A new film
about a father-daughter relationship in a world without women was shaped by
Casey Affleck's own struggles with becoming a single parent, the Oscar-winning
actor said at the Berlin Film Festival where "Light Of My Life" is
premiering.
In the
movie, which Affleck directs, he plays a father who isolates his daughter from
society in a desperate attempt to protect her from a pandemic that has wiped
out most women.
In this
dystopia, the father and daughter - dressed as a boy - fear discovery and plan
escape routes wherever they stop. They trek through rain and snow, camping in
woodland and seeking shelter in an abandoned house, a church and a home with
three religious men.
Affleck, who
won the best actor Oscar in 2017 for his performance in the family drama
"Manchester by the Sea", said some ideas in the new film could be
considered feminist but his goal had not been to make a film with a political
message.
"It's
certainly about a young woman sort of asserting herself as the storyteller and
beginning to define herself with the narrative that she chooses to tell,"
Affleck told a news conference.
Anna
Pniowsky, who played the daughter - the only female in the movie other than her
mother, who features solely in flashbacks - said: "I think it is partially
about showing that women are critical in this world."
Affleck, who
divorced his wife Summer Phoenix in 2017, said he was finding it hard to adjust
to life as a single parent when working on the movie and got the idea for it
from stories he had told his children and conversations he had with them.
Affleck -
the younger brother of actor and director Ben Affleck - has been accused of
sexual harassment by female crew members on an earlier film. Two lawsuits
alleging unwanted advances were settled out of court for undisclosed sums. An
attorney for Affleck denied the accusations at the time.
He said
"Light of My Life" had been conceived before the #MeToo movement that
took off in 2017 in response to accusations of sexual assault and harassment in
the entertainment industry.
But he
added: "I think everyone out there has had to do some sort of
self-reckoning and think about culturally what part they play and how they can
play a positive role no matter how much they like to think of themselves as one
of the good guys."
Asked
whether the movie reflected difficult times in his own life, Affleck said that
as an actor, "your private life has been sort of invaded", and he had
wondered whether to wait until his children were older to pursue his career.
"It's
definitely difficult sometimes - you know I've developed a pretty thick skin
but then you have kids and they don't have such thick skin and you have to do a
lot of explaining to them about the world prematurely," he said.
Film explores fatherhood in world without women
Reviewed by SenseTechGroup
on
February 09, 2019
Rating:
Reviewed by SenseTechGroup
on
February 09, 2019
Rating:


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