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Mothering Sunday

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

United Kingdom · 2021
1h 44m
Director Eva Husson
Starring Odessa Young, Josh O'Connor, Sope Dirisu, Patsy Ferran
Genre Drama, Romance

On Mothering Sunday in 1924, a maid living in post-World War I England celebrates her day off by meeting with her lover, who happens to be the next-door neighbor of her employer. Because of the nature of their relationship, she secretly plans to meet with the man she loves before he leaves to marry another woman.

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What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

70

Variety by Guy Lodge

Telling a story that advocates living boldly over not living at all, Husson has followed suit, opening up exciting new possibilities for her career in the process.

60

Los Angeles Times by Justin Chang

It never quite comes together — the decades-spanning connective tissue somehow feels both overstated and thin — but Husson’s skill with actors, among them Colin Firth, Olivia Colman, Ṣọpẹ Dìrísù and the great Glenda Jackson, yields undeniable dividends.

60

The Hollywood Reporter by Leslie Felperin

Even the lush world-building of the visuals here, committed performances especially from Young, and stream-of-consciousness editing aren’t enough to conjure the wry, melancholy, and, above all, intensely literary interior voice of the book’s protagonist.

60

The Guardian by Peter Bradshaw

It is a lovely-looking, lovely-sounding movie, handsomely designed, meticulously shot and impeccably performed — and it also has interesting things to say about the emotional toughness and the Greeneian splinter of ice in the heart, that is needed by a writer. But I have to admit that, despite my liking for slow cinema, I found something a bit indulgent and classy about the unvarying andante pace.

80

The Telegraph by Tim Robey

There’s so much distinction here, and maybe just a slight vagueness about theme as Husson nears the finish line: it’s a tough ask to end a film well which is so given over to memory, and this becomes a bit of a waft in the general direction of closure.

90

Screen Daily by Wendy Ide

It’s a richly detailed mosaic of a movie which pays as much attention to emotional authenticity – a dull ache of grief which is the aftermath of the First World War and a smouldering yearning between the two lovers – as it does to the story itself.

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