Monday, October 19, 2009

Motherhood Watch Free ENGLISH Movie Online , Motherhood Movie Review 2009, Free Poster

Motherhood English Movie 2009
Cast Maya Ri Sanchez, Stephanie Szostak,
Anthony Edwards, Minnie Driver, Uma Thurman Director: Katherine Dieckmann Producer: John Wells Screenwriter: Katherine Dieckmann Art Director: Debbie De Villa Genre: Comedy Release Date: October 23, 2009 MPAA Rating: PG-13 for language, sexual references and a brief drug comment. Distributor: Freestyle Releasing, LLC

The Film Motherhood English Movie Trailer Motherhood Video Songs For English film Download Free Wallpaper Motherhood Music preview cast crew dvd Movie Review The day-in-the-life feature has Thurman as a harried mother of two preparing for her daughter’s sixth birthday party as myriad urban challenges confront her.
Driver and Edwards will play Thurman’s best friend and husband, respectively.

Shot entirely on location in New York’s West Village, “Motherhood” is a comedy distilling the dilemmas of the maternal state into the trials and tribulations of one pivotal day. “Motherhood” forms a genre of one – no other movie has dedicated itself in quite this way to probing exactly what it takes to be a mother, with both humor and authenticity. “Motherhood,” a funny and poignant look at the daily challenges mothers everywhere face, is a hymn to the trials and joys of raising children and the necessity of not losing yourself in the process.
Synopsis: Uma Thurman, Minnie Driver, and Anthony Edwards star in writer/director Katherine Dieckmann’s slice of life indie Motherhood, which follows a hapless mother of two as she attempts to prepare for her daughter’s rapidly approaching sixth birthday party. Along the way, the harried mother is forced to contend with a monumental series of unexpected urban challenges. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Starring: Uma Thurman, Anthony Edwards, Minnie Driver Eliza Welch is a former fiction writer-turned-mom-blogger with her own site, “The Bjorn Identity.” Taking place in a single day in Eliza’s life that nearly pushes her to the tipping point, which includes preparing for and throwing her daughter’s 6th birthday party, minding her toddler son, and navigating playground politics with overbearing moms. On top of it all, Eliza decides to enter a contest run by an upscale parenting magazine. All she has to do is write 500 words answering the deceptively simple question, “What Does Motherhood Mean to Me?” In the process of trying by nightfall to put these thoughts into words that don’t “sound like bad ad copy,”