Skip to content
City PM
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • Markets
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • DE
Monday 21 February 2022 4:06 pm

The Forest at Hampstead Theatre is a fascinating puzzle-box

By: Steve Dinneen

Life&Style Editor

Add as a preferred source on Google

Were it not for the involvement of award-winning French playwright, novelist and film director Florian Zeller, The Forest might have flown under the radar as a stylish but straightforward psycho-drama. That would have been a shame, because this is a play more delicate and layered than its elevator pitch might otherwise suggest.

It first presents itself as a psychological puzzle-box, a riddle to be unpicked through repeated viewings of the same tragic events. But behind that lies another, more surreal world, where things never make sense, a place where the play’s myriad dopplegangers and tulpas exist in their own realities rather than as mere keys to unlock the central mystery.

It follows a celebrated doctor, Man 1, whose affair with an unstable young woman threatens to consume his marriage and career. We see him going about his life, wracked with guilt and compensating with foppish bravado.

Then the lights go down, and above the stage we find a second stage, a pocket reality in which another man, Man 2, is living out the affair, one literally hanging over the other.

The two can be read as different aspects of the same fractured psyche, the doctor unable to process the affair and some other terrible event. But this feels like the least interesting analysis, and one that’s thrown into doubt when the two men come into horrifying contact with one-another (this scene brought to mind the famous moment behind the diner in David Lynch’s Mulholland Drive, in which a character meets the presence that’s haunted his dreams).

The same scenes – a drinks party, a meeting with a friend, post-coital pillow talk – are repeated again and again, each time playing out slightly differently.

Events also ripple from one reality to the next: the doctor’s daughter has an adulterous relationship that not only reflects that of the doctor, but is, I think, a literal aspect of it. Likewise certain objects – flowers, a note – are able to pass from one reality to the next, symbols given some Jungian power through their sheer weight of meaning.

There are flickers of Pinter to be found, especially in the way language begins to break down as the events are repeated, the doctor perhaps aware, on some level, that these scenes have already taken place.

There also flaws that are a little hard to swallow, not least that all the female roles are rather cliched and underwritten, and the nagging sense that, while excellently translated into English, these remain French people’s words coming out of English people’s mouths; the frank  discussion of affairs, for instance, doesn’t quite suit the English bluster with which they’re delivered.

But this is a slick, stylish and wonderfully textured play by a director who has built a career exploring troubled minds. Unlikely to get a film adaptation à la The Father, you’d better get down to the Hampstead Theatre.

Read more

Box can provide you with a Boom at Sha Tin

Vintage boom box on a wooden table with colorful stickers, representing retro music culture and nostalgia.

Share this article

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • WhatsApp
  • Email

Similarly tagged content:

Sections

  • Life&Style

Categories

  • Culture
  • Life&Style

Trending Articles

  • Citroën 2CV returns as a £13,000 electric car, and the timing is no accident

  • James Watt offers to buy back Brewdog

  • Bank of England warns Burnham of UK economy’s ‘big issue’

  • The former African gold miner taking on the billionaire Issa brothers

  • Rachel Reeves to unveil next steps for ring-fencing reform at Mansion House

More from City PM

  • Box can provide you with a Boom at Sha Tin

    Sport
    Vintage boom box on a wooden table with colorful stickers, representing retro music culture and nostalgia.
  • Nottingham Forest owner Marinakis announces £210m stadium plans

    Sport Business
    Breaking news anchor reporting live from bustling city street with pedestrians and traffic in the background
  • Why do six Premier League clubs still not have front of shirt sponsors?

    Sport Business
    Without the article title or content, its challenging to provide specific alt text. Please provide more context or details...
  • ‘Ultrasound cakes’ help fuel sales surge at London-listed Cake Box

    Business
    Ultrasound cake from Cake Box bakery, contributing to record sales growth in UK market, displayed on a countertop
  • Zack Polanski: I have a ‘serious vision’ for UK businesses

    Politics
    Zack Polanski addressing a business audience at a conference podium, engaging in a discussion on economic strategies
  • Be Brave with Comanche and Sajir in QEII sprint

    Sport
    Breaking news headline displayed on a digital screen with stock market graphs and data in the background.
  • Kinswoman to take the honours in Dash for glory

    Sport
    Getty Images logo on a building facade, representing the companys influence in global visual media and stock photography i...
  • S4 Capital cuts jobs as Sorrell predicts ‘fewer people’ in advertising

    Media
    British businessman Sir Martin Sorrell founded S4 Capital in 2018.

City PM — European politics, business and analysis.

Europe

  • Germany
  • France
  • Europe
  • UK & Ireland

Topics

  • Business
  • Markets
  • AI
  • Technology
  • Opinion
  • Energy

More

  • Politics
  • Economics
  • Fintech
  • Legal
  • Sport
  • Life

Company

  • About City PM
  • Editorial Policy
  • Corrections
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
© 2026 City PM · Published by CityPM Media, Bahnhofstrasse 65, 8001 Zürich, Switzerland
About · Editorial Policy · Corrections · Contact · Privacy · Facebook