Review: 'Mother's Day' Suffers From Underdeveloped Plot
Jacqueline Gualtieri ’18 / Emertainment Monthly Staff Writer
In the same fashion as his previous holiday movies, the film follows the lives of different characters, each in different stages of their lives and relationships. It just happens that all of these people are intertwined in some slight or substantial way. Sandy (Jennifer Aniston) is dealing with life after her ex-husband (Timothy Olyphant) gets married to a younger woman. Jesse (Kate Hudson) is hiding the marriage of a man her mother does not approve of. Bradley (Jason Sudeikis) is trying to take care of two daughters after the death of his wife. Kristin (Britt Robertson), who just became a mom, is looking to reconnect with the mother that put her up for adoption. Seperately, some of these stories may have made for decent plots. Together, each one is weighed down by the forced connections.
Kristin’s story is the most forced, but she sometimes gets a pass, not because of her own character but because of her boyfriend, Zach (Jack Whitehall). The concept of a child looking for her mother seems a bit overdone, but it’s made a little more interesting thanks to the man that wants to be her husband. Zach’s stand up routine had both the on-screen and real audience rolling in the aisles. Off stage, Zach is a lovable character who just wants to be a good dad and be a husband to Kristin. For having such little screen time, Zach is actually pretty well developed. He’s more than a boyfriend; he’s a young, ambitious bartender, hoping to follow his dream and be able to provide for his family doing it.
Sandy’s plot of being the older ex-wife of a man married to a twenty-something is another overdone plot. Of course she’s going to have trouble getting along with the new wife. Of course she’s going to be upset if the kids love the new wife. Sandy was easily the main character in the film and that was an unfortunate mistake. She has a right to be upset, but she comes across as whiney and Aniston seems to make the character far less dignified than she could have been. She could have come across as a strong and competent mother. Instead, her story ends with her doing something great and courageous, then doing something stupid and needing to be saved by a man.
Hopefully, Mother’s Day will be the last of Garry Marshall’s holiday flicks, with too many characters and underdeveloped plots. The worst part of the film is that there were places where a good movie could have been created. There were characters and stories that would have made for something worth watching. Unfortunately, the haphazard, but predictable, way that characters and stories were thrown in ruined the chance for Mother’s Day to redeem itself.
Overall Grade: D
Watch The Trailer:
[embedyt] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2BPr217zLps[/embedyt]