The material has a lot of similarities with 20th Century Women, a kind of patchwork narrative with Charlotte Gainsborough's matriarch navigating her life post-divorce and presiding over her children (both biological and "adopted") over the course of the decade. You get a sense of her apartment as this home base everyone's orbiting around, coming together sometimes to quarrel but mostly to love. But Mills' film is populated with more fascinating, diverse, and three-dimensional characters, and is ultimately far more reflective and even ambivalent about its time period than the vague sketch in Passengers. The usual Hers hallmarks are here—scenes of sexual intimacy and a disappearance—but one can't help but feel him succumbing to a particularly enfeebling nostalgia that renders his usual sensitivity merely saccharine. It's a sweet and likable film, too much so for its own good.
Spoiler
The most interesting formal element in the film is the footage of the city drawn from a variety of video and filmic sources he drops in as transitional (or, in one striking instance, POV) shots. It's a bit like an elaboration of the strategy he uses at the very end of This Summer Feeling. As the film nears the end and the present-tense of the narrative starts bleeding into the past-tense of the footage, Hers achieves an undeniable poignancy. One just wishes that it capped off a stronger film.
Also, there's a blink-and-you'll-miss-it cameo from the actress who played Amanda that'll make your heart skip a beat.
Also, there's a blink-and-you'll-miss-it cameo from the actress who played Amanda that'll make your heart skip a beat.