Babes (2024)

Direction: Pamela Adlon
Country: USA

Actress turned director Pamela Adlon makes her directorial feature debut with Babes, a quintessential New York comedy centered on motherhood and female friendship. While not a revolutionary tale, the film draws its strengths from fine performances, side steps, juicy details, and broken of taboos.

The story follows Eden (Ilana Glazer), who unexpectedly becomes pregnant after a one-night-stand, and her long-time best friend, Dawn (Michelle Buteau), who is married and has just had her second child. Tensions between the nearly inseparable pair escalate to a frantic boil, exacerbated by the emotional fluctuations and frustrations of being a mom. 

Though the catalogue of family troubles and various conflicts is familiar, the film is humanely observed and profuse on witty banter. The dialogue is fast and pungent, and the pacing is suave, all delivered with a good heart. Even the most clichéd moments can feel emotionally true in this lighthearted film, which, despite its faults, tries to march to a different drum than the most of Hollywood comedies.

Babes might not be as funny as some have claimed, but focuses on how these two friends rely on each other and grow through life's blessings and adversities. It’s an entertaining film aimed at adults.

Other People's Children (2023)

Direction: Rebecca Zlotowski
Country: France 

In her most accomplished work to date, Rebecca Zlotowski (Grand Central, 2013; An Easy Girl, 2019) encapsulates more than just a simple romance. Pruning rather than emphasizing, the plot is a realistic evocation of motherhood as experienced by Rachel (Virginie Efira), a caring 40-year-old middle-school teacher who desires a child of her own but ends up deeply attached to the five-year-old daughter (Callie Ferreira-Goncalves) of his new partner (Roschdy Zem). When things go in an unexpected direction, it’s necessary to come to terms with her own feelings. After all, a separation means two losses, not just one. Emotionally damaged and poked with unfairness, Rachel opts to remain in the background because she’s not the confrontational type.

The topic, rarely addressed in cinema, is treated with luminous candor and simplicity by Zlotowski, whose attentive gaze is empowered by Efira’s performance. The Belgian-born actress continues to astound with the depth of her characterizations - recent examples are Benedetta (2021), Waiting for Bojangles (2021), and Revoir Paris (2022). 

Other People’s Children is a tone poem of a film that entangles tenderness and cruelty within a mix of refined classicism and breezy modernity. The emotional waves are never allowed to erode the unflinching truthfulness of the film’s insights. Accordingly, with intelligent nuance molding storytelling, this is a drama that, in the end, reaches our hearts.