MovieChat Forums > The Age of Adaline (2015) Discussion > Her having lunch with her elderly daught...

Her having lunch with her elderly daughter was sad


This is why immortality would hurt, watching people become elderly before your very eyes.

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Did you feel the mother and daughter relationship was well portrayed? This is where the story fails, for my liking. There is very little tenderness between them so I didn't feel sad during that lunch scene. Adeline is always so detached, and while that is a requirement to protect herself in many situations, time with your child should be one place where you can show a little warmth. She never once convinced me that she cared about anyone but herself.

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I thought it was lacking, too. Like they hardly see each other. Surely they've moved enough that they could seem grandmother and granddaughter and have a relationship known by others that way. If Adaline moves every few years then why wouldn't they just do that? Did her daughter never get married or anything? It wasn't how I would play it.

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Put yourself in her daughter's shoes. Just because her mother has this incredibly dramatic life, doesn't mean she wants to be always involved in that. She, like other kids, wants to grow up and be an adult and have her own life. Plenty of mothers and daughters don't live in the same city. The scene where Flemming discusses moving to Arizona is meant to illustrate that she is a grown woman, has her own issues in aging (of which Adaline knows nothing), and has her own life.

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Some comment about Queen Elizabeth living to see Charles and Anne become seniors.

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It's just something you have to make peace with as you get older. No life is perfect.

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If I was Adaline I would have snatched that salt from her hands, tell her salt is bad for you, and then proceed to put a healthy portion of it on my entree. But then again, I'm a bitch.

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