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Women in Love: The World to Come Is Filled With the Wild Excitement of Romance Women in Love: The World to Come Is Filled With the Wild Excitement of Romance Vanessa Kirby is utterly magnetic in director Mona Fastvold s 19-century historical drama focused on the desire between women K. Austin Collins, provided by March 7, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail You smell like biscuits. Of all the details comprising Tallie and Abigail’s first kiss in Mona Fastvold’s The World to Come, this reaction, which comes from Abigail, may be the most surprising and disarming moreso, even, than the fact that it’s a kiss between two married women in 19th-century America. It’s a covert but not wholly unexpected gesture between wives whose passions seem only to spring to life while their husbands are away. It’s a surprising line, in part, for containing so much. ....
Skip to main content Currently Reading New Movies to Watch This Week: Barb and Star, Judas and the Black Messiah, Minari and The Mauritanian Peter Debruge, provided by FacebookTwitterEmail With the Super Bowl behind us and the Oscars looming (and a pandemic-dampened Valentine’s Day as a marketing peg), American distributors are releasing their most robust slate of new releases in months this weekend. Awards contenders “Judas and the Black Messiah” (about the FBI-sanctioned murder of Fred Hampton) and “Land” (starring and directed by Robin Wright) arrive in theaters, hot off their premieres at this year’s virtual Sundance Film Festival. Also on the awards-worthy indie front, A24 releases last year’s Sundance winner “Minari” on demand. Steven Yuen stars in this immigrant story with universal appeal. And if theaters are open (and safe) near you, consider catching Michelle Pfeiffer in the wickedly funny “French Exit.” ....
Two women in love struggle to give voice to their feelings in The World to Come Michael O Sullivan, The Washington Post Feb. 9, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail 3 1of3Katherine Waterston, left, and Vanessa Kirby in The World to Come. Vlad Cioplea/Bleecker StreetShow MoreShow Less 2of3Christopher Abbott and Vanessa Kirby in The World to Come. Vlad Cioplea/Bleecker StreetShow MoreShow Less 3of3 Abigail, the protagonist of The World to Come, keeps a diary, which, along with thoughts laid down in her letters, provides the narration for this film, set in 1856 in rural upstate New York, and centering on the unhappily married wife of a dour farmer named Dyer (Casey Affleck). When Abigail (Katherine Waterston) mentions that she d like Dyer to pick up an atlas for her when he next rides into town - she s saved up 90 cents of her own money - he suggests that it might be better spent on buying him a gift. ....