Mother Mary
Mother Mary is David Lowery's first major engagement with the machinery of celebrity and pop music, and it emerges as a film about power, intimacy, and the cost of being watched.…
Full analysis belowNOT A WOKE TRAP. The film's ideology is visible from the marketing and trailer material. Anne Hathaway as an icon past her prime, Michaela Coel as a formerly silenced collaborator, music from Charli XCX and FKA Twigs: these casting and creative choices signal a film centrally concerned with female agency, the politics of celebrity, and reclaiming power in relationships structured by patriarchy. Conservative viewers will identify the film's perspective before purchasing a ticket.
Mother Mary is David Lowery's first major engagement with the machinery of celebrity and pop music, and it emerges as a film about power, intimacy, and the cost of being watched. Anne Hathaway plays Mother Mary, an iconic pop star whose career has been built on image, control, and the careful management of her persona. Michaela Coel plays Sam Anselm, a fashion designer and Mother Mary's estranged best friend. Decades earlier, Sam designed the costumes that made Mother Mary's image what it is. Then Mother Mary silenced her. Then Mother Mary fired her. Then Mother Mary became the icon and Sam disappeared.
On the eve of Mother Mary's comeback tour, the two women reunite. The reunion is ostensibly practical: Mother Mary needs a dress for the new performances. But the actual business is the unfinished emotional and creative reckoning between them. What Lowery has made is a film about female power that is simultaneously very progressive in its concerns and, in some respects, classically melodramatic in its execution.
The narrative hook is straightforward: two women, once intimate collaborators, now estranged, must confront what happened between them. But the film is less interested in plot than in the texture of their interaction, the language of their conflict, the way they look at each other. Lowery's visual language, developed through years of making films about loss and spiritual searching, turns its attention toward the aesthetics of female desire and power. The camera lingers on Hathaway's face. It follows Coel's hands as she works. The film is a study in attention itself: who gets watched, who gets to look, what is the cost of being seen.
The original songs by Jack Antonoff, Charli XCX, and FKA Twigs function less as traditional musical numbers and more as emotional punctuation. Hathaway, who demonstrated genuine vocal ability in Les Miserables, performs the songs herself. The songs are not there to resolve the plot or provide emotional catharsis in a conventional sense. Rather, they are articulations of the internal emotional states that the characters cannot voice in dialogue. This is consistent with Lowery's approach to art generally: the spiritual and emotional truths are often best expressed through form and texture rather than explicit statement.
The supporting ensemble is calibrated with precision. Hunter Schafer, known for her work on Euphoria and her advocacy around gender expression, plays Hilda, one of Sam's collaborators. Sian Clifford, who brought sophisticated comic timing to Fleabag, appears as Jade. FKA Twigs, who creates performance art that interrogates embodiment and vulnerability, has both a role in the film and a songwriting credit. The casting suggests a production team that has thought carefully about which artists would align with the film's thematic and aesthetic concerns.
The world of the film is almost exclusively female and queer-coded. The fashion studio where Sam works is populated primarily by women. Mother Mary's crew and collaborators are predominantly women. The emotional architecture of the film centers female intimacy, female anger, female desire, female creative power. In Lowery's hands, this becomes neither a tract nor a lecture but rather an exploration of how women create, how they betray each other, how they build worlds together, and how they tear them apart.
Where Mother Mary enters ideological territory is in its framing of power itself. The film appears to argue that Mother Mary's silencing of Sam was not simply an individual act of betrayal but was also the predictable outcome of a celebrity machine that demands women compete with each other for limited space and recognition. Sam was silenced not because she was weak but because the system only had room for one female icon at a time. Mother Mary's choice to erase her collaborator was made within a context that made that erasure almost inevitable. This is a progressive framing: it locates individual harm within systemic structures and asks audiences to see how patriarchal systems pit women against each other.
Conservatively, one could argue that this framing somewhat excuses individual moral responsibility. Mother Mary chose to erase Sam. That was a choice. The film's implicit argument that the system forced her hand is debatable and contestable. A more traditional reading would emphasize that Mother Mary had agency and failed morally in how she wielded it. That the system is unjust does not mean Mother Mary's specific cruelties were justified.
But Lowery's film is complex enough to hold both truths. Mother Mary is held accountable. The film does not excuse her. It contextualizes her, which is different. And it forces Mother Mary to confront what her choices cost, not in abstract terms but in the face and voice of the person she harmed.
The film's visual language, composed by cinematographers Andrew Droz Palermo and Rina Yang, is muted and textural. The production design appears to favor pale colors, natural materials, and spaces that feel both intimate and claustrophobic. The effect is to draw the viewer into the emotional world of these two women while isolating them from the outside world. This is a film that trusts audiences to sit with discomfort and unresolved tension. There are no easy resolutions.
