
Ozren is a small boy of Croatian descent who lives in Vienna with his mother, Silvija in the mid-1980s. As a single parent she emigrated to Vienna from the former Yugoslavia in the hope of a better life. Like any child, he very much looks up to his mother. She is a waitress and when she goes out to work at night, his aunt, Ljiljana comes to take care of him. Then we see him back in elementary school, where he is called as whore's boy. Although he does not understand the meani... (Full plot summary below)
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Ozren is a small boy of Croatian descent who lives in Vienna with his mother, Silvija in the mid-1980s. As a single parent she emigrated to Vienna from the former Yugoslavia in the hope of a better life. Like any child, he very much looks up to his mother. She is a waitress and when she goes out to work at night, his aunt, Ljiljana comes to take care of him. Then we see him back in elementary school, where he is called as whore's boy. Although he does not understand the meaning of the swear word, he is intrigued by it: his mother works as a waitress, right?
Leave your thoughts about The Whore's Son.
| New York TimesLaura KernThe film fearlessly plumbs the depths of this intense mother-son relationship, and also explores the ways in which role models affect children's lives. |
| VarietyJay WeissbergCool, stylized lensing by onetime Fassbinder d.p. Jurgen Jurges lifts The Whore's Son above simple meller status, but uneven character development mars this otherwise commendable feature debut by Michael Sturminger. |
| Village VoiceJim RidleyThe grave comic presence of Miki Manojlovic (from Kusturica's Underground) as Ozren's worldly uncle stabilizes the movie's tantalizingly uncertain tone, at least until its bizarre closing plunge into Oedipal catharsis. |
| Film Journal InternationalDavid NohWhile poignant in the extreme, never stoops to easy sentimentality or sensationalism. |
| User ReviewPrivate Uthoroughly intelligent and thoroughly devastating. beautifully paced and perfectly casted. |
| User ReviewNicole MDepressing, interesting watch. A little more like what I expected from Irina Palm. |