Mom and Dad *** / *****
Directed by: Brian Taylor.
Written by: Brian Taylor.
Starring: Nicolas Cage (Brent Ryan),
Selma Blair (Kendall Ryan), Anne Winters (Carly Ryan), Zackary Arthur (Josh
Ryan), Robert T. Cunningham (Damon Hall), Olivia Crocicchia (Riley), Lance
Henriksen (Mel Ryan), Marilyn Dodds Frank (Barbara Ryan), Samantha Lemole (Jenna).
There
is a scene in Mom and Dad in which Nicolas Cage sings the Hokey Pokey, while
destroying a pool table with a sledge hammer – and in the timeline of the
movie, this is BEFORE he is infected with a strange virus that makes him – and
every other parent – want to murder their children – preferably in some brutal
and bloody fashion. Mom and Dad is some sort of strange mixture of satire,
comedy and horror – and it the movie begins by being way over the top, and then
just tries to top itself again and again and again. In Cage, the film found the
only actor who could really pull this off. What’s odd about the film – what I
think ultimately makes it work – is that every so often the movie does slow
down, to show you another side of Cage’s Brent, and his wife Kendall (Selma
Blair) – instead of being just a completely over-the-top bloodbath.
The
film takes a little bit of time setting things up. Brent and Kendall are
suburban parents to teenager Carly (Anne Winters) and 10 year old Josh (Zackary
Arthur). Like all suburban parents in the movies, they aren’t really that happy
– he trudges off to work at a job he doesn’t really like, she is dealing with
the fact that her kids don’t need her as much anymore – and her daughter openly
insults her. The movie doesn’t waste too much time before some sort of strange
outbreak happens – which gives parents the uncontrollable urge to murder their
children. Most of the movie happens at the family house – with the kids locked
in the basement, and the parents trying inventive ways to get them – and a
boyfriend of Carly who gets knocked out repeatedly, but regains consciousness
at just the right moments.
The
film takes more than a few missteps along the way – the biggest may well be in
the character of the family maid – an Asian American woman, who is little more
than a stereotype, used to add in a little more bloodshed. The film also seems
to be hinting at bigger ideas at times, and then backs off to back to the
looniness. It mainly works, but there are hints at a better movie than Mom and
Dad ultimately ends up being.
The
film was written and directed by Brian Taylor – one half of the Nelvedine and
Taylor duo, whose films include the god-awful Crank films, offensive and
violent films in which Jason Statham has to keep his heart rate up or else
he’ll die. I hated the Crank films for their nihilism and misogyny – but you do
have to admit that the films had energy. He brings that energy to parts of Mom
and Dad as well – particularly in the back half of the film, as things spin
wildly out of control, and they get some unexpected visitors that bring things
up a notch.
The
reason to see the film is mainly Cage and Blair. Cage can, and will, go wildly
over-the-top at all times, and he does so here. But unlike many of his recent films,
it works here – there is a reason for it, and the movie requires him to do so.
Oddly though, it’s Blair who is more the center of the movie – she’s the one
who keeps things grounded. Cage and Blair have a nice chemistry together –
particularly in the more serious scenes – like right after Cage destroys that
pool table, where the pair of them wonder what exactly happened to their life.
Mom
and Dad is a demented satire – another look at suburban life, and home empty it
can be. It doesn’t really add anything that Hitchcock, Lynch of Solondz hasn’t
done – but it’s done it all in such a demented and over-the-top entertaining
way that it should become a cult hit – particularly among parents with a black
comedic streak. We may not actually want to kill our children, but we all
relate to Cage’s final moment here.
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