I really enjoy a good afterlife riff. Whether it is something poignant like A Matter of Life and Death , After Life , or Nine Days or something lighter like Defending Your Life , Soul , or The Good Place , it’s ample ground to both have fun and speculate on the meaning and totality of our existence. We don’t know what awaits us on the other side if anything at all, and so these kind of stories are a good way of reckoning with those questions while on earth. It’s also a space for tremendous creativity. Eternity , a movie by David Freyne, isn’t particularly creative -at least not in its approach to the breadth and architecture of its fairly bureaucratic afterlife, which has shades of several of the examples listed. But what it does do interestingly is present a scenario that none of these other films had really yet thought of. What if David Niven’s character wasn’t able to come back to Kim Hunter and had to wait for her to pass and be united with him again? What if she had found las...
Nora Borg is a really good stage actress. She is celebrated for it, commended on it, and she can fully engage her audience. But she is incredibly uncomfortable in the theatre, she suffers bouts of anxiety and stage fright that threaten opening nights. It is an inconvenience to say the least. One might think she could transition away from the medium into film and television where her subtle emotional performance style would also be more welcome. But one gets the sense she can’t do that -to move into movies and television is to move into the realm of her father, and that would make her ten times more uncomfortable. The intricacies of this estrangement, both spoken about and alluded to, is the pillar that Joachim Trier builds his astounding new movie Sentimental Value on. A movie about fractured family relationships, family history, and the uneasy work of turning life and trauma into art, it is among the most tender and quietly moving films I’ve seen in recent years -a trait it shares wit...