Mother of Tears
Theatrical release poster
ItalianLa Terza madre
Directed byDario Argento
Screenplay by
Story byDario Argento
Based onSuspiria de Profundis
by Thomas De Quincey
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyFrederic Fasano
Edited byWalter Fasano
Music byClaudio Simonetti
Production
companies
Distributed by
  • Medusa Distribuzione (Italy)
  • Myriad Pictures (United States)
Release dates
  • 6 September 2007 (2007-09-06) (TIFF)
  • 24 October 2007 (2007-10-24) (Italy)
  • 6 June 2008 (2008-06-06) (United States)
Running time
102 minutes
Countries
  • Italy
  • United States
Languages
  • English
  • Italian
Budget$3.5 million
Box office$3.1 million[1]

Mother of Tears (Italian: La Terza madre; lit.'The Third Mother') is a 2007 supernatural horror film written and directed by Dario Argento, and starring Asia Argento, Daria Nicolodi, Moran Atias, Udo Kier and Coralina Cataldi-Tassoni. The film has also been billed in English-speaking media as Mater Lachrymarum, The Third Mother (English translation of the film's original Italian title) and Mother of Tears: The Third Mother.

Written by Argento, Jace Anderson and Adam Gierasch, the film is the concluding installment of Argento's supernatural horror trilogy The Three Mothers, preceded by Suspiria (1977) and Inferno (1980). The film depicts the confrontation with the final "Mother" witch, known as Mater Lachrymarum.

Plot

Catholic Church workers, lead by Monsignor Brusca (Franco Leo), dig up the body of a 19th-century church official, whose casket has a box-shaped urn chained to it. Inside they discover artifacts of Mater Lachrymarum (Moran Atias), the last surviving member of the Three Mothers, an ancient trio of powerful black magic witches. In particular, the box contains a magic tunic that, when worn by Mater Lachrymarum, increases her powers significantly.

The urn is shipped to the Museum of Ancient Art in Rome, where Sarah Mandy (Asia Argento), an American studying art restoration, works. Sarah is dating the curator Michael Pierce (Adam James), a single father who is away from the museum that night. With help from the assistant curator Giselle (Coralina Cataldi-Tassoni), Sarah opens the box and finds the tunic, a dagger, and three statues representing the three witches. Sending Sarah to her office to retrieve tools to help her translate the text on the artifacts, the assistant curator is promptly attacked by the demonic agents of Mater Lachrymarum. Sarah arrives too late to save her from being disembowelled by the monsters and tries to flee the museum. She is pursued by Mater Lachrymarum's familiar in the shape of a monkey and is only able to escape when a disembodied voice guides her through a series of locked doors that are magically thrown open.

Sarah tells the police what happened, then spends the night with Michael and his son Paul. Michael visits the Cardinal who sent him the urn only to find out that, shortly after mailing the urn, he had a severe stroke and is now in a coma. An assistant of the priest, Father Milesi (Tommaso Banfi) gives Michael a message the Cardinal was writing on before collapsing. On it is scrawled the name "Mater Lachrymarum". Michael is observed by a pair of witches while leaving the hospital.

Back in Rome, chaos descends as a wave of mass suicides, murder, and violence engulfs the city. Sarah continues her own research only to be summoned by Michael to his apartment. The witches have kidnapped his young son and won't return the boy to him unless he stops his investigation. Sarah begs him to call the police, who have been tailing Sarah since the murder at the museum, but Michael refuses and instead opts to visit a local priest who is a trained exorcist. En route, Michael is found by two witches, and he is soon captured and murdered, along with his son, whose body is cannibalized by the rapidly expanding coven. Before he is killed, Michael calls Sarah and begs for her to come and help him.

As she makes her way through a crowded train station, Sarah is spotted by a gang of witches who have arrived in Rome in order to pledge their loyalty to Mater Lachrymarum. Pursued by the witches and the police, the disembodied voice from before instructs Sarah how to magically make herself invisible. She uses this to avoid a police detective, though she is forced to kill a witch, Katerina, who corners her on the train.

