May 9, 2017
On today's show, we have a messy love triangle to sort through. No, I'm not referring to any sordid entanglements with our trio of panelists - host Lady P, co-producer Martin Kessler, and Battleship Pretension's Scott Nye - but rather the messy bed hopping and relationship dramas of the central trio in Jean Eustache's The Mother and the Whore (1973). Despite it being a notoriously difficult movie to see, The Mother and the Whore has drummed up enough critical support to land the 59th slot on the "Sight and Sound Greatest Films of all Time" list. The film stars Jean-Pierre Léaud as a hapless thirty-something layabout, who's somehow managed to get not one, but two women, to fall for him. This is the original Quarterlife crisis movie, sort of in the vein of the HBO series Girls, where the characters are both endearing and completely insufferable.