{"id":1445,"date":"2016-01-02T12:22:48","date_gmt":"2016-01-02T12:22:48","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/corkcineclub.com\/?p=1445"},"modified":"2016-07-31T16:21:11","modified_gmt":"2016-07-31T16:21:11","slug":"the-second-mother-que-horas-ela-volta-brazil-thursday-28-january-8pm","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/corkcineclub.com\/2016\/01\/the-second-mother-que-horas-ela-volta-brazil-thursday-28-january-8pm\/","title":{"rendered":"THE SECOND MOTHER [QUE HORAS ELA VOLTA?, Brazil] – Thursday 28 January, 8pm"},"content":{"rendered":"

The delicate relationship between employer and servant is skilfully subverted and scrutinised in a funny, serious study of class in modern day Brazil.<\/p>\n

“The perennially fascinating and tactless subject of 21st-century servitude is the theme of this well acted and absorbing film \u2013 to be compared with Sebasti\u00e1n Silva\u2019s 2009 gem The Maid, and, from much further back, Joseph Losey\u2019s 1960 classic The Servant.<\/em><\/p>\n

What happens when the live-in help get above themselves? And how does the supposedly liberal and relaxed employer class find a way of expressing its fastidious distaste and unease? It is the story of a rich Brazilian family in S\u00e3o Paulo and their housekeeper Val, wonderfully played by Regina Cas\u00e9. She has been a nanny to the son of the house, as well as all her other duties, earning enough to send money home to pay for the care of her own daughter J\u00e9ssica, whom she has not seen for 10 years.<\/em><\/p>\n

Everyone knows their place and everyone is happy. Now J\u00e9ssica shows up: a smart, confident 19-year-old (played by Camila M\u00e1rdila) hoping to apply for a university place in the city, and Val asks if she can stay with her in her little room while she looks for a place. Soon J\u00e9ssica makes herself at home all over the house in all sorts of subtly inappropriate ways, addressing her mother\u2019s employers in a subtly insolent manner \u2013 and it is clear that the master of the house and the son find her attractive. The unspoken, unspeakable agony of class and caste is cleverly rendered in this funny, serious movie.”<\/em> – The Guardian<\/a>\u00a0\u00a0\u2605\u2605\u2605\u2605<\/p>\n