Fortunately, Leonor Watling (who spent most of "Talk to Her" in a coma) plays the spectacularly neurotic middle daughter with dizzying abandon and single-handedly saves the day.
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Wins you over with this bright sense of humor and its gentle, welcome message of tolerance and acceptance.
For a movie with a lesbian theme, My Mother Likes Women is absurdly coy about gay sex. It may be the most heterosexually minded film about lesbians ever made.
New York Daily News by Jack Mathews
The Spanish writers-directors often overreach for humor, and really overreach for a happy ending. But there's a strong heart beating beneath the foolishness and one wonderful performance from Leonor Watling.
Lightness of touch, vibrant performances and a sharp script are the hallmarks of this delightful femme comedy.
Los Angeles Times by Kevin Thomas
The attempt to find humor in mean-spiritedness is way beyond Paris and Fejerman's abilities, and their last-reel attempt to portray Sofia as an ultimately liberating force for her daughters is as contrived as My Mother Likes Women is repellent.
TV Guide Magazine by Maitland McDonagh
In fact it ends, as all good romantic comedies do, with a wedding, though the identities of the newly married couple might be the least predictable thing about this cheerfully ham-fisted celebration of love and family in modern-day Madrid.
The Globe and Mail (Toronto) by Rick Groen
Wants keenly to be hip and modern, but really it's just an old-fashioned drawing-room comedy.
The New York Times by Stephen Holden
As My Mother Likes Women gallops along, it picks up speed and takes its characters on a whirlwind tour of Prague before rushing back home. As it accelerates, its texture thins and its story turns strained and eager to please. But it never loses its cheeky sense of humor about love and the havoc it can wreak.
PAGING Pedro Almodovar! We have a movie badly in need of your help.