At the priest's home, Sarah meets Marta, a fellow white witch and friend of Sarah's deceased mother. Realizing that the voice guiding Sarah is that of her mother, Marta reveals that Sarah's mother was a powerful white witch who dared to challenge and severely wounded Mater Suspiriorum, the eldest and wisest of the Three Mothers. Suspiriorum retaliated by caused the car crash that killed Sarah's parents. Though Mater Suspiriorum and her sister Mater Tenebrarum are now dead, their sister Mater Lachrymarum has emerged from the shadows to bring about the second age of magic, with the fall of Rome as her coming-out party. They talk to the priest, but he is killed by a worshipper before he can give the two a copy of a book that would explain how to fight Mater Lachrymarum.

Sarah returns to her home in the city but finds Mater Lachrymarum's forces waiting for her. She heads for Marta's house instead, but once again Mater Lachrymarum's minions strike and Marta and her lesbian lover are murdered. Fleeing, Sarah spots Michael, who takes her back to his apartment. Unfortunately, Sarah soon realizes that Michael is dead and that Mater Lachrymarum is animating his body in an attempt to kill her. As she burns Michael's still-animate body, the ghost of her mother intervenes one final time to banish Michael, and possibly herself along with him, to Hell.

Sarah locates De Wiitt, an alchemist whom Marta mentioned as her only hope to learn how to fight Mater Lachrymarum. After paralyzing her briefly to confirm whether she is a white witch or a black witch), he gives Sarah a copy of "The Three Mothers" to read, enabling her to find Mater Lachrymarum's lair. She is joined by Detective Enzo Marki, one of the police officers hunting her, and the two go into the catacombs to find Mater Lachrymarum, but are separated. Marki is captured by the witch's followers and tortured, along with De Wiitt and his assistant. Sarah is caught and brought before Mater Lachrymarum, who offers Sarah up to her cannibal followers. Sarah, having healed Enzo's wounds, uses a spear to pull the tunic off Mater Lachrymarum and tosses it into a nearby fire. This causes the mansion to collapse, and a pillar falls and impales Mater Lachrymarum. With the followers crushed as the catacomb collapses, Sarah and Marki struggle back above ground and laugh in horror and relief.

Cast

Production

Pre-production

The Three Mothers trilogy

Mother of Tears is the final film in Argento's trilogy known as The Three Mothers. The trilogy is loosely based on characters from "Levana and Our Ladies of Sorrow", a section of Thomas De Quincey's Suspiria de Profundis. The prose poem outlines the existence of three women that are the personification of sorrow: Mater Lachrymarum, Mater Suspiriorum and Mater Tenebrarum. Argento and Daria Nicolodi recast De Quincey's Three Sorrows as three malevolent witches who rule the world with tears, sighs and shadows. When released in 1977, the first film, Suspiria, introduced the major stylistic elements of the series, including the bold use of primary colors and elaborate setpieces for each murder. The sequel, Inferno, developed the overarching plot continuities concerning the three central witches when released in 1980.

Nicolodi script (1980s)

As early as 1984, Daria Nicolodi asserted in an interview with Fangoria – alongside Argento – that they had "finished the script for the third [film] but there are a few things we are still working on to perfect the project, a couple of special effects and locations, that sort of thing."[2] Although Nicolodi mentioned her version of the script again in an interview for Alan Jones' book, Profondo Argento: The Man, the Myths and the Magic, it was not used in whole or part for Mother of Tears.

