We Live in Time

We Live in Time                 4 ½ stars

At first glance We Live in Time might sound like another romantic tragedy about a couple in love facing the challenge of their lives that doesn’t end well. Two things make the film more interesting than that. One is the combined performances of the two leads, Florence Pugh as Almut, a rising superstar chef with her own restaurant, and Andrew Garfield as Tobias, a working stiff who is going through a tough divorce. The second is the imaginative way that director John Crowley and screenwriter Nick Payne chose to tell the story in a non-linear fashion covering critical phases of the brief time that this couple spends together. Both Pugh and Garfield have given us outstanding performances in recent years, Pugh in the horror movie Midsomer, the science fiction film Don’t Worry Darling and the period piece Little Women, and Garfield in the musical Tick, Tick…Boom!, The Eyes of Tammy Faye playing televangelist Jim Bakker and the war film, Hacksaw Ridge. Here they work well together as the young British couple trying to figure things out. It is a little puzzling to the audience at first as the film starts somewhere in the middle of the relationship as they deal with the question of having children. It is only later that we find out how they meet with Almut running Tobias over with her car and her visiting him in the hospital afterwards. There are at least three time periods that the film alternates between, that include such dramatic events as a cancer diagnosis and a pregnancy that ends with giving birth in a service station. The events are put together in a way that raises the drama with each scene and may leave you a little weepy by the end. One scene in particular shows conflict between the two when Almut decides to compete in a high-profile cooking competition despite being ill with cancer, against Tobias’ wishes. Her decision seems irresponsible, but Pugh’s performance makes you believe she is doing the right thing. We Live in Time stars two great actors of their generation and should convince us to make the most of the time we have.