‘MOM’ (2025) Emily Hampshire wows in this visceral watch. It will haunt your soul.

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Being a mom to a newborn is overwhelming. The isolation, judgemental eyes, unsolicited advice, sleep deprivation, and the death of your former self can eat you alive. There is no way to adequately explain the transformation of our mental, emotional, and physical being unless you have experienced it personally. Adam O’Brien brings audiences a film that tackles all these elements with a horror twist. MOM stars Emily Hampshire as a new mother struggling to connect with her newborn son. Her unforgiving husband only exacerbates each new challenge, leading to the darkest outcomes for this little family.

Mom Jared and Meredith - Rotten Tomatoes - [www.rottentomatoes.com]As a mother of two, I will never forget those days of newborn life. Lack of sleep almost drove me to the edge. In MOM, Hampshire skillfully captures the nuance of first-time parenting like I have never seen portrayed onscreen before. Screenwriter Philip Kalin-Hajdu combines each new hardship with unresolved trauma, and the marriage of those two stories makes for the perfect storytelling storm.

François Arnaud is loathsome, which means he is doing a fantastic job. His careless reactionary blaming makes him punchable. Arnaud’s version of Jared will make you want to scream. Mothers will immediately recognize the pattern of behavior.

Mom Pictures - Rotten Tomatoes - [www.rottentomatoes.com]Emily Hampshire nails this role. Her chameleon abilities shine once again in Meredith. Hampshire is so compelling you cannot take your eyes off her. She delivers an emotional torrent that burrows into your psyche. It is truly startling.

The editing, sound, and cinematography are fantastic. Often jarring in nature, they match the tone from the first frame. MOM delves into the stress of default parenting, the impossible expectations we put on women, the pressure to bond, and the insurmountable grief that digs into your soul. The film is a physical manifestation of PPD and unresolved trauma. MOM is a hauntingly visceral watch. You will feel it in your bones.

MOM Trailer:


Uncork’d Entertainment will release the postpartum horror MOM in select theaters beginning February 7 before arriving on digital/VOD platforms on February 11.

Starring Emily Hampshire, known for her acclaimed role in “Schitt’s Creek,” the film made its world premiere at Glasgow FrightFest in 2024, receiving praise for its haunting exploration of motherhood and psychological trauma.

MOM follows a struggling mother (Hampshire) who is abandoned by her family and partner after a horrific incident. As she falls further into isolation, she begins to be haunted by a sinister entity that is determined to make her relive her darkest moments. Delving into the darker side of motherhood, Mom is an intelligent and original take on the family-based horror story.

Directed by Adam O’Brien and written by Philip Kalin-Hajdu, the film also stars François Arnaud (Marlowe) and Christian Convery (Cocaine Bear). Producing are Delirium Pictures and Kinetic Film Group.

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Review: ‘PERMISSION’ allows an audience to ask ‘what if?’ for themselves.

***Official Selection of the 2017 Tribeca Film Festival***

Anna (Rebecca Hall) and Will (Dan Stevens), were each other’s first every-things: first kiss, first love, first and only relationship. Now, 10 years in, at Anna’s 30th birthday party, as Will is about to propose, the couple’s best friend makes a drunken toast, suggesting that they should sleep around before their inevitable marriage. The joke lands like a lead balloon, but the thought lingers until Anna proposes that they try opening their relationship – as a sexual experiment. Together, they venture out of the purely monogamous boundaries of their relationship and, along the way, evolve.

Permission is one of the most honest portrayals of how awkward true intimacy is. When you are so comfortable with someone to the point of predictability, does that have the potential to become a death sentence for a relationship? Life’s ‘what ifs” are some of the most tempting ideas a person can entertain. The chemistry between the entire cast is palpable. You will find yourself falling in love with Hall and Stevens and definitely crushing on Arnaud, Gershon, Craig, Spector, and Sudeikis. This true ensemble of actors along with writer/director Brian Crano has given us a gift. What may appear on the surface as small moments in the script are incredibly impactful due to some really brilliant acting and writing. Permission has an authenticity that sneaks up on you. It’s those moments that define the story and make it so relatable. The music is perfectly paired with each scene, almost becoming its own fly on the wall secondary cast member. Overall, the film is a refreshing look at adult relationships and how to find horny contacts. It’s fun and engrossing and different. It dares to challenge the typical rom-com genre and that’s why you should seek it out.

Permission is in theaters today! Check out the trailer below.

Starring Rebecca Hall (Christine, Professor Marston and the Wonder Women), Dan Stevens (Beauty and the Beast, Downton Abbey)Gina Gershon (Empire), Francois Arnaud (Midnight Texas), David Joseph Craig (The Gift), Morgan Spector (Chuck, Boardwalk Empire), and Jason Sudeikis

Written and Directed By Brian Crano (A Bag of Hammers, Dog Food)

Produced by Rebecca Hall, Margot Hand, Girl Tharan, Joshua Thurston