45
Metascore
12 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 89Austin ChronicleJosh KupeckiAustin ChronicleJosh KupeckiMuch as he did with his 2016 feature debut (at the age of 23), the love-triangle drama As You Are, Joris-Peyrafitte tells this story with welcome subtlety and a keen attenuation to his actors.
- 70Arizona RepublicBill GoodykoontzArizona RepublicBill GoodykoontzCredit Joris-Peyrafitte for creating the dark, grungy world of the movie, and for making it compelling enough that you don’t want to flee it immediately. You may not want to revisit it — this is not the sort of movie that demands repeat viewings — but “The Good Mother” is a perfectly fine film.
- 50Chicago Sun-TimesRichard RoeperChicago Sun-TimesRichard RoeperA disappointing and murky mess of a film that feels like an uncompleted project and leaves the viewer frustrated, despite the gritty visuals and a game lead performance by two-time Academy Award winner Hilary Swank.
- 50Washington PostMichael O'SullivanWashington PostMichael O'SullivanThe plot, in which Swank is given little more to do than guzzle Costco-size bottles of liquor and mope, proceeds in somewhat somnambulist fashion, generating surprisingly little suspense even when Paige confronts a suspect whose identity has been telegraphed throughout the film. This comes as a disappointment, at least for viewers who have watched a movie or two before.
- 50Chicago TribuneMichael PhillipsChicago TribuneMichael PhillipsThe strongest minutes in The Good Mother belongs to Chicago-trained Karen Aldridge. She takes care of business so well in her monologue about her character’s grief and loss, her exit from the narrative becomes just one more oh-well factor in an indifferent Albany noir.
- 50RogerEbert.comKatie RifeRogerEbert.comKatie RifeAs it is, The Good Mother starts with a gunshot and ends with a whimper.
- 50Los Angeles TimesKatie WalshLos Angeles TimesKatie WalshCooke and her character, Paige, inject some life into the proceedings, but the central mystery feels forced, the twists implausible. The screenplay strains for topicality, stuffing too many elements at once into this sad story in a bid for relevance that never quite resonates.
- 25San Francisco ChronicleG. Allen JohnsonSan Francisco ChronicleG. Allen JohnsonIt seems Joris-Peyrafitte can’t decide what film he is making, and as a result we’re left with a jumbled mess with a slapped-together resolution that will satisfy no one.
- 15ABC NewsPeter TraversABC NewsPeter TraversHilary Swank looks like she’d rather be anywhere else than starring as a journalist and grief-stricken mother in this overblown, undercooked drug drama about America’s opioid crisis that makes its scant running time of 89 minutes feel like a torturous eternity.