Academy Award — nominated director Jason Reitman returns to the Sundance Film Festival for the sixth time, having previously debuted four shorts and one feature at the Festival, while Academy Award — winning screenwriter Diablo Cody makes her Sundance Film Festival debut with Tully, a funny, moving, and insightful
look at motherhood that features captivating performances by its two female leads.
The Hollywood Reporter «s John DeFore praised the film as a biting
look at motherhood that balances its bleak outlook with moments of sheer humanity:
Had Douglas Sirk been alive to direct a 90s comedy it likely would resemble this witty
look at motherhood in America.
Delivering an unflinching
look at motherhood, Tully is at times funny, at times moving and at times predictable.
«If you need an irreverent, hysterical and oftentimes too - close - for - comfort
look at motherhood, you need Scary Mommy.»
Motherhood is Easy... has Scott taking lighthearted
look at motherhood, from the early days of sleep deprivation, to learning that sometimes, «Because I said so», is an adequate answer to your questioning toddler.
Why Tiny Steps Mommy is a Top Mom Blog: With plenty of a great parenting tips as well as stories and posts that all moms will relate to, this is a great blog for moms searching for an honest, heartfelt
look at motherhood.
Jill Smokler's Confessions of a Scary Mommy is a funny, real - life
look at motherhood and it its joys and struggles.
Here at sweet lil you, you'll find posts about crafts & DIY, recipes, reviews, tales of our family adventures, and an honest
look at motherhood!
Brain, Child isn't the first magazine to take a fresh
look at motherhood.
I believe that when people espouse the values of a mother or wife exclusively being a homemaker, they are longing for a perceived simpler and easier time as opposed to truth, elevating a nostalgic
look at motherhood from the standpoint of the post-war American dream of the white, upper - middle - class rather than Scripture.
What feels borderline revolutionary about the movie is the way
it looks at motherhood through the mother, not her relationship with her kids.
Not exact matches
Motherhood — why do we
look at the fails over the wins?
When you are finally coming up for air a few weeks into
motherhood, you will suddenly
look at your little one and think «What happened to my newborn?».
Despite progressive changes, there is still a strong perception that society
looks at single
motherhood as «natural», but
looks at single fathers and thinks that «the child should be with the mother.»
Or perhaps our mental image of
motherhood is a new mother
looking lovingly
at the infant she is cradling.
This excerpt from A Mother's Circle takes a closer
look at the topic of food and
motherhood and all that it encompasses:
Thinking about people having new babies and
looking back on the early days of new
motherhood is funny as my — youngest — baby is growing up
at such a rapid rate that I'm pretty sure she has her driving test next week, so there's a lot of distance between us and that time.
When I think back to those first few days of
motherhood, I think about how I felt in those moments with each of my daughters; and I think about how they were feeling
looking up
at me during those midnight feedings and diaper changes.
In this article, we
look at some examples of women's attitudes that ensure that they are not ready for the
motherhood ride.
This lighthearted
look at breastfeeding and
motherhood was written by a former IBCLC and associate LCGB member, Alison Blenkinsop, to raise funds for Baby Milk Action.
I try to
look at it now and then to remind myself of the personal interests I want to maintain along with
motherhood.
Before
motherhood you may have
looked at a fussy baby and wondered how you would ever figure out how to soothe one of your own.
That list includes «The Opt - Out Revolution» by Lisa Belkin, a 2003 Times Magazine cover story that
looked at a handful of Princeton grads who (unlike most of their peers) left demanding jobs to stay
at home with their children; Caitlin Flanagan's gloating potshots
at working moms, especially «How Serfdom Saved the Women's Movement» in the Atlantic in March 2004 and «To Hell with All That» in the New Yorker in July 2004; and an article on the New York Times's front page on Sept. 20, 2005, that repeated that many women
at elite colleges were opting for
motherhood over careers.
Now comes the time to
look at the shoes famous moms choose while balancing life, career and
motherhood.
SMILF, Season 1: From Frankie Shaw, SMILF takes a raw and honest comedic
look at a single, 20 - something from Southie whose desires for relationships, sex, and a career collide with the realities of young, single
motherhood.
takes a
look at the depictions of the hardships of
motherhood in Diablo Cody and Jason's Reitman's latest joint.
For this upcoming Mother's Day weekend, Jorge takes a
look at the depictions of the hardships of
motherhood in Diablo Cody and Jason's Reitman's latest joint.
The core idea — a
look at the stresses of modern
motherhood with a splash of «Mary Poppins» thrown in — does provide a few authentic moments, but there isn't enough «new» material here.
What starts out as a comedy
at the expense of a mother with her hands full, on the verge of a breakdown; morphs into a thought - provoking
look at the downsides of
motherhood.
Now arrives their third collaboration Tully, an equally gracious and hilarious
look at personal growth and self - awareness, this time with
motherhood at the forefront.
Making Babies by Anne Enright Norton, $ 24.95, 208 pages The subtitle of Making Babies, Anne Enright's marvelously irreverent
look at having children later in life, is «Stumbling into
Motherhood,» and that is just what the Irish writer did when she and her husband had their first child after 18 years of marriage.
New York Times best - selling author Jennifer Weiner offers a frank, funny and poignant
look at new
motherhood,...
Along with its unique story line, it gives a fresh, thought provoking
look at the labyrinth of
motherhood and the lengths a mother will go to for her child.
While that might sound like a
motherhood statement, most people can't help but focus on the short term: they
look at recent performance (one to three years) and expect it to continue indefinitely.
The last part of the show, which starts off with Louise Bourgeois,
looks at how feminist art has both embraced and criticized certain representations of
motherhood, and how it's often gone back to myths of goddesses and mother figures to reappropriate power.
Through interviews and stories, Lourdes Viado, PhD, MFT goes beneath the surface and takes a deeper
look at relationships,
motherhood, self - acceptance, authenticity, aging, healing, suffering, loss, and other areas connected to the emotional and psychological well - being of women.
Ah... that's the beauty of
motherhood - the wonderful prism it provides to take another
look at our own childhood - from the eyes of someone who would do anything for their child.