Argento script (2003/4)

On 29 November 2003, at the Trieste Science Plus Fiction Festival in Northern Italy, Argento revealed that he hoped to start filming The Third Mother in August 2004 and was currently working on the script.[3] Thematically it concerned "mysticism, alchemy, terrorism and Gnosticism [...]. So many people were tortured because the Church said Gnosticism was heresy, and that will be the starting point for the story. [...] It has been over 20 years since I left the Three Mothers behind [...] and it has felt surprisingly good to go back and explore the whole story from a retrospective point of view."[3] The film was to be set in Rome and begin with Mater Lachrymarum in the Middle Ages.[3] Argento originally hoped to cast a Russian model in the role of Mater Lachrymarum.[3] (He later chose Israeli actress Moran Atias.[4]) Argento also said that a Hollywood studio might finance the film.[3]

Anderson and Gierasch script (2005/6)

In late 2005, Argento travelled to the North of Europe to begin conceptual work on The Third Mother.[5] Soon after, it was announced that Jace Anderson and Adam Gierasch had been asked by Argento to help him write the film's script. "When we got there [Rome,] Dario had already done his own pass on the treatment, and we spent three weeks holed up in an apartment, meeting with Dario, visiting the catacombs, and getting the first draft done." Around this time, Fangoria reported that the film would be entitled Mater Lachrymarum.[6]

The script for The Third Mother was still being refined in February 2006, with Anderson and Gierasch having composed a first draft which Argento then revised.[7] This early script began immediately after Inferno, with a witch who survived the destruction of Mater Tenebrarum's home watching a detective (Ennio Fantastichini) investigating a series of murders at a university.[8] Other tentative cast members were Chiara Caselli as a psychiatrist, Max von Sydow as a mysterious university professor, and Giordano Petri as a young investigator who takes the case when Fantastichini's character is killed.[8] At this point, shooting was set to begin in late spring of the same year and was to be released between November 2006 and January 2007.[7] However, in early 2006 rumors circulated that Argento had dismissed Anderson and Gierasch after being displeased with their script. French horror magazine L'Écran Fantastique reported that Argento alone would receive a screenwriting credit. On the tenth of March it was announced that shooting The Third Mother would be delayed until September.[9] In mid-April it was announced that Argento would return to Italy in June to immediately begin filming The Third Mother, which would be "a big budget feature, produced by Medusa along with a major American company [Myriad]."[10] In May 2006 the title Mother of Tears surfaced as a possible name for the film. According to journalist Alan Jones, this title "was never in the running as far as Dario was concerned. That was the title the originally contacted American sales agent Myriad wanted for international distribution."[4] In the same month, rumors from the Cannes Film Festival linked actress Sienna Miller to the film's lead female role.[11] Also at Cannes, Medusa's CEO Giampaolo Letta was quoted by Anderson and Gierasch as saying "This is going to be vintage Argento. Pretty strong stuff."[12] In July it was revealed that The Third Mother had been delayed yet again until "next November or later" and that Argento's daughter, Asia, had been cast in the film.[13]

Filming

Primary filming in Rome on 25 October 2006. In this scene, a mother throws her baby from a bridge in a fit of aberration brought on by the return of the Third Mother

In mid-October 2006, Gierasch revealed that The Third Mother would begin filming later in the month.[14] Primary filming occurred in Rome, although some parts were filmed in Turin and at the Cinecittà studios in Terni.[15]

Post-production

The editing of Mother of Tears was more or less finished by March 2007.[16] Dubbing the soundtrack into the Italian and English language versions of the film was finished on 5 April 2007.[15]

The film's digital effects were created by Lee Wilson and Sergio Stivaletti.[15] According to the director of photography, Frederic Fasano, the film will begin with a subdued cool color palette that will segue to red as the film progresses.[4]

The Italian distributor of Mother of Tears, Medusa Film, believed the film was too violent and requested it to be edited.[17] Medusa's main objection is to "the depiction of perverse sex in the witch gathering satanic scenes and one cannibal killing of a major character."[18] Argento was asked to re-edit the film to make it more mainstream.[18] It was confirmed on 28 May 2007 that the film would receive a rating of 14 in Italy, necessitating the removal of "all hardcore gore" which would later "be re-instated for the dvd release".[19]

