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Motherhood's Abyss: Love That Devours
11 Feb
Summary
- Film explores maternal love as a destructive force.
- Director drew parallels to 'Eraserhead' for anxiety.
- Motherhood's struggles are often dismissed as ugly truths.

If I Had Legs I'd Kick You presents a stark portrayal of maternal anxiety, likened by its director, Mary Bronstein, to the unsettling atmosphere of 'Eraserhead.' The film centers on a mother, Linda, whose overwhelming love for her ill child becomes a source of her own destruction, making her desire escape. Bronstein highlights this as a unique maternal anxiety, contrasting it with male-centric anxieties where leaving is an option.
The narrative confronts the taboo of a mother's potential resentment and anger towards her child, asserting that such feelings do not negate love. Rose Byrne’s performance as Linda showcases the unraveling of a mother facing societal pressures and the narrow definitions of acceptable maternal behavior. Bronstein herself drew from personal experiences, where the intensity of motherhood led to a profound ego death before she could reclaim her identity as an artist.



