Mothering Sunday (2021) – the quietly devastating period drama now streaming on Netflix – is exactly the kind of film that sneaks in without fanfare and lingers like a bruise you didn’t see coming. Set in 1924 England, in the long shadow of World War I, it unfolds on a single Mother’s Day that changes everything for a young housemaid named Jane Fairchild (Odessa Young). While her employers, the grieving Nivens (Olivia Colman and Colin Firth), are away, Jane seizes a rare chance for an intimate, forbidden afternoon with her secret lover, Paul Sheringham (Josh O’Connor). What begins as stolen passion spirals into something far more haunting: a meditation on love, class, loss, and the unspoken wreckage war leaves behind.

No bombastic score swells to cue your tears. No grand speeches or dramatic confrontations. The power lies in what’s withheld – the silences, the averted eyes, the weight of unsaid words. Olivia Colman and Colin Firth, in supporting but pivotal roles as the childless couple still shattered by the sons they lost in the war, deliver performances of exquisite restraint. Every glance between them carries years of quiet devastation; their marriage is a fragile shell held together by routine and shared sorrow. Colman’s Clarrie is warm yet brittle, Firth’s Godfrey stoic to the point of invisibility – together, they embody how grief can hollow people out without ever raising a voice.
The film is slow, deliberate, almost meditative. Director Eva Husson (adapting Graham Swift’s novel via Alice Birch’s screenplay) lets moments breathe: sunlight on skin, a hand lingering too long, the sound of birds in an empty house. It’s emotionally unforgiving because it’s honest – love survives bombs and trenches, but time, class divides, and the slow grind of ordinary life can erode it just as surely. The post-war setting isn’t backdrop; it’s the air everyone breathes, thick with absence and what-ifs.
This isn’t flashy entertainment. It’s the kind of movie that follows you – into the kitchen while you make tea, into bed that night, into memories you’d rather not revisit. It hurts because it rings true: pain doesn’t always shout; sometimes it settles in silence and stays.
My rating: 8.5/10. A masterclass in understated acting and storytelling. If you’re in the mood for something that demands your full attention and rewards it with deep, aching resonance, stream it now. Just be prepared: when the credits roll, it doesn’t let go easily.
Have you watched Mothering Sunday yet? Did it hit you as hard as the buzz suggests? 😔