouth.”

This dual film, with serious and soapy sides, is usual for Almodovar but it is a strong, striking drama which might win the director both audience and award attention. In a funny way, it is DNA which ties both tracks of the film together, as a technology that makes discoveries like family connections possible and as the stuff of those family lines, as the past and the present come together in this fine drama.

PARALLEL MOTHERS, in Spanish with English subtitles, opens Friday, Jan. 28, at Landmark’s Plaza Frontenac Cinema and at other theaters nationally.

RATING: 4 out of 4 stars

Review: ‘Then She Found Me’

I was pleasantly surprised by this little Independent film. It was an impressive vehicle for Helen Hunt to make her directorial debut. Hunt spent 10 years bringing this loosely based adaptation of Elinor Lipman’s novel to the big screen and it was worth the time and effort.

Then She Found Me opens with April Epner’s (Helen Hunt) wedding to the immature child-like Ben (Matthew Broderick). Several months go by without April becoming pregnant. Being adopted, April’s one wish is to experience the biological bond between mother and child, but at 39 years old she feels time is slipping away. Ben, not able to cope with any adult issues, leaves April to move back in with his mother. From this point on, April’s life falls apart. After her husband leaves, April’s beloved adopted mother dies, her biological mother, played by the fantastic Bette Miller, appears out of thin air, April meets the possible love of her life, played by the dashing Colin Firth, and then she finds out she is pregnant with Ben’s child. April’s mid-life crisis is a fantastic heart-felt journey to experience.

I cannot recommend this film more. There is perfect acting all around. Bette Miller stands out by pulling back her bigger then life personality into a caring mother trying to connect with  her  lost daughter. Colin Firth proves again how perfect he is as a leading-man. Helen Hunt makes you feel her pain and longing for a child of her own.

With this wonderful directorial debut, Hunt has solidified her future as a top notch director. Make sure to catch this intelligent romantic comedy before it leaves theaters.

Winner of the Palm Springs 2008 International Film Festival Audience Award

Rated R for language and some sexual content.

[rating:4.5/5]