Bong's stylistic embellishment of the simple tale of a mother who will do anything to protect her son is breathtaking.
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Its combination of dazzling cinematic craft, psychological insight and black humor make this one of the year's moviegoing musts -- and even or especially at her most deranged, Kim Hye-ja's amazing mother is profoundly, passionately human.
The New Yorker by Anthony Lane
The fact that Mother keeps its balance is a tribute to the leading actress.
Key casting is aces, led by a deglammed Kim, forcefully low-key as the mother who seems capable of anything to protect her son.
For all its jarring sound design and herky-jerky pacing, founded on sudden incidents or shocking accidents, Mother is deftly plotted, applying Hitchcockian suspense with a Hitchcockian sense of fair play.
Wall Street Journal by Joe Morgenstern
An absolutely phenomenal film by the Korean director Bong Joon-ho.
Bong is so concerned with whodunit that his creaky genre mechanics diminish Kim's determined performance.
The New York Times by Manohla Dargis
The hard-pounding heart of Mother, Ms. Kim is a wonderment. Perched on the knife edge between tragedy and comedy, her delivery gives the narrative -- which tends to drift, sometimes beguilingly, sometimes less so -- much of its momentum.
Again as with Bong's earlier films, Mother is a genre exercise that honors convention, yet weaves around it whenever possible. Bong carefully turns Mother into a classic gumshoe tale, with red herrings, interrogations, and moments of sublime suspense.
Bong Joon-ho's filmography beyond the Best Picture winning Parasite is teeming with great movies ready to be seen by a wider audience, and Mother is one such film. Intriguing, surprising, and full of twists, this noir-esque story of a mother turned unlikely detective is anchored by a great performance by Kim Hye-ja.