Promotion

Promotion of Mother of Tears before Cannes 2007 was limited. Several behind-the-scenes photographs surfaced, the first official one at Fangoria on 27 November 2006.[20] A short, eighteen-second preview of The Third Mother was released on 18 December 2006 at Cinecitta.com.[21] Several black-and-white photographs of the filming were published on 19 January 2007 in the book Dario Argento et le cinéma by Bernard Joisten.[22] In May 2007, just before the event at Cannes, a promotional poster for The Third Mother was featured on the cover of Variety magazine's digital edition. Mother of Tears premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival on 6 September 2007, just moments before midnight and Argento's 67th birthday (on the 7th).[23] The film debuted in Italy on 24 October 2007 at the Rome Film Festival.[24] Its Italian wide release occurred on 31 October 2007, Halloween.[17] In the United States, Myriad Pictures released the film uncut in select cities in June 2008.[25]

Cannes 2007

The Cannes Film Festival requested that The Third Mother be ready in time for consideration as a 2007 competition contender.[4] However, the film was not screened in its entirety at the festival. On 17 May 2007 at 9:30 am Myriad premiered 20 minutes of footage from the film, consisting of eight lengthy scenes, to a packed audience.[26] The preview was preceded by a credit roll and disclaimer that warned of graphic violence.[26] The eight scenes included: the complete beginning to the point where Asia opens the Mother of Tears urn, the arrival of several demons, Daria Nicolodi's "powder puff" scene, a lesbian death scene, Udo Kier's major scene, Asia running through the streets of Rome, Adam James' major scene, and the entrance of Mater Lachrymarum.[26] According to reporter Alan Jones the audiences' reaction was mixed: the acting quality varied and the script contained too much exposition, but the cinematography was beautiful.[26]

Post-Cannes

The day after the Cannes screening, on 18 May at 3:45 pm, co-scripter Jace Anderson and actress Coralina Cataldi-Tassoni were on The Third Mother discussion panel at Fangoria's Weekend of Horrors convention on the West Coast.[27] On 27 May, a second promotional poster – featuring an eye weeping tears of blood – surfaced on the internet bearing only the title Mother of Tears.[28] In early June, a teaser trailer for The Third Mother was attached to Grindhouse in Italy. Camera-recorded copies of the trailer surfaced soon afterward on the internet. The Cannes promo reel was also screened during Fangoria's Weekend of Horrors East Coast convention in Secaucus, New Jersey on 1 July at 12:15 pm[29] Cataldi-Tassoni introduced the footage.[29] Pirated stills and audio from the preview surfaced the same day on the forum of the Dario Argento fansite DarkDreams.org.[30] In late August, an American trailer for the film was screened at the Rue Morgue Festival of Fear.

US release

The film had its US premiere at the San Francisco International Film Festival on 25 April 2008. This was followed by a limited theatrical run in June courtesy of Myriad Pictures and a DVD release by The Weinstein Company via Dimension Extreme DVDs on 23 September 2008.

Reception

Critical response

Critical response was mixed, although many reviewers felt the film, despite its flaws, was entertaining. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reports a 49% approval rating based on 73 reviews, with an average rating of 5.3/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "As excessive and ketchup laden as predecessors Suspiria and Inferno, Dario Argento's Mother of Tears completes the trilogy with the same baroque grandeur and soggy 1970s sensibilities."[31] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 52 out of 100 based on 18 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[32] The concluding film of The Three Mothers trilogy provided some reviewers with an opportunity to reflect on Argento's career as a whole, and parallels were often drawn between Mother of Tears and Argento's films from the 1970s and 1980s.

