The Second Mother review: good help is hard to share

This Brazilian comic drama is a superior take on the plight of mothers who must look after other people’s children

The Second Mother
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Director: Anna Muylaert
Cert: Club
Genre: Drama
Starring: Regina Casé, Michel Joelsas, Camila Márdila, Karine Teles, Lourenço Mutarelli, Helena Albergaria
Running Time: 1 hr 52 mins

Nannies who tend to other people's children in order to financially support their own is a theme that has been explored to great effect by Anthony Chen in Ilo Ilo (2013), by Lukas Moodysson in Mammoth (2009), and by Walter Salles in his contribution to the portmanteau film, Paris, Je T'aime (2007).

The Second Mother, from Brazil, opens in this familiar groove as Sao Paulo-based Val (a tremendous turn by Regina Casé) chases after Fabinho, her charge, while attempting to "parent" down the phone to her own faraway daughter.

Val plainly dotes on Fabinho (Michel Joelsas), who, even in his stoner teenage phase, often sleeps beside the live-in maid. His birth mother, meanwhile, is a distant, ill-defined fashion icon. His father, although addressed as “Doctor” by all, is too hilariously useless to fetch a soft drink from a nearby fridge.

Still, Val patiently and uncomplainingly tends to her adopted family unit’s needs; if anything, she’s proud to “know her place”. This class-structure compliant arrangement is suddenly threatened when her daughter Jessica (Camila Márdila) comes to stay with her estranged mother.

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Jessica is bright and hoping to study architecture, an ambition that proves something of an affront to the affluent host family. Indeed, both mothers are appalled by Jessica’s lacksidaisical attitude towards the status quo.

“When they offer us something, we’re not supposed to take it,” scolds Val repeatedly, as the class war heats up.

Writer/director Anna Muylaert’s beautifully shot, frequently comical take on the “second mother” phenomenon sets the film apart from other explorations of similar material. There’s a lot of fun to be had, even against the film’s astute observation that where women are the primary enablers of class snobbery, they can just as easily be radical dismantlers.

Tara Brady

Tara Brady

Tara Brady, a contributor to The Irish Times, is a writer and film critic