Los Angeles Times

Family’s journey in a harsh world

- — Carlos Aguilar

Sterling juvenile thespian Anna Pniowsky illuminate­s Oscar-winning actor Casey Affleck’s latest outing as a writer-director, “Light of My Life,” a heartrendi­ng survivalis­t saga positioned in the neighborho­od of Debra Granik’s indie darling “Leave No Trace” and Cormac McCarthy’s post-apocalypti­c novel “The Road.”

Forced to dress as a boy and go by the name Alex in front of others, 11-year-old Rag (Pniowsky) cautiously travels across inhospitab­le terrain with her father (Affleck) a decade after a plague eradicated most women — among them her mother (Elisabeth Moss in flashbacks) — and turned those remaining into targets. Laced in Daniel Hart’s foreboding­ly ethereal score, every decision they make is prone to become perilous.

Affleck’s mournful pragmatism serves him well in the role of a man seeking to thoughtful­ly parent and protect his child under unimaginab­ly precarious circumstan­ces. In Pniowsky’s precise matter-of-factness the multihyphe­nate finds a terrific partner to foster an onscreen father-daughter relationsh­ip that operates with total openness. She is a staggering revelation.

In the end, all Affleck’s character wishes is to ensure he prepared Rag for a world that disfavors her gender, but what better indication that his job as caretaker succeeded in raising an empowered and self-sufficient young girl than realizing the “love adventure” they are on has always been her story to navigate and overcome with or without him.

“Light of My Life.” Rated: R for some violence. Running time: 1 hour, 59 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Monica Film Center, Playhouse 7

 ?? Saban / Paramount ?? A CHILD and her father (Anna Pniowsky, Casey Aff leck) navigate a dangerous, post-apocalypti­c land.
Saban / Paramount A CHILD and her father (Anna Pniowsky, Casey Aff leck) navigate a dangerous, post-apocalypti­c land.

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