

Russell’s semi-autobiographical film (no, not the incest part) about a mother who not only loves her teenage son, but loves her son. So you’d be well advised to steer clear of David O. Movies involving incest are never a good pick for family gatherings - especially not ones celebrating Mom.

You probably know this by now, but we’re tipping you off just in case you don’t. If discussing her sagging tits with her son isn’t bizarre enough to make your viewing experience on Mother’s Day uncomfortable, then watching Moore getting into bed with both him and another young man will certainly do the trick. Julianne Moore, who continues to age quite gracefully, manages to use her unique beauty to make her role here as a charismatic wife and mother to pull off a mother-son relationship that is both hard to watch and hard to look away from.

And though the film is a meaningful examination of the mother-son bond, the only way it’ll bring you and your own mother any closer is by showing you just how good you’ve really got it.Īs far as Oedipal complexes go, this one certainly ranks up there with the most irksome. The film chronicles Caouette’s upbringing at the hands of his schizophrenic mother, detailing his odd behavior and character traits and revealing scene by scene how much damage his family life has inflicted on his psyche. This documentary about the troubled life of Jonathan Caouette will not only shock you, it will shake you to your core. The bloody crime caused a stir on both sides of the Atlantic and remains one of the most memorable American Tragedies. A dramatization of the shocking Barbara Daly Baekeland murder case, which happened in a posh London flat on Friday 17 November 1972.
