Things to Come – first look review | Little White Lies

Festivals

Things to Come – first look review

13 Feb 2016

Words by Adam Woodward

Two people walking on a path through a wooded area, one wearing a grey jumper and the other an orange top.
Two people walking on a path through a wooded area, one wearing a grey jumper and the other an orange top.
Isabelle Hup­pert stars as a woman calm­ly los­ing con­trol in Mia Hansen-Løve’s life-affirm­ing fifth feature.

Life may teach us to accept cer­tain incon­testable truths, but it doesn’t always pre­pare us for them. We know, for exam­ple, that our chil­dren will one day forge their own paths, just as our par­ents will reach the end of theirs. How we cope with sud­den­ly find­ing our­selves at the mid­point of our own jour­ney is the focus of Mia Hansen-Løve’s trans­for­ma­tive fifth fea­ture, which marks a pro­nounced shift in the writer/director’s out­look on grow­ing up and all the anx­i­eties and pres­sures that come with it.

Things to Come is a sen­si­tive, bit­ter­sweet por­trait of a mid­dle-aged woman named Nathalie, played by Isabelle Hup­pert, who is forced to reeval­u­ate her life after her hus­band of 25 years, Heinz (André Mar­con), con­fess­es to hav­ing an affair. As a long-serv­ing phi­los­o­phy teacher at a local Parisian high school, Nathalie prides her­self on her abil­i­ty to stim­u­late her stu­dents’ minds while encour­ag­ing them to think for them­selves. Now she must ask seri­ous ques­tions about her own exis­tence, all while hav­ing her per­spec­tive con­stant­ly chal­lenged by her two free-spir­it­ed chil­dren and a charis­mat­ic for­mer pupil named Fabi­en (Roman Kolin­ka), all of whom drift in and out of Nathalie’s story.

Nathalie quotes Jean-Jacques Rousseau in class while doing her best to avoid being dragged into a debate on a pro­posed retire­ment reform act which, if passed, will direct­ly impact her more than the ado­les­cent pro­test­ers who con­front her out­side the school gates. Yet although she even­tu­al­ly comes to doubt her­self, this is by no means a time of cri­sis for Nathalie – she takes every­thing in her stride with dig­ni­ty and a cool head, bely­ing the com­plex and con­fus­ing nature of her predicament.

Indeed, Things to Come is a film com­prised of still moments of self-reflec­tion rather than sweep­ing dra­mat­ic ges­tures. Like each of Hansen-Løve’s pre­vi­ous films, from 2007’s Tout est par­don­né through to 2014’s Eden, it offers an inti­mate exam­i­na­tion of a char­ac­ter enter­ing a peri­od of read­just­ment fol­low­ing a per­son­al loss or sep­a­ra­tion. It’s about how easy it is to lose con­trol over the things we hold dear, and how oth­er people’s actions can lead us to ques­tion our own beliefs.

It’s also a film con­cerned with fur­ther­ing our under­stand­ing of ful­fil­ment – be it voca­tion­al or domes­tic – and how in life we tend to set­tle at the point at which our pre­con­ceived notions of hap­pi­ness appear to have been met. For Nathalie, the real­i­sa­tion that life rarely plays out as expect­ed arrives late, but not so late that whole­sale changes severe­ly com­pro­mise her well­be­ing. And, as the title sug­gests, there’s a great deal of opti­mism here, too. Nathalie express­es feel­ing lib­er­at­ed both by her husband’s betray­al and the death of her infirm yet over­bear­ing moth­er. She doesn’t dwell on past regrets but instead rev­els in the uncer­tain­ty of the present.

In one par­tic­u­lar­ly cathar­tic scene Nathalie and Heinz trav­el to his family’s pic­turesque sea­side retreat in Brit­tany. While she sets about clear­ing out her wardrobe, he appears over­whelmed by the real­i­sa­tion that this will be her last vis­it. The fact that Nathalie’s con­science is clear allows her to say good­bye while reflect­ing fond­ly on the mem­o­ries they have built togeth­er – whether on their hon­ey­moon or dur­ing count­less fam­i­ly hol­i­days. Con­verse­ly Heinz’s lin­ger­ing guilt over his infi­deli­ty means that he is reluc­tant to let go. There’s an innate sense of tragedy here, but it’s also a strange­ly beau­ti­ful scene, not to men­tion high­ly amus­ing in its frank obser­va­tion of human relationships.

In the end, what Things to Come sig­nals most coher­ent­ly is a young filmmaker’s ascent to true great­ness, although Hansen-Løve’s stand­ing as one of France’s most nat­u­ral­ly gift­ed film­mak­ers is con­firmed long before the clos­ing stages of this remark­able film, when Nathalie’s mid­night search for a black cat show us that only when sur­round­ed by dark­ness can we begin to see the light.

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