Variety's Dennis Harvey wrote, "This hectic pileup of supernatural nonsense is a treasure trove of seemingly unintentional hilarity...this "Mother" is a cheesy, breathless future camp classic."[33] Stephanie Zacharek of Salon.com opined that "Mother of Tears is depraved, bloody and unrepentantly exploitive, and the plot makes virtually no sense—it's the sort of movie nobody, save Argento himself, is crazy enough to make these days. It's also so full of life that it dwarfs contemporary horror pictures of the Saw and Hostel variety."[34] Jim Ridley in The Village Voice felt the film was further evidence of the declining quality of a once great director's abilities, stating that "for people who revere the horror maestro's vital work—roughly the period between his debut, 1970's proto–De Palma giallo The Bird with the Crystal Plumage, and his 1990 segment of the anthology film Two Evil Eyes — it's painful to watch the Hieronymus Bosch of '70s horror sink this low...If you believe someone of Dario Argento's proven talent would make a movie so deliberately sucky, feel free to join in."[35] Maitland McDonagh of Film Journal International panned the film, describing it as "sadly lacking in the baroque atmosphere and visual aesthetic that elevated Argento above the horror hacks—it's flatly lit, indifferently staged, coarsely violent and brutally straightforward. The English-language dubbing is the final indignity: even the voices are ugly."[36]

Writing in The New York Times, Nathan Lee described the film as "...silly, awkward, vulgar, outlandish, hysterical, inventive, revolting, flamboyant, titillating, ridiculous, mischievous, uproarious, cheap, priceless, tasteless and sublime...[I]t may be the most entertaining film of [Argento's] career...It's true that The Mother of Tears, strictly as visual storytelling, suffers by comparison with the first and second Mother movies, or one of Mr. Argento's better baroque thrillers, like The Bird with the Crystal Plumage. But it does something as well as, if not better than, anything in his oeuvre: it goes all the way."[37] Scooter McCrae of Fangoria was extremely enthusiastic about the film, and said that "Mother of Tears is a great movie, and well worth the wait. Does it have flaws? Oh yeah, but so do Tenebrae, Phenomena, Suspiria and Inferno, and they're now all part of the accepted canon of classic Argento cinema."[38] Cinefantastique's Steve Biodrowski also felt the film was worthy of praise, noting that "the experience of watching Mother of Tears is like a delirious descent into primordial chaos, where the powers of darkness hold sway...As a long-awaited coda to Argento's "Three Mothers" trilogy, [it] may not be exactly what was expected, but it is perfectly satisfying resolution...."[39]

Argento has noted that he is dismissive of critical reaction, saying that "the critics don't understand very well. But critics are not important – absolutely not important. Because now audiences don't believe anymore in critics. Many years ago critics wrote long articles about films. Now in seven lines they are finished: 'The story is this. The actor is this. The color is good.'"[40]

Box office performance

In Italy, La Terza madre generated $827,000 in two days at 273 theaters. By the end of its opening week in 303 theaters it had amassed $1,917,934 and took the 4th spot at the Italian box office. To date it has taken 2,077,000 Euros ($3,114,070). During its first week of limited theatrical release in the United States, Mother of Tears grossed $19,418 at seven theaters, for a per theater gross of $2,774, taking 55th place on Variety's weekly box office chart.[25]

Soundtrack

Claudio Simonetti composed the soundtrack for Mother of Tears, which was completed in early April 2007 after four months of work.[15] He chose a classical style with Gothic influences present in many of the choruses. Simonetti described the score as "very different" from his previous work due to the subject matter of the film.[15] The music was influenced by his own work for Argento's Masters of Horror episodes ("Jenifer" and "Pelts") as well as composers such as Carl Orff, Jerry Goldsmith, and Bernard Herrmann (among others).[15] The score also incorporates electronic music and influences from Simonetti's earlier work on Argento films, such as Suspiria and Phenomena.[15]

The piece at the end of Simonetti's "Mater Lachrimarum" is called "Dulcis in Fondo" and was performed by his heavy metal band, Daemonia.[15] Cradle of Filth frontman Dani Filth recorded a song with Simonetti, Mater Lacrimarum, for the soundtrack of the film.[41]

