Cool, 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.
The film fearlessly plumbs the depths of this intense mother-son relationship, and also explores the ways in which role models affect children's lives.
50
TV Guide MagazineKen Fox
TV Guide MagazineKen Fox
Works better as a look at life among a family of Croatian immigrants in Vienna during the nightmare years of the Balkan conflicts than an exploration of the psychosexual tension between a prostitute and her son.
50
New York PostLou Lumenick
New York PostLou Lumenick
Modestly entertaining.
50
New York Daily NewsElizabeth Weitzman
New York Daily NewsElizabeth Weitzman
Austrian director Michael Sturminger's debut feature creates a visually evocative environment in which to explore some significant themes, from religious repression to Freudian guilt.
50
Village Voice
Village Voice
The 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.
50
L.A. WeeklyElla Taylor
L.A. WeeklyElla Taylor
In the end, Sturminger's virginal insistence on draining the mother-son relationship of all eros also drains it of interest.
The misfortune, of Michael Stürminger's low-boil melodrama is that it's entirely too familiar. Underneath the movie's cool surface beats the heart of a 1940s tear-jerker. It's a subzero "Stella Dallas."