One significant uncertainty pre-release is the film's length and pacing. Lowery's films are characteristically slow, deliberate, and long. A Ghost Story is 92 minutes but feels like three hours. The Green Knight is 130 minutes of deliberately paced, meditative filmmaking. If Mother Mary follows this pattern, audiences expecting a conventional pop-music drama or thriller may find it frustratingly slow. But for audiences who appreciate Lowery's approach to cinema as a meditative form, this will be precisely its virtue.
The film's engagement with music and sound will be crucial to its emotional impact. The original songs function as extensions of the narrative language rather than as breaks from it. This is ambitious. It could work beautifully or it could feel discordant and artificial. The presence of Jack Antonoff, Charli XCX, and FKA Twigs as collaborators suggests a project where the music has been thought through with as much care as the visual language.
Mother Mary appears to be a film about female power, female desire, female creativity, and the systems that limit and distort all three. It is progressive in its framework and ideological in its sympathies. But it is also a film made with extraordinary craft and deliberation, by a director with a consistent artistic vision and performers who have selected this project carefully. The film is not propaganda. It is cinema with a perspective.
Formula: Weighted Score = Severity × Authenticity Multiplier × Centrality Multiplier
🔴 Woke Tropes
| Trope | Severity | Authenticity | Centrality | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female Creative Power and Reclamation of Voice | 5 | 0.9 | 1.8 | 8.1 |
| Systemic Gender Dynamics as Explanation for Individual Harm | 4 | 0.8 | 1.5 | 4.8 |
| Female Intimacy as Central Emotional Value | 4 | 0.8 | 1.8 | 5.76 |
| Fashion and Beauty Industry as Site of Patriarchal Control | 3 | 0.7 | 1.2 | 2.52 |
| Trans and Gender-Expansive Representation in Ensemble | 2 | 0.7 | 0.5 | 0.7 |
| Absence of Male Characters or Male Perspective | 3 | 0.6 | 1 | 1.8 |
| TOTAL WOKE | 23.7 | |||
🟢 Traditional Tropes
| Trope | Severity | Authenticity | Centrality | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female Artistic Excellence and Craft | 3 | 0.9 | 1 | 2.7 |
| Personal Accountability for Harm Done | 3 | 0.8 | 1 | 2.4 |
| Sacrifice and Hard-Won Achievement | 2 | 0.8 | 0.8 | 1.28 |
| TOTAL TRADITIONAL | 6.4 | |||
Score Margin: -8.6 WOKE
Director: David Lowery
PROGRESSIVE/CENTER-LEFT. Known for contemplative, socially conscious filmmaking that centers female perspectives and interrogates power structures. His films consistently foreground themes of loss, environmental consciousness, and emotional vulnerability.David Lowery is an American filmmaker known for The Green Knight (2021), A Ghost Story (2017), Ain't Them Bodies Saints (2013), and Pete's Dragon (2016). His work is characterized by long takes, muted color palettes, philosophical inquiry, and a deliberate pacing that prioritizes emotional and spiritual dimensions over plot momentum. Lowery has described himself as interested in exploring 'how we construct meaning and how we fail each other.' His direction of Mother Mary marks his first deep engagement with pop music and the machinery of celebrity, though his consistent thematic concerns, particularly around power and vulnerability, remain central. Lowery won Best Film at Cannes Film Festival for A Ghost Story.
Adult Viewer Insight
Conservative adults should understand what Mother Mary is trying to do and engage with it on those terms. The film is not pretending to be neutral. It is presenting a specific argument about female power, female creativity, and systemic gender dynamics through the lens of a specific story about two women. The question is whether that argument is truthful or ideologically motivated. Lowery's track record suggests he is genuinely interested in exploring spiritual and emotional truth, not in delivering propaganda. What makes Mother Mary worth watching from any perspective is that it trusts audiences to grapple with moral complexity. Mother Mary harmed Sam. That is real. The system that incentivized that harm is also real. Both things can be true simultaneously. Conservative viewers who dismiss the film outright as 'woke propaganda' will miss the opportunity to engage with a work of genuine artistic ambition that is trying to say something true about power and relationships. Progressive viewers will find validation for their existing concerns about how systems pit women against each other. The more interesting question, for any viewer, is whether Lowery has earned the right to make these arguments through craft and truthfulness or whether he is using craft to smuggle in ideology. Based on available pre-release material, it appears he has earned it, but that judgment can only be confirmed after viewing.
Parental Guidance
Rated 15 in the UK. Expected R rating in the US. The violence in Mother Mary appears to be primarily emotional and psychological rather than graphic. The film is described as a psychosexual drama and thriller, which suggests themes of desire and power that will be adult-oriented. Expect strong language, likely sexual references or moments, and definitely emotional intensity. The film is not appropriate for children. Teenagers 15-16 and up, in contexts where they can process themes of power, desire, betrayal, and creative control, might engage with this film productively, but it requires adult facilitation and discussion. For adults, this is craft-driven cinema aimed at sophisticated audiences willing to sit with ambiguity and discomfort.
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