Julia Roberts, Susan Sarandon, and Ed Harris star in a touching story of unlikely friendship between two remarkable women. A hilarious, poignant, heartfelt drama. One of the best films of the year! Wonderful, funny, emotional and uplifting.Sara Edwards,
Although Stepmom was dismissed as a contender in the 1998 Oscar race, it’s worth giving a second chance to this rather cogent, sharp-tongued look at second chances. Susan Sarandon’s performance as a mum about to be replaced by her ex-husband’s new girlfriend (played by Julia Roberts) has a lot of bite, and it’s a shame the script opted to trivialise her plight in its final reel. Initially, the rancour that passes between divorced mum Jackie (Sarandon) and trendy fashion photographer Isabel (Roberts) rings true, aided by the sincerity of Jackie’s ex-husband Luke (Ed Harris) and the emotional plight of their children, who have the most to lose in their parents’ divorce. As the drama makes clear, the children are the real victims in the agony that ensues between old and new love.
Director Chris Columbus, who is adept at showing familial chaos (he directed Mrs. Doubtfire and Home Alone) with a sanitised minimum of lingering emotional damage, actually manages to dig a trifle deeper than usual in exploring the jealousy and hurt that occur when the baton is passed between a birth mum and the younger wife who steps into her shoes. Stepmom fortunately manages to touch on that chord–showing how an ambitious woman might feel hampered by the responsibility of children just because she’s fallen in love with their dad–as well as the haunting grief that it causes their birth mum. It’s an issue that haunts millions of second wives everywhere, and while Roberts conveys the confusion of being taken for granted in the melee that follows, it’s Sarandon who walks off with the film. She’s relentless in her fury, and everyone else in the film–the generally excellent Harris included–is sideswiped. It’s just a shame that Hollywood once again wimps out in the end, solving the problem by giving Sarandon a terminal illness. Instead of allowing Jackie and Isabel’s relationship to unfold on something less than a high note, the movie has to quell its best thing with a false payoff because it doesn’t know what to do with real life
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