Joachim Trier's 2025 Sentimental Value is an ambitious picture that explores, among other things, intergenerational trauma, art as therapy, self-destructiveness, and intricate family dynamics. Trier is painting with a broad brush and freights his film with too much material -- there is too much neurosis, guilt, and reconciliation in the movie; I found it exhausting and, after ninety minutes, was longing for the thing to be over -- I think its two hours and 13 minutes long. This is an estimable movie by an important director but it's excessive in the sense that the viewer can't quite keep the various patterns devised by the director in mind -- presented in short sequences that end with the screen suddenly dark, the movie has a staccato rhythm and, despite its potentially lugubrious subject matter, the film has a light touch -- it's like one of Woody Allen's pictures from the eighties without the one-liners and Borscht belt gags; in fact, the movie has a role that seems tailor-made for Woody Allen -- this is the part of Gustav, the manipulative director, who seems brazenly willing to sacrifice everything on the altar of his art. With a little spin, the movie's rather Gothic subject matter could be presented as a black comedy -- Trier doesn't opt for comedy but, I admire him, for not shaping his material into some sort of tragedy or melodrama either. He's a realist, at least in this movie and most of what we see and hear is plausible on the level of quotidian observation -- these seem to be real people and their interactions aren't heightened, nor do they veer into Bergman's metaphysical darkness. In its odd way, it's a companionable movie.
The intergenerational trauma underlying the movie is socio-historical and, also, personal. Gustav's mother was a psycho-therapist, practicing in the family's wonderful-looking early Victorian house. During World War Two, she was betrayed by neighbors as a member of the Resistance, sent to a camp, and severely tortured. When Gustav was eight, his mother hanged herself, an enigmatic and catastrophic act that is either over-motivated or under-motivated depending upon how you view things. Gustav is a film-maker and has achieved international fame. He's also seventy and hasn't made a movie for fifteen years. But he has written a script about his mother which he regards as his magnum opus. Netflix is interested in financing the movie and Gustav is engaged in machinations to cast the film, hire a director of photography and a technical crew, to get the picture made.
Gustav has two daughters by his wife whom he has divorced. The movie begins at the family home where people are gathered after the funeral of Gustav's ex-wife. No one seems particularly griefstricken -- these are Norwegians and they are masters at maintaining a stiff upper lip. Nora, the eldest sister, is an actress who has appeared in a TV series but is mostly active in Oslo's theater. She suffers from severe stage-fright. In an early scene, we see her refusing to go on-stage during the premiere of some classical drama -- it may be Chekhov's The Sea Gull or some other work in the classical repertoire. Nora flees through the backstage area, fights people trying to drag her on stage, and, then, summons her married boyfriend and demands a lightning sexual encounter with him. He says there's not enough time and, so, Nora replies that he should hit her hard in the face to knock her out of her hysteria. He slaps her and, after some more struggles, she goes on-stage and, apparently, amazes everyone with her performance. Later, Nora says that she's only 20% functional and 80% fucked-up. Her dysfunction consists of anger and loneliness with depression. By contrast, Agnes, Nora's little sister, is successful -- she seems to be happily married, has an eight-year old son on whom she dotes, and works as an "academic historian" as she says. Gustav's flamboyant and belated appearance at the family Leichenschmaus or funeral buffet destabilizes the situation and knocks the sisters back into memories of their childhood. Agnes starred as a child in one of Gustav's movies, indeed, probably his last movie before the fifteen years dry period. The movie, a fragment of which we see, harkens back to the Occupation of Norway and involves Nazi soldiers snatching a young boy while his sister, played by Agnes, watches from a nearby train. Since that movie was shot, neither of the sisters has had much to do with Gustav -- he's selfish and has been an absent father. Gustav approaches the older sister, Nora, and asks her to play the role of the mother in his new play. Nora refuses angrily and won't even read the script. At a retrospective of his films at Deauville, Gustav meets a Hollywood starlet, Rachel (played by Elle Fanning) and, after a night drinking with her on the beach, casts her in the role of his mother. Rachel comes to Norway where Gustav is planning to shoot the movie in the family home (where Agnes is living). He intimidates Rachel by showing her the footstool that his mother used to climb up to a noose to hang herself in one of the rooms in the house -- this is a lie: everyone in the family knows the footstool came from Ikea. It turns that Rachel is a bad fit for the part. The plan is to shoot the movie in English which seems problematic. Gustav has Rachel cut her hair and change its color so she looks more like Nora. Finally, Rachel, recognizing that she is miscast, graciously withdraws from the movie. Gustav has written the role for Nora, whom he recognizes as sharing traits with his mother. He hopes her performance in the film will free her from the burden of the past. At first, Nora refuses to even read the script. But, then, at last, Agnes prevails upon her to study the script. (This is in the context of Gustav trying to cast Agnes' son, Erick, as the little boy in the movie -- that is, as Gustav himself as a child; Agnes refuses and accuses her father of egoism and being opportunistic and malevolently manipulative.) Gustav has a heart attack but is too mean and tough to die. He directs the movie with Nora playing the part of his suicidal mother and, in fact, Erick as the child. There's an intentionally confusing sequence near the end in which we don't know whether we're watching the movie or a film within the film. (This echoes an earlier scene in which Nora begins crying and curls into a fetal posture by her bed -- a scene that turns out to be a part in a play in which she is acting; we can see the audience in the long shot of her on the floor.)
This summary omits many interesting things in the movie. There's a bitter and moving meditation on old age: Gustav's long time cameraman is not sufficiently spry to manage the hand-held camera shots in the proposed film and his old friend, at first, seems to reject him for the project. Nora's married boyfriend gives up on her -- now that his wife has divorced him, Nora thinks that they can expose their love affair, but the boyfriend isn't interested in committing. There's biographical scenes from Gustav's youth and middle-age and a long sequence in which Agnes, the historian, researches her grandmother's capture and torture by the Occupation forces. Trier films family squabbling about the dead mother's possessions and there's conversation about the status of the old house -- Gustav's wife was granted the house in the divorce but the papers were never filed and Gustav expects the home to revert to him. Much of this material, broadly speaking, is superfluous.to the main plot which involves Gustav persuading Nora to act in the role of his mother. The staging of the final scenes suggests that, perhaps, Gustav has re-written history so that his mother does not commit suicide -- but this is very unclear. (The clue is whether we hear the Ikea foot stool knocked over when the act occurs -- Gustav's mother has shut the door on the chamber where she commits the act.,) Another curiosity in the film is narration, seemingly by the old house itself. The house has a crack running from its foundation up to the attic -- it's like the fatally flawed House of Usher.
Sentimental Value is never less than highly cultured, subtle, and beautifully made and acted. It's a little too diffuse for my taste and I prefer Trier's earlier The Worst Person in the World which seems more focused and coherent to me. But it's probably important for those interested in cinema to see this movie and the time spent watching the film is certainly not wasted.