‘Mafia Mamma’ a daring, charming take on woman’s midlife crisis

Monica Bellucci in "Mafia Mamma." (Fabrizio Di Giulio/Courtesy of Bleecker Street/TNS)

Toni Collette, left, and Giulio Corso in “Mafia Mamma.” (Fabrizio Di Giulio/Courtesy of Bleecker Street/TNS)

“Eat, Pray, Love” is so over — ladies, we’ve officially entered the “Threaten, Extort, Kill” era. This unusual new ethos of empowerment is the guiding theory behind Catherine Hardwicke’s crime comedy/feminist manifesto “Mafia Mamma,” starring Toni Collette as Kristin, a harried American mom and marketing exec who discovers her own power after she ascends to the top of an Italian crime family. Aretha Franklin sang a girl power anthem about “R-E-S-P-E-C-T,” but what Kristin finds in Rome is a little “rispetto,” something she was sorely lacking in her previous life.