TLDR
Girls with daddy issues, get your tissues ready is all I’m saying.
What it's about
In a Washington, D.C. jail, a group of imprisoned fathers prepare for a special dance with their daughters. In the process, they talk about many things, including the unjust prison system in America and the expectations people have about Black fatherhood.
The take
There are three threads in Daughters that directors Natalie Rae and Angela Patton weave beautifully together. The first thread follows the incarcerated men who gather every week to talk about fatherhood, mostly, because of the program that they’re in, but also: masculinity, race, systemic poverty, social mobility, and the skewed prison system in America. The discussions are raw and enlightening. “This isn’t normal, that we’re all in here,” one of the men wisely says, and it feels special to witness that moment of shared empowerment. The second thread follows the daughters, whose ages range from 5 to 15. In line with the film’s honesty, it shows us girls who miss their fathers and girls who don’t; girls who know everything about them and those who can’t even remember their faces. One is oblivious, the other suicidal. This part is enlightening in a different way: you hope the kids are too young to realize what’s going on, but that’s almost never the case. The final thread is where the two others meet: it offers the most heartbreaking parts of the film, but also the most beautiful. Both parties dress up, take pictures, move on the dancefloor, and say their inevitable goodbyes, and all this is captured in the same darklit, grainy color as the film cameras the fathers and daughters are given to document the dance. The direction and editing is artistic, but never in a gratuitious way. Instead, like other parts of the film, it’s filled with gentleness and empathy.
What stands out
Ten-year-old Santana who is so wise beyond her age. Forced to parent not just her younger siblings but her young parents as well, she already has her whole life planned. “You could give me a million dollars and I still won’t be a mother,” she insists. But the moment she sees her father, she turns back into the child she is. Fellow eldest daughters, if you know, you know.