post_page_cover

Sarah Carter’s In Her Name Is About Liberation (Exclusive Video)

Dec 25, 2023


Sarah Carter’s feature directorial debut, In Her Name, is a story of liberation, self-acceptance, grief, and healing.

In Her Name follows two sisters, Freya (Erin Hammond) and Fiona (Ciera Danielle) who are forced to spend time together as their father is dying. Together, they end up discovering new truths about themselves and each other.

After a successful world premiere at Tribeca in 2022 where it received the Audience Award, In Her Name will begin streaming on Tribeca Online on Friday, Dec. 1. You can access Tribeca Online on Apple TV, Fire TV, Roku, and in the standalone app on your iPhone or Android.

Sarah Carter on the Inspiration for In Her Name

Carter, who served as writer, director and producer on the film, drew inspiration for the script from Lebanese painter Huguette Caland, whose son, Philippe Caland, plays Freya and Fiona’s father, Marv.

“She is a woman who I have always been very inspired by. Her story is that she had to flee her country and leave her family in lot of ways in order to pursue mastery and a career as a painter,” Carter tells MovieMaker.

She calls Philippe Caland “a brilliant actor” who grew up in “that kind of L.A. art world that we’re poking fun at in the film.”

Also Read: In ‘Betty Bites Back’, Jessica Michael Davis Puts an Unexpected Spin on Female Empowerment

“He did have to reckon with finding himself and his own artistic identity in the shadow of his mother’s extremely radical liberal pursuit of her voice in the world,” she says. “So there’s a lot of irony, juxtaposition, alchemy, and transcendence in the film, just playing with those dynamics in a moment of grief. He’s dying in the film — the father’s dying. And Huguette Caland had recently died right before we started writing this. So I was very influenced by my awareness of how death kind of informs healing in the family.”

But make no mistake — this is not a story about death. It’s a story about freedom.

“It’s about liberation. It’s about finding oneself in spite of the given circumstances. It’s about radical acceptance and free expression of that, whether you’re an artist or not. It’s two estranged sisters who come together at this moment of death in the family and realize how much they love each other, essentially, and sort of let go of differences.”

You can watch an exclusive behind-the-scenes clip of Carter talking about making the movie along with some footage in the video above.

“In Her Name forced me to wear every hat, it forced me to face every challenge imaginable, but more than anything to trust the process and trust life,” Carter says in the clip.

In addition to Tribeca, In Her Name also played at Nòt Film Fest, Red Rock Film Festival, Imagine This Women’s International Film Festival, Montreal Independent Film Festival, Vancouver Independent Film Festival, Toronto Independent Film Festival of CIFT, Florence Film Awards, Downtown Film Festival Los Angeles, and Festival of Cinema NYC.

You can watch the exclusive BTS clip above.

Main Image: Erin Hammond and Ciera Danielle in In Her Name courtesy of Sarah Carter.

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
Publisher: Source link

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
The Running Man Review | Flickreel

Two of the Stephen King adaptations we’ve gotten this year have revolved around “games.” In The Long Walk, a group of young recruits must march forward until the last man is left standing. At least one person was inclined to…

Dec 15, 2025

Diane Kruger Faces a Mother’s Worst Nightmare in Paramount+’s Gripping Psychological Thriller

It's no easy feat being a mother — and the constant vigilance in anticipation of a baby's cry, the sleepless nights, and the continuous need to anticipate any potential harm before it happens can be exhausting. In Little Disasters, the…

Dec 15, 2025

It’s a Swordsman Versus a Band of Cannibals With Uneven Results

A traditional haiku is anchored around the invocation of nature's most ubiquitous objects and occurrences. Thunder, rain, rocks, waterfalls. In the short poems, the complexity of these images, typically taken for granted, are plumbed for their depth to meditate on…

Dec 13, 2025

Train Dreams Review: A Life in Fragments

Clint Bentley’s Train Dreams, adapted from Denis Johnson’s 2011 novella, is one of those rare literary-to-film transitions that feels both delicate and vast—an intimate portrait delivered on an epic historical canvas. With Bentley co-writing alongside Greg Kwedar, the film becomes…

Dec 13, 2025