A Communication With Light: Azazel Jacobs on "His Three Daughters" | Interviews | Roger Ebert
Briefly

Simultaneously showing how death alienates us from ourselves and brings us closer to community, Azazel Jacobs' tender and trenchant 'His Three Daughters' explores the limits of what we can control while grieving.
The film wastes no time throwing viewers into the whirlwind of conflict that befalls the titular three daughters as they gather at their father Vincent's house.
'I think that represents most of what this experience has been for me ... that there's no beginning. It's just suddenly you're just in it, and it's just happening,' Jacobs shared.
The film puts its characters in boxes, making certain parts of their personalities their defining attributes, as they struggle with their father’s impending death.
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