The Movie Waffler Tribeca Film Festival 2025 Review - A BRIGHT FUTURE | The Movie Waffler

Tribeca Film Festival 2025 Review - A BRIGHT FUTURE

A Bright Future review
In a future Global South blighted by environmental catastrophe, a teenager is offered a chance to journey to the promised land of the North.

Review by Eric Hillis

Directed by: Lucía Garibaldi

Starring: Martina Passeggi, Soledad Pelayo, Sofía Gala Castiglione, Alfonso Tort

Uruguayan writer/director Lucía Garibaldi follows up her Sundance breakout debut The Sharks with another quirky coming-of-age drama centred on a smart young woman. This time she's dabbling in science fiction with A Bright Future, a blackly comic piece of speculative fiction that plays like a dystopian Young Adult thriller by way of the Greek Weird Wave.

A Bright Future review

Our young heroine here is Elisa (Martina Passeggi), a rosy-cheeked teen living in a near future where an environmental catastrophe has left the global South uninhabitable. While a select group of elites live in the still fertile North, most of the population is crammed into a small area stuck between the North and South borders. Young people who display high intelligence are selected to journey to the North to help rebuild society. Thus, smarty pants Elisa finds herself plucked from her drab suburb and given the opportunity most dream of, including her mother (Soledad Pelayo), who has her heart set on winning a trip to the North via state lottery.


Trouble is, Elisa doesn't dream of leaving the South. She's eked out a life for herself, using her smarts to run a business selling hard to come by goods to her neighbours. But the authorities view Elisa as a prime candidate, forcing her to undertake a series of farcical tests which they already know she will pass.

A Bright Future review

If you turned the sound off and couldn't hear its Spanish dialogue, you might assume A Bright Future was the latest black comedy to emerge from Greece. Garibaldi appears to take her cues from the distinctive absurdism of filmmakers like Yorgos Lanthimos, Athina Rachel Tsangari and especially Christos Nikou. Like Nikou's Apples and FingernailsA Bright Future is centred on a protagonist trying to retain an ounce of humanity in a sterile society. The comedy beats are very much of the Greek variety, based largely on people giving in to their most base instincts. To make a quick buck, Elisa follows the advice of her cool-aunt-energy neighbour Leonor (Sofía Gala Castiglione) and embarks on a unique brand of sex work. This sees her go days without bathing in order to turn on a group of blindfolded customers with her "youthful" scent.


Garibaldi never doles out any explanation of the effects of her film's environmental apocalypse, allowing us to put two and two together with the nuggets she subtly offers throughout her film. There are details that seem inspired by cult sci-fi author Philip K. Dick, like how residents purchase speakers that emit dog and cat sounds, the real animals having gone extinct. Young people appear to be thin on the ground here, hence the willingness of people to fork out cash to sniff Elisa's sweaty pores. We're never told why this is the case, but it's clearly intended to reflect the exodus of young people from our real world global South. Garibaldi appears to be making a plea to the youth of South America to give their own lands a chance, that the grass may not always be greener up North.

A Bright Future review

Like the young Romina Bentancur in The SharksPasseggi is another star find by Garibaldi. In her first role the young actress delivers a confident performance that is always in tune with the film's uniquely odd vibe. As a character Elisa might have a notable IQ and some canny resourcefulness, but the movie never lets us forget that she's still a rather naive teenager. Just like the young heroine of Garibaldi's previous film, Elisa doesn't always make the right choices, but the point is that she makes a choice. Many sci-fi tales have been centred on free will, and in Elisa, Garibaldi and Passeggi have created a young woman determined to exercise hers, at any cost.

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