Home #Hwoodtimes FATHER MOTHER SISTER BROTHER: Jim Jarmusch’s Latest Inde Film About the Failure...

FATHER MOTHER SISTER BROTHER: Jim Jarmusch’s Latest Inde Film About the Failure of Connections Between Generations

0

On Wednesday, October 22, at the AFI FEST 2025 was a screening of Jim Jarmusch’s latest film Father Mother Sister Brother, which recently garnered the Golden Lion Award at this year’s Venice International Film Festival. The film will be released in U.S. theatres on December 24. Legendary indie auteur Jim Jarmusch’s newest work is a wry gem about the timeworn drift of familial intimacy. In this collection of three quietly humorous stories, families struggle to bridge or avoid the distance that has grown between them. Starring Tom Waits, Adam Driver, Cate Blanchett, Vicky Krieps and Charlotte Rampling, each episode concerns a different family in a different country – one in New Jersey, the others in Dublin and Paris – but connected through thematic and visual motifs.

The awkward silences between the adult children and their aging but lively parents are wide enough to drive a tractor-trailer through, and in these moments of suppressed expression reside the failures of vulnerability. With guarded hush, the characters perform a ballet of emotional avoidance, slipping into falsehoods, half-truths and superficial niceties. Jarmusch finds the tension and the humor in these lacunae, as his characters attempt to hide themselves but can’t find the words for convincing cover. The final chapter turns many of these themes on their head and gives voice to the unspoken affinities animating family dynamics, in which enduring love and total comprehension need not be one and the same.

JIm Jarmusch, Director

Jim Jarmusch has made anthology films before: Mystery Train (1989), Night on Earth (1991), Coffee and Cigarettes (2003). In fact, he could claim to be the pre-eminent specialist in this now very unfashionable movie form. But with his new one, a deeply pleasing and gently quietist triptych on the subject of family, he is giving us something new and personal.

Tom Waits as the Father visited by his son Jeff and wife Emily

It’s the sense of mortality and the gathering cloud of darkness over our heads as we enter middle age, a perpetual nagging worry about the health and happiness of our elderly parents, with the guilt and sadness of not going to see them, or seeing them only rarely, and the related feeling of closeness – or perhaps the opposite – with your siblings for whom these parents are the number one topic of conversation. Then there’s the feeling of relief mixed with dissatisfaction and unease on the long car journey home.

Adam Driver as Jeff

In “Father,” Jeff (Adam Driver) and Emily (Mayim Biyalik) journey to the remote New Jersey home of their estranged dad (Tom Waits).

Mayim Biyalik as Emily, Jeff’s wife

In the second segment, “Mother,” Timothea (Cate Blanchett) and Lilith (Vicky Krieps) head to afternoon tea with their Irish author mom (Charlotte Rampling). In the final section, “Sister Brother,” Skye (Indya Moore) and Billy (Luka Sabbat), the two grown children of a recently deceased couple who we glimpse in photos, visit the Paris apartment they were raised in to close out their father and mother’s affairs.

Cate Blanchett as Timothea – en route to visit her mother

Each of the segments opens similarly, with the two siblings in a car driving to their parents’ respective homes; in “Mother,” though, Timothea and Lilith are in separate vehicles, the former dealing with engine breakdown, the latter riding with her girlfriend, Jeanette (Sarah Greene), who she passes off as her Uber driver. Most of these introductory scenes are shot with glaringly obvious rear projection. The aesthetic falseness makes the conversations between characters feel like they’re occurring in a self-delusional bubble, which is apt considering that one of the film’s overarching themes is the ultimate unknowability of the people who birthed you.

Charlotte Rampling (as the Mother), Cate Blanchett (Timothea), Vicky Krieps (Lilith)

The movie is divided into three (apparently) unrelated panels of drama, events taking place in parallel in three different parts of the world: rural US, Dublin and Paris, and with images and gestures that fortuitously echo each other. In the first, Mayim Bialik and Adam Driver play siblings Emily and Jeff, making the arduous trip out into the countryside to see their ageing dad, played by Tom Waits. His place seems chaotic and on the verge of poverty, an instant source of worry to them both, and Jeff also reproaches himself with having given his dad money over the years. And yet in the course of their awkward visit, they are disconcerted to notice what appears to be a genuine Rolex on the old guy’s wrist and there is evidence that their father is slyly faking his elderly disarray for opaque reasons of his own.

Lilith & Timothea looking at theri mother’s latest novel

Meanwhile, in Dublin, Charlotte Rampling plays a characteristically self-possessed and self-assured woman who is welcoming her two grownup daughters for their annual visit for tea. She is entirely content to make these visits a rarity. They are the trendy Tim (Vicky Krieps) with pink hair, and the more staid and uptight Lilith, played, a little stagily, by Cate Blanchett, with glasses and sensible shoes.

Skye (Indya Moore) and Billy (Luka Sabbat),

And finally, in Paris, siblings Skye and Billy – non-identical twins, in fact – are played by Indya Moore and Luka Sabbat; their parents have just died, apparently piloting a light aircraft in the Azores, a deadpan-jokey demise that the actors carry off with complete real-world seriousness. They pay a final visit to their late mum and dad’s Paris apartment, and chat to the housekeeper, played by iconic French veteran Françoise Lebrun. And they make a trip out to a storage depot and gaze at their parents’ belongings, crammed into a lockup. This was the material of their parents’ lives, and Skye and Billy have already wonderingly gone through old photos and marriage and birth certificates. It all seems like evidence of something. But what?

The movie returns us to an age-old question: who are or were our parents? Did they have real existences before we were born that we will never understand? And are our own existences destined to be effaced and rendered irrelevant or taboo by our own children? For me, the first and third sections are the most naturalistically convincing as portraits of real life, the second is more theatrical, although the weird, slyly comic echoes of each other in each of the sections undermine or at least complicate this reality effect. You might sit through this film waiting for a crisis or a confrontation: some explosion of temper or passionate demand for honesty. None will arrive. Basically, there is a contentment and calm here, an acceptance and a Zen simplicity that is a cleansing of the moviegoing palate, or perhaps the fiction-consuming palate in general. It is a film to savor.

The shaggily comic first segment is centered around the befuddled interactions between the father and his offspring, building to an O. Henry-like twist that reframes everything we’ve seen prior. The second keeps us at a distance from the polar-opposite sisters and their icy matriarch, the trio’s very precisely picked wardrobes and obviously studied behavior helping to render them as mysterious at the end as they are at the beginning. And the third is extremely warm and wistful with a lingering hint of bittersweetness, since the unspoken notion—of both the vignette and the film at large – is that we often feel more fondly for our blood relatives after they’re gone.

More than any other Jarmusch film, Father Mother Sister Brother is haunted by mortality and the inevitable passage of time. Mark your calendars for the date of December 24, when the film will be released in selected theaters.