Sitcoms Online - Main Page / Message Boards - Main Page / News Blog / Photo Galleries / DVD Reviews / Buy TV Shows on DVD and Blu-ray

View Today's Active Threads (No Chit Chat/Chit Chat Only) / View New Posts (No Chit Chat/Chit Chat Only) / Mark All Boards Read / Chit Chat Board


Sitcoms Online Message Boards - Forums  

Go Back   Sitcoms Online Message Boards - Forums > 2010s and 2020s Sitcoms > Mom
Register Community View Today's Active Threads (No CC/CC Only) Search Photo Galleries Calendar FAQ

Notices

SitcomsOnline.com News Blog Headlines Facebook X/Twitter Bluesky Threads Instagram YouTube RSS

SitcomsOnline Digest: First Look at New Seasons of King of the Hill and The Paper; Ben Feldman Upped to Regular for Season Six of Ghosts
The Paper Season 2 Premieres September 9; President Curtis Trailer and Premiere Date
NBC Fall 2026 Premiere Dates; Leanne Season 2 Premieres August 27 on Netflix
Trailer for Stuart Fails to Save the Universe; Terry Crews to Host 50th Macy's 4th of July Fireworks Spectacular
Netflix Releases Alley Cats Trailer; BET's Ms. Pat Comedic Courtroom Series Returns June 30
Remembering Legendary Sitcom Director James Burrows; The Audacity Season 2 Coming in 2027
Sitcom Stars on Talk Shows; This Week in Sitcoms (Week of June 22, 2026)


New on DVD and Blu-ray

Happy's Place - Season One (Blu-ray) Two and a Half Men - The Complete Series (Blu-ray) Abbott Elementary - The Complete Fourth Season (DVD) I Love Lucy - The Complete Series - 75th Anniversary Edition (DVD) The Office - The Complete Series - Superfan Extended Episodes (Blu-ray)

11/04/25 - Happy's Place - Season One (Blu-ray) (DVD)
11/11/25 - Rick and Morty - Season 8 (Blu-ray) (DVD)
11/11/25 - SpongeBob SquarePants - The Complete Fifteenth Season (DVD)
11/11/25 - Two and a Half Men - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
12/02/25 - Tom and Jerry - The Golden Era Anthology (1940-1958) (Blu-ray) (DVD)
12/16/25 - Lippy the Lion and Hardy Har Har - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
12/16/25 - Wally Gator - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
01/20/26 - The Woody Woodpecker and Friends Golden Age Collection (Blu-ray)
01/27/26 - The New Fred and Barney Show - The Complete Series (Blu-ray)
02/11/26 - Tom and Jerry - The Complete CinemaScope Collection (Blu-ray)
03/24/26 - Looney Tunes Collector's Vault - Volume 2 (Blu-ray)
04/11/26 - Abbott Elementary - The Complete Fourth Season (DVD)
04/21/26 - Famous Studios Champion Collection (Blu-ray) (DVD)
05/19/26 - I Love Lucy - The Complete Series - 75th Anniversary Edition (DVD)
05/19/26 - Looney Tunes Cartoons - The Complete Series (Blu-ray) (DVD)
07/14/26 - The Office - The Complete Series - Superfan Extended Episodes (Blu-ray)
07/28/26 - I Love Lucy - The Complete Series - 75th Anniversary Edition (Blu-ray)

More Recent and Upcoming TV DVD and Blu-ray Releases / TV Shows on DVD, Blu-ray and Prime Video / DVD Reviews Archive


Search Sitcoms Online:



Donate

Please make a donation if you can help with Sitcoms Online's web hosting costs. Thanks for your support!

We receive a small commission on all DVDs, Blu-rays, CDs, Books, and any other items ordered through our Amazon.com links as an associate. Thanks for using our links for your online shopping!

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 04-30-2015, 01:15 AM   #1
TMC
Member
Forum Idol
 
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,660
Default Mom cements its place as one of the best sitcoms of the decade

http://www.avclub.com/review/mom-cem...-decade-218593

Quote:
In last week’s penultimate episode of Mom’s second season, most of the show’s major characters were sitting in a circle at an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting, where Bonnie Plunkett (played by Allison Janney) had to make an amends after falling hard off the wagon. “It’s not easy to say this,” she began, “but I lied to you guys. A lot. Even about stuff I didn’t have to. And I’m not proud about that.” Then, after a brief pause, she continued, “I mean, I’m proud of how well-crafted the lies were. Because, y’know, doing anything well is its own reward.”

That line is quintessential Mom: frank, funny, and rooted in real pain. In its second season, Mom has kicked the crap out of its main characters week after week, and they’ve come out of it with their wits sharpened. Christy Plunkett (Anna Faris) got herself and her family evicted from their house because she gambled away their rent money. After reconnecting with Christy’s long-absent father Alvin (Kevin Pollack), Bonnie nearly sacrificed her sobriety when Alvin died of a heart attack in their bed, mid-lovemaking. Bonnie later wrenched her back and got hooked on painkillers, threatening everything she’d rebuilt with her daughter. And as the Plunketts have dealt with all of that, they’ve also tried to help their AA friends handle cancer, imprisonment, and a wavering commitment to the program. This season has been a rough ride.

