The Daily Telegraph

Frontier love story that hits like ice-cold vodka

The World to Come Cert TBC, 98 mins ★★★★★

- By Robbie Collin

Dir: Mona Fastvold Starring: Katherine Waterston, Vanessa Kirby, Casey Affleck, Christophe­r Abbott

‘It has been my experience that those who show the least do not always feel the least,” Tallie (The Crown’s Vanessa Kirby) tells her friend Abigail (Katherine Waterston) in The World to Come. It’s the entire film distilled into a single droplet of dialogue. Mona Fastvold’s breathquic­kening period romance, which premiered at the Venice Film Festival last night, is a picture of frozen surfaces and surging depths. Adapted by Ron Hansen and Jim Shepard from the latter’s 2017 short story, it’s as simultaneo­usly chilling and warming as a slug of ice-cold vodka, and just as liable to make your mind swim and eyes prick.

Abigail is a young farmer’s wife helping her taciturn husband Dyer (Casey Affleck) eke a life from the land in the mid-19th century American north-east (played on screen by Romania). The two have lost their four-year-old daughter Nellie to diphtheria, and their existence has settled into a routine that’s as numbing as the bitter early January weather which causes frost to form in the couple’s bedroom overnight.

Abigail records this and many other observatio­ns in her diary, which provides the film with its voiceover – a device which in other hands might have felt lazy or intrusive, but here makes every scene throb with a private poetry, thanks to the extraordin­ary musicality of the writing itself and Waterston’s delivery of it.

It’s in these passages that we discover the increasing strength of Abigail’s feelings for Tallie, who with her husband Finney (Christophe­r Abbott) has recently moved into a larger farmhouse nearby. Warm and vivacious, with tumbling, tawny hair, Tallie seems to define and fulfil a need in Abigail all at once, and they spend more and more time together, reflecting on their lives and giving one another devotion and support – which Dyer dismisses as “tittering and gossiping away the hours”.

Each of their marriages lacks love, and in fact Tallie’s is abusive – albeit initially in the kind of subtle, ambiguous ways that are rarely portrayed on screen, since they don’t have the obvious showmanshi­p of drunken rages. But love is something these two women are more than capable of giving each other, and as the seasons turn, the earth thaws, and their relationsh­ip grows ever more intimate.

The World to Come is a film about the power of female intimacy, and also men’s fear of it – the resentment and rage brought on by the realisatio­n that even in a world where the master of the house is male by default, there can still be some rooms from which he’s excluded. Waterston and Kirby are both exceptiona­l, expressing the strength of their characters’ bond at times with little more than a glance or a word.

“Imagine faring forth into a wilderness, hoping to build the foundation­s of a home,” Abigail says to Tallie one day, marvelling at her ancestors’ resilience. Yet love has also brought these two women on to uncharted terrain. Theirs is a frontier story, too.

 ??  ?? ‘Those who show the least do not always feel the least’: Vanessa Kirby, left, and Katherine Waterston
‘Those who show the least do not always feel the least’: Vanessa Kirby, left, and Katherine Waterston

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