Like Mom, Like Me (TV Movie 1978) Poster

(1978 TV Movie)

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5/10
They belong to a mutual admiration society.
mark.waltz25 March 2022
Warning: Spoilers
The pairing of Linda Lavin and Kristy McNichol as mother and daughter in this TV movie works because they really seem to enjoy being together and have good chemistry, even when the two are arguing. Levin is separated from her husband, and has moved along with daughter McNichol to a new town with the new job. Everything is fine until various men start popping into mom's life, and McNichol hopes that she'll be able to get her parents back together. The fight scenes between the two are very realistic and don't resort with McNichol getting a slap, something that is usually utilizing in films of this nature. It's obvious that you do the closest and best interest at heart, even if McNichol at times is rather possessive.

There's a great scene when they go to a resort hotel and McNichol befriends the lifeguard while Lavin accept a dinner date with a portly older man who is Charming in spite of looking more like Lavin's father than someone to go out with. Patrick O'Neal, Max Gail and Lawrence Pressman (as the estranged hubby) are good in support, but it would have been nice to have more details of the reasons why Lavin and her husband began having issues outside of his affair. While a good, not a great film, it's very movie of the week in tone, managing to create likable characters and avoid a lot of cliches. We've seen this plot a ton of times before, and Lavin is basically playing a less assertive version of Alice which allows her to show more depth.
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3/10
Godawful TV fakery
moonspinner5516 March 2001
Linda Lavin and Kristy McNichol fail to convince as mother and daughter. With Mom single again, she and her teenage daughter unpack in their new house and do a little dance together in the kitchen (The Bump, I believe, or is that The Hustle?). With all signs apparent that these two really get along just like buddies, it's only a matter of time before a man comes between them and stops all that dancing. Kristy soon gets a boyfriend of her own, who lets her hug him every time there's a problem. LOTS of hugging and near-tears melodrama in this TV-movie, written by Nancy Lynn Schwartz from Sheila Schwartz's book. Truly numbing.
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10/10
A wonderful made-for-television movie
superstar4926 March 2008
Saw this the night it premiered on television and a couple of repeats a few years later. Kristy McNichol had star persona written all over her so you knew this was going to be good and it was.

I haven't seen this movie in about 25 years now. Why it's never shown on television I don't know why. But both Kristy and Linda Lavin are excellent as mother and daughter, and if memory serves me correctly, Kristy throws one of her famous fits when her mom finds a guy she doesn't approve of.

The person who didn't find Lavin and McNichol convincing in their roles probably would have preferred seeing Stan Laurel in a dress and Milton Berle playing Kristy's part. Remember folks, it's all just a matter of opinion.
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