The soundtrack was recorded in the Acquario Studio of Castelnuovo in Porto-Roma. The symphonic orchestra parts were performed by the Orchestra D.I.M.I. The choral parts were performed by the Nova Lyrica chorus in February 2007.[42] Both were recorded in Lead Studios in Rome with the help of sound-man Giuseppe Ranieri. Filmmakers finished dubbing the soundtrack into the film on 5 April 2007.[15] At the preview during the Cannes Film Festival, journalist Alan Jones described Simonetti's score as an "unqualified success".[26]

The soundtrack was released around the same time as the film's Italian wide release (31 October 2007) by Edel Music.[43]

References

  1. "The Mother of Tears (2007)". Box Office Mojo.
  2. Argento, Dario. "Interview with Dario Argento and Daria Nicolodi Taken from FANGORIA Magazine – Volume No. 35 Issue 4". Master of Colors Dario Argento website. Archived from the original on 6 March 2005. Retrieved 28 May 2006.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "Argento to raise THE THIRD MOTHER". Fangoria. 9 December 2003. Archived from the original on 7 November 2007.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Jones, Alan (17 November 2006). "La terza madre". Dark Dreams. Archived from the original on 28 November 2006. Retrieved 15 December 2006.
  5. Muglia, Alessandra (22 September 2005). "A Dario Argento "Piace Hitchcock"". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). Retrieved 19 June 2007.
  6. Decker, Sean (23 November 2005). "Scripters talk Argento's MOTHER OF TEARS". Fangoria.com. Archived from the original on 31 December 2005. Retrieved 23 September 2007.
  7. 1 2 "Dario Argento" (in Italian and English). Profondo Rosso. February 2006. Archived from the original on 6 May 2006. Retrieved 19 June 2007.
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  9. "Dario Argento" (in Italian and English). Profondo Rosso. 10 March 2006. Archived from the original on 6 May 2006. Retrieved 19 June 2007.
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  11. Jones, Alan (29 May 2006). Mackenzie, Michael (ed.). "Official Mother of Tears news". Whiggles.com. Retrieved 14 March 2007.
  12. "Dario Argento set to deliver THE MOTHER OF TEARS!". Ain't It Cool News. 17 May 2006. Retrieved 20 May 2007.
  13. "Flash" (in Italian and English). Profondo Rosso. 18 July 2006. Archived from the original on 2 May 2007. Retrieved 20 June 2007.
  14. Gingold, Michael (12 October 2006). "MOTHER OF TEARS ready to roll". Fangoria. Archived from the original on 26 April 2007. Retrieved 20 May 2007.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Simonetti, Claudio (5 April 2007). "LA TERZA MADRE, NEWS" (in Italian). Archived from the original on 17 April 2008. Retrieved 11 April 2007.
  16. "Dario Argento – Gunnar Hansen – Luigi Cozzi" (in Italian and English). Profondo Rosso. 7 March 2007. Archived from the original on 3 June 2007. Retrieved 14 March 2007.
  17. 1 2 "Dario Argento – Profondo Rosso The Musical" (in Italian). Profondo Rosso. 16 March 2007. Archived from the original on 3 May 2007. Retrieved 18 March 2007.
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  25. 1 2 "Weekly Box Office, Jun 06–12 Jun 2008". Variety. Retrieved 16 June 2008.
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  27. Timpone, Tony (14 May 2007). "IT'S ALIVE! First look at Burbank Fango schedule". Fangoria. Archived from the original on 30 May 2006. Retrieved 18 May 2007.
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  40. Cinefantastique Online: Dario Argento Sheds the Mother of All Tears
  41. Roadrunner Records (10 August 2007). "CRADLE OF FILTH" (in Italian). Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 11 August 2007.
  42. "Nova Lyrica – Coro lirico – Roma" (in Italian). Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 4 May 2007.
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