Mother, Couch – Niclas Larsson Interview
Jul 9, 2024
The brilliant young filmmaker Niclas Larsson sat down with MovieWeb’s Julian Roman to discuss his new movie, Mother, Couch. He spoke about the allegorical themes of the mind-bending work and his incredible cast, including Ewan McGregor and Ellen Burstyn.
Film Movement & Memory will co-release Mother, Couch on July 5th in NY at the Angelika Film Center, July 12th in LA at the Landmark Nu-Art and additional theaters nation-wide.
The members of a dysfunctional family find themselves mysteriously trapped in an antiquated furniture store when their elderly matriarch (Ellen Burstyn) suddenly refuses to get up from one of the display couches. Reluctantly assembled, her three estranged children – David (Ewan McGregor), Gruffudd (Rhys Ifans), and Linda (Lara Flynn Boyle) – must figure out how to escape this bizarre predicament. With the help of the store managers, Marco & Marcus (F. Murray Abraham), and their daughter Bella (Taylor Russell) the siblings embark on a mind-bending odyssey that forces them to face life-altering truths about their own lives and upbringing.
Written and directed by Niclas Larsson, Produced by Ella Bishop and Pau Suris for Suris/Bishop Films, Alex Black for Lyrical Media, and Sara Murphy for Fat City. Executive produced by Jon Rosenberg and Natalie Sellers under their Lyrical Media banner, Ryan Zacarias for Fat City, Ewan McGregor, and David Harari.
more
Publisher: Source link
Die My Love Review | Flickreel
A movie where Edward Cullen and Katniss Everdeen have a baby would be a much bigger deal if Die My Love came out in 2012. Robert Pattinson has come a long way since his Twilight days. Even as the face…
Dec 9, 2025
Quentin Tarantino’s Most Ambitious Project Still Kicks Ass Two Decades Later
In 2003, Quentin Tarantino hadn’t made a film in six years. After the films Reservoir Dogs and Pulp Fiction, 1997’s Jackie Brown showed the restraint of Tarantino, in the only film he’s ever directed based on existing material, and with…
Dec 9, 2025
Sapphic Feminist Fairy Tale Cannot Keep Up With Its Vibrant Aesthetic
In Julia Jackman's 100 Nights of Hero, storytelling is a revolutionary, feminist act. Based on Isabel Greenberg's graphic novel (in turn based on the Middle Eastern fable One Hundred and One Nights), it is a queer fairy tale with a…
Dec 7, 2025
Sisu: Road to Revenge Review: A Blood-Soaked Homecoming
Sisu: Road to Revenge arrives as a bruising, unflinching continuation of Aatami Korpi’s saga—one that embraces the mythic brutality of the original film while pushing its protagonist into a story shaped as much by grief and remembrance as by violence.…
Dec 7, 2025







