Before the Time Comes

Before the Time Comes (French: Le Temps de l'avant) is a Canadian drama film, directed by Anne Claire Poirier and released in 1975.[1] The film stars Luce Guilbeault as Hélène, a housewife and mother who is raising her three children largely on her own without much help from her itinerant sailor husband Gabriel (Pierre Gobeil); when she becomes pregnant for a fourth time, she struggles both with her conscience and the opinions of her husband and her sister Monique (Paule Baillargeon) as she considers whether or not to have an abortion.[2] It was the first Canadian film ever to address the subject of abortion.[2] The film opened in Quebec theatres in 1975, and was subsequently screened in the International Critics' Week program at the 1976 Cannes Film Festival.This article related to a Canadian film of the 1970s is a stub.
FrenchAnne Claire PoirierMarthe BlackburnLouise CarréLuce GuilbeaultPaule BaillargeonMichel BraultMaurice BlackburnNational Film Board of CanadaabortionInternational Critics' Week1976 Cannes Film FestivalGerald Pratley