This Blog, established since Dec 2001, is a place dedicated to the talented and beautiful Hollywood actress Naomi Watts. All images and videos published here are owned by their respective owners or photographers. No copyright infringement whatsoever is intended or implied. The owner of this Blog is not associated with the actress or anyone around her. This Blog is non-profit making and is operated purely for personal interest. We welcome all discreet and well-intentional comments and feedback. (Note: this site is best viewed with Firefox)

Jan 9, 2011

Naomi Watts as Elizabeth in "Mother and Child"

- by Alex in Movieland

There were at least three performances of Naomi Watts released in 2010, none of which gained too much love from the critics. However, I was completely captivated by her performance as a cold-hearted seductive lawyer in the fabulous indie film Mother and Child.

One might actually argue that this is a leading performance, due to the three-separate-stories structure that dominates the first part of the film. Mother and Child is a story about adoption and talks about three different women, each of them representing a different perspective on the subject: a woman obsessing on a decision made years ago, the child she gave up for adoption who’s now a successful lawyer and a woman desperately trying to adopt.

Naomi plays Elizabeth, a beautiful, confident, seductive woman who’s made a great career for herself, but who decided on a rule of not getting emotionally attached to anyone, most likely due to the lack of love from her childhood. As a baby, she was given up for adoption, but her not-so-happy childhood made her become a woman who’s completely against the idea of a family or any kind of stability and long term commitment.

In the first part of the film we see her as a seductive woman, who plays with men and has no guilty conscience about destroying somebody’s marriage. She is determined, aware of her charms and finds pleasure in sexdates that always put her in a domineering, in control, situation. Naomi, of course, is great at playing this side of the character, combining both the flirtatious nature of Elizabeth and her coldness and distant way of treating those around her.

With one single look, she can easily turn into the bitchiest woman, yet always giving us the feeling there’s more to this character than we might’ve thought. Naomi creates her in such an interesting way, that I was constantly curious to see what’s gonna happen to Elizabeth, as I was anticipating a change in the character.

And the change does happen, as a completely unexpected pregnancy transforms Elizabeth into a totally different woman, liberating her in a way from her childhood trauma and finally giving her something/someone to love and to protect, someone who might love her unconditionally and become her reason for existing.

With great talent, Naomi makes the change completely believable and delivers an even more likeable Elizabeth. Because I don’t want to spoil the film for those who haven’t seen it, I’ll stop here with my writing. But I do have to give Naomi credit for her acting in what is by far the most touching, heartbreaking scene in a 2010 film for me: the elevator scene, with Elizabeth and a blind girl that she befriends – in a scene that lasts less than a minute, Naomi manages to gives us so much without saying a single word, making this film moment completely and undeniably heartbreaking.

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5 comments:

Amy said...

Oh yeah thank you so much for appreciating her.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for posting.

johnQ said...

This is how I thought of her in the film. Thanks for posting.

dalurae said...

Coming out of the theatre my first impression was all three-Bening's Karen, Watts' Elizabeth, and Washington's Lucy-were equally lead characters, but on a second viewing I came to the conclusion that Elizabeth kinda built a bridge between two entirely different people and Watts therefore deserved to be shown first in the end credits. It's shame Watts' performance went pretty much unnoticed. Sigh. A great post, by the way.

dalurae said...

I think I published my comment but it disappeared! :P Anyways, after watching this movie my first impression was that all three-Karen, Lucy, and Elizabeth-were equally lead characters, but on a second viewing I came to the conclusion that Elizabeth not only plays both the 'mother and the child' the title refers to but also builds a bridge between two entirely different people and provides the source of the two's newfound happiness, so Watts deserves to be shown first in the end credits. It's a shame Watts' performance went pretty much unnoticed...Sigh.