It’s also been more joyous than a show about recovering addicts would typically be.

The key to Mom’s comedy is its physicality. This isn’t slapstick. The jokes are mostly verbal, and even somewhat deadpan, as the Plunketts and their friends grumble about their latest disappointments. But the humor pops because of the way Faris delivers her lines with wide, anxious eyes, looking like a silent-movie heroine; and because of the way Janney’s lanky frame has her towering over everyone else, imposing and indomitable. In one second-season storyline, the Plunketts’ friend Regina (Octavia Spencer) was released from jail—where she’d been serving time for embezzlement. When everything seemed to be breaking Regina’s way after she became a born-again Christian, Mom cut to Bonnie at church, waving her long skinny arms around while singing a gospel song, as though trying to force Jesus to bless her by out-rapturing everybody else in the congregation.

That scene fit with one of the major themes of this season: what people get, and what they deserve. Mom’s strong first season was largely about reconciliation, as a newly sober Bonnie reentered a newly sober Christy’s life for the first time in years, and the two women forged an uneasy trust, facilitated by their commitment to AA. In the early stages, a lot of Mom’s stories were driven by Christy’s lingering resentment over a childhood spent with a junkie scam-artist for a mother, and her guilt at how her own history of addiction had alienated her teenage daughter Violet (Sadie Calvano).

Throughout the second season though, Christy and Bonnie have watched their efforts to stay straight go largely unrewarded, while their friends and relatives have thrived. Regina was taken in by their insanely rich, unstable friend Jill (Jaime Pressly). The moody, ungrateful Violet got engaged to one of her college professors (David Krumholtz). Christy’s stoner ex-boyfriend Baxter (Matt L. Jones) cleaned up and got a good job working for his new girlfriend’s dad. But the rock of their social circle, Marjorie (Mimi Kennedy), suffered through breast-cancer treatments, and Bonnie and Christy were handed setback after setback. The message of Mom is that, for the Plunketts, sometimes sobriety itself has to be the victory, because there are very few other “wins.”

The show’s writers and ensemble keep finding ways to make this message not just palatable, but entertaining. Mom’s dialogue is snappy, but derives from the characters’ self-flagellation, and their sense deep down that maybe they should feel lousy, given what they’ve done to their bodies and their families. That’s where the above-mentioned “joyous” quality comes in. It’s not just that these actresses are having fun spitting harsh insults at each other (and at themselves), it’s that they grasp the motivation beneath the meanness. There’s real depth to these people they’re playing, which is all too rare in TV or movie comedy.

With all the (justified) attention being paid these days to series like Broad City and Inside Amy Schumer and how they’re redefining the images of women on television, it’s disappointing that so few cultural critics are engaging with Mom. Disappointing, but not surprising. Mom is an unapologetically conventional multi-camera sitcom, with laughter—which means it also has the kind of broad gags and theatrical pauses that leave space for laughter. Plus, it was co-created by Chuck Lorre, of Two And A Half Men and The Big Bang Theory fame. Lorre’s not hip, and he’s not an insurgent. He’s a mainstream TV writer-producer, and a cash cow for the super-successful CBS. He doesn’t need to be championed.

Still, more should be said about Lorre’s long record of working on shows like Roseanne, Grace Under Fire, Cybill, Dharma & Greg, and now Mom, which use familiar conventions to tell challenging stories about prickly, multi-dimensional women. These sitcoms don’t play it as safe as some may think. They create cluttered, realistic spaces for their characters, and use elliptical plotting that avoids easy “and now everything’s back to normal” endings. They also confront the complexities of American social stratification and class, honestly and consistently.

Lorre assembles good teams (his co-creators on Mom are Eddie Gorodetsky and Gemma Baker), and he lets them contribute. The credits on a typical Mom episode cite anywhere from four to six writers, a mix of men and women, who have shown a remarkable willingness to shake up the series’ premise. They’ve moved characters in and out and have even changed where the leads live. Mom reflects the Plunketts’ unsettled lives—and has remained fresh through its first two seasons—by staying in constant flux.

The larger point to all the shake-ups is that Bonnie and Christy have remained essentially the same: scrappy and stubborn, ashamed of their pasts but fighting for their futures. They’re magnificent comic creations, unlike any other on television right now. If Mom isn’t as much a part of the cultural conversation as it should be, that doesn’t diminish what it’s achieved this season in particular. Doing anything well is its own reward.
TMC is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply



Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:49 PM.


Although the administrators and moderators of the Sitcoms Online Message Boards will attempt to keep all objectionable messages off this forum, it is impossible for us to review all messages. All messages express the views of the author, and neither the owners of the Sitcoms Online Message Boards, nor vBulletin Solutions Inc. (developers of vBulletin) will be held responsible for the content of any message. The owners of the Sitcoms Online Message Boards reserve the right to remove, edit, move or close any thread for any reason.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions Inc.