Cinema Scope

Nuestras Madres

It may seem puzzling that a film about a young man’s agonizing, relentless search for his father should be called Nuestras Madres (Our Mothers). Yet as we come to realize in César Díaz’s Caméra d’Or-winning debut feature, the two are inversely linked. The key point of Nuestras Madres, in fact, is that the absence of a father can loom so large that it obscures the mother’s presence. It is only towards the end of Díaz’s nuanced, dexterously acted, and at times very sombre character study that the bond between mother and son can finally reconfigure itself, its importance fully acknowledged.

The protagonist of is Ernesto (Armando Espitia), a forensic anthropologist investigating mass graves

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Cinema Scope

Cinema Scope9 min read
The Sense Of The Past
Time present and time pastAre both perhaps present in time future,And time future contained in time past.If all time is eternally presentAll time is unredeemable.What might have been is an abstractionRemaining a perpetual possibilityOnly in a world o
Cinema Scope5 min read
Priscilla
The aesthetic appeal of Sofia Coppola’s work—baby pink and pastel colours, girly make-up and cute clothes, soft lighting and trippy music—belies a deeper understanding of the condition of teenage girls, her favourite subject. For the filmmaker, these
Cinema Scope15 min read
Objects of Desire
“The problem is that it then goes off on tangents and the plot becomes secondary.”—A Mysterious World Until recently a somewhat forgotten figure of the New Argentine Cinema, director Rodrigo Moreno has, with The Delinquents, asserted himself as perha

Related Books & Audiobooks