A group of strong women struggle and dance gracefully through the ups and downs of life. It's a feminist film by all means, not only because it features women characters and tells stories about sisterhood, but also because it maps out a lanscape on which women can both be economically independent and enjoy freedom and marriage at the same time.
As Virginia Woolf calls for a room of their own for women writers, this film sees writing as one of a few ways asides from being a spectacle for talented women to stand out. It presents a limited picture, but it stays hopeful.
Greta Geriwg's color palette is noteworthy with her perfect mixing and flow of flashbacks and realtime. The film consciously showcases the complexity of desires, failures, loss and love of women. Women might be feeble or little, but their vision can be far and they can live up to the full.