Recent films and novels ask:
The most powerful works do not tell us to love our mothers more, or to leave them faster. Instead, they show us that the thread between mother and son is elastic—it can stretch across continents or snap under pressure, but it is never truly gone. It is the first bond, the last wound, and for the artist, an eternal source of truth. Recent films and novels ask: The most powerful
Conversely, presents the mother as absence. The unnamed narrator’s parents are dead, but her mother’s ghost—a cold, WASP-y, emotionally withholding woman—drives the novel’s nihilism. The narrator’s decade-long drug-induced coma is a perverse attempt to return to a pre-natal state of non-being, a direct rejection of the mother’s failure to nurture. Cinema: The Visible Struggle If literature excels at interiority, cinema excels at the visible, visceral drama of the mother-son gaze. Film can capture a look of disappointment across a kitchen table, the physical distance of a doorway, or the explosive violence of an argument. Hitchcock’s Mothers: The Original Gaslighters Alfred Hitchcock was obsessed with domineering mothers. In Psycho (1960), Norman Bates’s mother is dead, yet she is the most powerful character in the film. She lives as a voice inside Norman’s head, a desiccated corpse, and finally, a wig-wearing killer. Mrs. Bates is the ultimate internalized mother—so successfully guilt-inducing that her son cannot form an identity outside of her commands. The famous line, "A boy’s best friend is his mother," becomes chilling irony. Hitchcock warns us that a mother who never releases her son commits a living murder. Conversely, presents the mother as absence
From the Oedipal horror of Sophocles to the grief-stricken tenderness of The Babadook , from Lawrence’s suffocating intimacy to Gerwig’s bracing forgiveness, artists keep returning to this dyad because it is never resolved. Every generation redefines what a mother should be, and every son must negotiate his own release. Cinema: The Visible Struggle If literature excels at
shows Jake LaMotta as a brute who craves maternal warmth he cannot articulate. In one heartbreaking scene, he sits in his mother’s kitchen, a hulking, broken boxer, trying to explain his jealousy while she calmly fries peppers. She listens, but she does not intervene. Scorsese’s genius is showing that LaMotta’s violent misogyny stems not from a bad mother, but from a mother who is simply absent emotionally—a woman exhausted by her own life.
centers on Ashima Ganguli, a Bengali woman raising her son, Gogol, in Massachusetts. Here, the mother is the keeper of tradition, language, and root. The tension is not malice but incomprehension. Gogol’s rebellion—changing his name, dating American women, rejecting his heritage—is a rebellion against the mother’s body of memory. Lahiri poignantly captures the "immigrant mother" who sacrifices everything so her son can become a stranger to her.
The Sacrificial Saint is the pure, suffering mother who endures poverty, war, or social shame to elevate her son. This figure appears in Victorian literature and classic Hollywood melodramas—a woman whose entire identity is absorbed by her child’s success. Conversely, the Devouring Mother (inspired by Freudian and post-Freudian theory) represents the threat of emasculation. She is clingy, manipulative, and terrified of abandonment, often sabotaging her son’s romantic relationships to retain control.