The M Word (DVD REVIEW)
The
M Word
DVD Review by Kam Williams
Siblings Endure Menopause in Entertaining Tale of Female
Empowerment
Menopause apparently
affects women differently, even if they happen to share the same genes, as is
the case with Carson (Frances Fisher), Rita (Mary Crosby) and Louise (Eliza
Roberts). Each of these sisters is struggling to maintain her dignity while
dealing with the fallout from the so-called “Change of Life.”
Frustrated Carson describes feeling for months on end “like
I don’t have any control.” By contrast, Rita’s body chemistry is so confused by
the assortment of medicines and creams she uses that she wants to murder her husband,
one minute, and to make love to him, the next. Meanwhile, relatively-macabre
Lulu relies on humor to cope with her constant obsession with death.
At an informal gathering with her
siblings, Carson
announces that she just impulsively left her husband (Gregory Harrison) and
moved in with her daughter (Tanna Frederick). But that doesn’t necessarily mean
she’ll be able to avoid Mack entirely, since he’s a sportscaster at the same local
television station where Moxie plays a dog on a wacky kiddie series.
The plot thickens when network
executive Charlie Moon (Michael Imperioli) arrives in town from New York with plans to
implement programming changes to reverse the station’s plummeting ratings. However,
he is distracted at first sight by foxy Moxie who is not above using her powers
of seduction to save her own neck, if not her struggling show. Further complicating
matters is the fact that she not only recently missed her period, but is stuck in
an unsatisfying relationship with her producer (Corey Feldman).
That is the incestuously-intriguing point
of departure of The M Word, a sophisticated ensemble dramedy written and
directed by the legendary Henry Jaglom (Can She Bake a Cherry Pie?). The
picture’s soap opera-style premise basically serves as a launching pad for
frank discussions about the biologically-determined plight of women of a
certain age.
As humorous as it is sobering, Jaglom
proves as masterful as ever at creating fascinating characters designed to make
you both laugh and reflect. His raw tale of female empowerment revolves around uncompromisingly-realistic
discussions of menopause ranging from night sweats to mood swings to depression
to atrophied vaginas to cramps to forgetfulness to a loss of skin elasticity.
After venting their angst
interminably, our heroines eventually get around to resolving their crises in
entertaining fashion before the curtain comes down on a decidedly upbeat note
(“There is nothing like being a girl!”), thus allowing the audience to exit the
theater with a big smile on its collective face.
Such a satisfying cinematic treat
that the M Word might very well be “Marvelous!”
Excellent (4 stars)
Rated
R for profanity and sexual references
Running
time: 111 minutes
Distributor:
Breaking Glass Pictures / Rainbow Releasing
DVD
Extras: Theatrical trailer.
To
see a trailer for The M Word, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8yPe1Jknlx4&feature=youtu.be
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