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Emily Maskell
January 4, 2026

Two sisters navigate the challenge that comes with their estranged father (Stellan Skarsgard) wanting to make a film about their private family life

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Sentimental ☆☆☆☆

Starring: Renate Reinsve, Inga
Ibsdotter Lilleaas, Stellan
Skarsgard and Elle Fanning

Directed by: Joachim Trier

N

orwegian filmmaker Joac-him Trier returns with another Scandinavian gem. While Trier’s renowned Oslo trilogy Reprise, Oslo August 31st and The Worst Person In The World, followed young adults undergoing self-discovery, Sentimental Value sees the director broaden his focus, with a tender, insightful portrait of sisterhood, reconciliation, trauma and transformation. It’s about a fractured family unit attempting to heal through the power of cinema, unfolding with thorny dynamics and aching emotional resonance.

We first meet close-knit sisters Nora (Worst Person star Renate Reinsve), an anxious theatre actor and Agnes (Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas), a largely content academic historian, united in grief after their mother’s death. Enter their estranged father, legendary filmmaker Gustav (Stellan Skarsgard), who waltzes back into their lives offering a role written for Nora in a film about his mother’s suicide. It’s certainly not the apology the sisters were hoping for, after years of abandonment.

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Nora refuses the role, still harbouring bitter anguish, in a scene that establishes the anchoring pro-wess of Skarsgard and Reinsve. His smug smile meets her narrowed gaze, micro-expressions that hint at years of an adversarial relationship. Reinsve continues her outstanding run of work with Trier, and Skarsgard’s performance proves a real highlight, punctuated by playful humour (inappropriately gifting his young grandson DVDs of The Piano Teacher and Irreversible) and a gut-wrenching processing of trauma. This opens up something darker for them all, voiced in Gustav’s devastating admission to Nora: “I recognise myself in you.”

“Stellan Skarsgard’s performance as Gustav proves a real highlight, punctuated by playful humour (inappropriately gifting his young grandson DVDs of The Piano Teacher and Irreversible) and a gut-wrenching processing of trauma. This opens up something darker for them all, voiced in Gustav’s devastating admission to (Renate Reinsve) Nora, “I recognise myself in you.” The film-within-a-film commentary is gorgeously lived-in. Cinematographer Kasper Tuxen, meanwhile, imbues Trier’s frames with a grittiness Gustav would applaud.”

With Nora’s rejection, Gustav finds a fan in young American star Rachel Kemp (Elle Fanning), who snaps up the role intended for Nora. It’s here that Trier and co-writer Eskil Vogt take a meta-approach, delving into cinema’s relationship with reality and the imagined, the lived and the reconstructed. When Rachel delivers a heartbreaking monologue scripted for Nora, it doesn’t land with the necessary sincerity, and Nora must watch a stranger play a version of herself she’s trying to outrun.

The film-within-a-film commentary is gorgeously lived-in. Cinematographer Kasper Tuxen, meanwhile, imbues Trier’s frames with a grittiness Gustav would applaud. However, there are times when the titular sentimentality is thickly lathered, where Trier’s idealism about art takes over, with distractingly wistful diversions.

Ultimately, overlapping notions of family, cinema and healing are neatly tied up in an arresting and heartrendingly gentle finale that will leave an ache in your chest. Stripping dialogue and editing flourishes away, Sentimental Value’s final note is a showstopper.

– Courtesy: Empireonline.com


Rating system: *Not on your life * ½ If you really must waste your time ** Hardly worth the bother ** ½ Okay for a slow afternoon only *** Good enough for a look see *** ½ Recommended viewing **** Don’t miss it **** ½ Almost perfect ***** Perfection

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