The Asian Cut
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Donate
  • Reviews
  • Features
    • Essays
    • Interviews
    • Columns
      • Criterion Recollection
      • The Queer Dispatch
    • Series
  • Literary
  • Contact Us
    • Write For Us
No Result
View All Result
The Asian Cut
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Donate
  • Reviews
  • Features
    • Essays
    • Interviews
    • Columns
      • Criterion Recollection
      • The Queer Dispatch
    • Series
  • Literary
  • Contact Us
    • Write For Us
No Result
View All Result
The Asian Cut
No Result
View All Result

TIFF 2023: ‘Your Mother’s Son’ Disturbs as It Teeters on the Line Between Love and Abuse

Jericho Tadeo by Jericho Tadeo
September 15, 2023
0
Photo still from the movie Your Mother's Son.

Photo Courtesy of TIFF

⭐⭐⭐⭐

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Directed by Jun Robles Lana, who brought Bwakaw to TIFF back in 2012, Your Mother’s Son explores the complicated relationship between Sarah (Sue Prado) and her son Emman (Kokoy de Santos). The pair lives in a small village in the Philippines; Sarah, a former schoolteacher, works two jobs — preparing food orders and teaching English courses online (and doing both from home) — while Emman was recently laid off from his restaurant job as a result of it closing because of the pandemic.

Unemployed and restless, Emman spends his days pretending to look for a job, but, in actuality, he leaves the house in order to secretly get high and have sex with Amy (Elora Españo), Sarah’s assistant. To Amy, Sarah and Emman’s circumstances raise many questions, but neither are forthcoming with details. It isn’t until Sarah brings home Oliver (Miggy Jimenez), one of her online students who is being physically abused by his father, that things start to unravel and the truth about Sarah and Emman finally come to light in the most devastating way.

Your Mother’s Son is intentional in the way that it subverts expectation and disturbs at every turn as the web of lies that entangle Sarah and Emman — and, eventually, Amy and Oliver — fall apart. Teresa Barrozo’s score throughout is appropriately spare but haunting, and cinematographer Moises Zee’s camera is patient and precise. Combined with the use of longer takes, Lana makes us viewers the unwitting houseguest in this domestic drama, stirring our need for answers while making us dread their discovery.

As it turns out, Sarah and Emman aren’t mother and son, but husband and wife. However, this isn’t revealed until much later in the film, certainly well after we see them have sex (which seems fuelled more by anger than love). For most of the film, as a result, you wonder if Emman has an Oedipus Complex — after all, this is a film festival title, so you convince yourself nothing taboo is off limits. But Oliver’s presence disrupts and reveals all: Emman was Sarah’s former student, and it’s implied he was the prey and she was the predator, taking advantage of his youth and her power to convince him that what he is experiencing was love.

The last act of the film, and especially the chilling final moments, won’t be spoiled here, but the simmering performances from Prado and de Santos inevitably turn explosive. Prado is excellent in the way that she infuses Sarah’s conniving edge with something that feels almost like maternal warmth. Meanwhile, de Santos’ ability to live in the different shades of pain and rage defies his age.

If, as the credits roll, you find that Your Mother’s Son was hard to watch and even harder to define, that’s because, like all relationships between an abuser and the abused, it should be.

Now Streaming On

JustWatch
Tags: Jun Robles LanaKokoy de SantosPhilippinesSue PradoTIFF 2023Toronto International Film FestivalYour Mother's Son
ShareTweetShare
Jericho Tadeo

Jericho Tadeo

Jericho started writing about film in 2019. In the time since, he has reviewed hundreds of movies and interviewed just as many industry artists. In addition to writing, he has also guest-starred on movie podcasts and even served as a film festival juror. He has covered major events, like Sundance and TIFF, and has been a member of GALECA since 2023.

Related Posts

Paulo Avelino as Jolo and Kim Chiu as Sari embracing in My Love Will Make You Disappear
Interviews

‘My Love Will Make You Disappear’ Stars Kim Chiu and Paulo Avelino on First Loves and Pogi Shots

March 23, 2025
Nora Aunor as Bona staring at Phillip Salvador as Gardo in Bardo.
Reviews

Lina Brocka’s ‘Bona’ Paints a Portrait of Blind Devotion and Quiet Despair

December 11, 2024
15 Ways My Dad Almost Died stars Canadian-Filipino comedian Alia Rasul
Reviews

‘15 Ways My Dad Almost Died’ Unearths A Forgotten History Through Humour 

December 10, 2024
Kim Go-eun as Jae-hee and Steve Sanghyun Noh as Heung-soo sit in a dimly lit Korean restaurant in Love in the Big City.
Reviews

‘Love in the Big City’ Is a Love Letter to All the Rebels Out There

November 8, 2024
Photo still from K-Pops of
Reviews

TIFF 2024: ‘K-Pops’ Relies Too Much on Its Production Backstory

October 22, 2024
The Shadow Strays. Aurora Ribero as 13 / Nomi in The Shadow Strays.
Reviews

Netflix’s ‘The Shadow Strays’ Is Elevated Action Filmmaking at Its Finest

October 21, 2024
Next Post
A young woman looks out a window terrified in the movie Yellow Bus.

TIFF 2023: 'Yellow Bus' Isn't Worth the Ride

RECENT POSTS

Han Gi-chan, Youn Yuh-jung, and Kelly Marie Tran in The Wedding Banquet.

‘The Wedding Banquet’ is Less Like a Feast and More Like a Cosy Potluck

by Rose Ho
April 25, 2025

Ally Chiu as Shaowu stands across from Jack Kao as Keiko at an airport with a full luggage trolly between them in The Gangster's Daughter.

‘The Gangster’s Daughter’ Avoids Tropes and a Committed Direction

by Wilson Kwong
April 9, 2025

Photo still from Monisme, directed by Riar Rizaldi.

Riar Rizaldi’s Cryptic Indonesian Docufiction ‘Monisme’ Is a Fascinating Avant-Garde Take on the Conceptual Film

by Olivia Popp
April 6, 2025

Choi Min-sik in Exhuma

‘Exhuma’ Unearths More Than Bones

by Lauren Hayataka
March 30, 2025

A black-and-white image of Jayden Cheung as the unnamed protagonist in Jun Li's Queerpanorama

‘Queerpanorama’ Asserts Beauty in Gay Hook-Up Culture

by Jericho Tadeo
March 26, 2025

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Literary
  • Contact Us

Copyright © The Asian Cut 2025. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Donate
  • Reviews
  • Features
    • Essays
    • Interviews
    • Columns
      • Criterion Recollection
      • The Queer Dispatch
    • Series
  • Literary
  • Contact Us
    • Write For Us