Mother of Mine (1926) Poster

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8/10
Torn Between Two Mothers
wes-connors5 June 2013
In a busy French department store, perceptive young Jean Forest (as Antoine "Gribiche" Belot) picks up some gloves for his mother. While watching other customers, the boy notices wealthy socialite Francoise Rosay (as Edith Maranet) unknowingly drop her purse. Young Forest runs to return Ms. Rosay's purse, then declines her offer of a reward. Impressed with Forest, Rosay contacts his mother with an offer. She will adopt him and provide Forest with the best education money can buy. Believing her son will benefit from a luxurious lifestyle, widow Cecile Guyon (as Anne Belot) gives up her son...

The morale of the story is obvious, but there is nary a dull moment in this silent feature. Direction by Jacques Feyder is excellent. The set decoration is likewise, and moves the story effectively, too. Note the cold sparseness of Forest's mansion bed compared to his richly adorned "poor" one. This was Forest's last film with Mr. Feyder - and it's his best performance. He even handles nude scenes well. Also terrific are the "mothers" - Ms. Rosay and Ms. Guyon. Of course, Rosay knew and had acted with Forest before; she was the directors' wife. Sadly, this was the last film for Guyon; she died at age 36.

******** Gribiche (3/15/26) Jacques Feyder ~ Jean Forest, Francoise Rosay, Cecile Guyon, Rolla Norman
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8/10
Hopefully, finding a happy middle ground.....
planktonrules20 July 2016
"Mother of Mine" was recently restored by piecing the old existing footage together and they really did a terrific job with this one. The print shown on Turner Classic Movies was practically perfect and I applaud the conservation staff!

The story is a sweet one about a rich lady (played by Françoise Rosay, the director's wife). When she loses her purse, a nice young man, Gribiche (Jean Forest) finds it and returns it. Well, she is quite taken by the lad and tracks him down later. While a NORMAL person might think of rewarding the kid, this odd lady wants to adopt him. While the family he's from isn't poor (despite the rich lady telling everyone they were destitute), the mother is single and Gribiche thinks he's in the way because she is looking for a husband. So the boy agrees to live with the rich lady...assuming it will help mold him into a gentleman. However, his benefactor turns out to be an incredibly stuffy lady and her vision of a young gentleman NEVER includes fun...just lots and lots of classes on a variety of gentlemanly pursuits. Not surprisingly, the boy begins to rebel. What's next? See the film.

While the story is a bit simple, this is pretty typical of silent films of the day. And, compared to the hundreds (perhaps thousands) of silents I have seen, it is much better than average because the story is well told...with very good acting, excellent direction by Jacques Feyder and a story that is well told and avoids excessive sentimentality. Well worth seeing.
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8/10
This almost has the feel of an early Mary Pickford vehicle...
AlsExGal2 December 2023
...except with a boy as the central character.

A clean-cut young son of a working-class war widow returns a purse that a wealthy American woman has dropped in a department store, and she's so impressed that she wants to adopt him and give him a good education and cultured manners. To his mother's surprise he agrees, but he doesn't tell her it's so that she'll be free to marry the man she's been seeing and not have to worry about the man's reaction to gaining a whole family.

At first he loves his new privileged life, but soon gets upset at the way his new stepmother keeps showing him off to friends and increasingly exaggerating the story of how she saved him from a life of poverty. He also misses his real mother, who has since married her suitor. Eventually he runs away, leading to a simultaneously touching and amusing if predictable conclusion.
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