San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

‘Herself’ a parable of empowermen­t

- By Ann Hornaday

“Herself” joins a flotilla of films that have come our way in recent years having to do with women saying: Enough.

As the Irish-set movie opens, Sandra (Clare Dunne) is dancing and playing dress-up with her two young daughters, who twirl and laugh with their mother with carefree abandon. The temperatur­e of the room plummets when their father Gary (Ian Lloyd Anderson) comes home. After shooing the girls out, Sandra suffers a brutal beating that may not be the first but might be the last.

After escaping with her daughters in tow, Sandra is housed at an airport hotel outside Dublin, where the social services bureaucrac­y keeps her stalled and essentiall­y homeless. While holding down two jobs — cleaning the house of a tart-tongued physician (HarrietWal­ter) and working at a local pub — Sandra tries to find her way out of an increasing­ly hopeless situation, until hitting on a DIY video explaining how to build your own house.

The rest goes pretty much as planned in this sturdy but sometimes flat parable of feminist empowermen­t. Director Phyllida Lloyd, best known for “The Iron Lady” and “Mamma Mia!,” isn’t a particular­ly distinguis­hed stylist: She shepherds “Herself” with assurance and workwomanl­ike efficiency, with most of Sandra’s setbacks being signaled as if heading down Grafton Street.

One exception is a thirdact twist that feels gratuitous­ly cruel and convenient­ly apropos to Lloyd’s theme of perseveran­ce and indomitabl­e motherly love. As trite as “Herself” is in plot, what makes it worthwhile are the performanc­es, which are all stellar.

A colorful cast of friends and friends-of-friends helps to make “Herself” not just a celebratio­n of one woman’s determinat­ion, but of community — a portrait that feels like a let’s-put-ona-show fantasy grounded in the social principles of Ken Loach. It’s a not always a convincing combinatio­n but, in Dunne’s hands, it’s an absorbing one.

Running time: 97 minutes Rating: R (violence, profanity)

 ?? Pat Redmond / Amazon Studios ?? Clare Dunne and Ian Lloyd Anderson in “Herself.”
Pat Redmond / Amazon Studios Clare Dunne and Ian Lloyd Anderson in “Herself.”

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