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    Home - Streaming - I saw the 2025 Cannes film with a 19-minute ovation and here’s my verdict
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    I saw the 2025 Cannes film with a 19-minute ovation and here’s my verdict

    By Savanah Al Badri6 Mins Read
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    I saw the 2025 Cannes film with a 19-minute ovation and here’s my verdict

    Cliff Notes – I saw the 2025 Cannes film with a 19-minute ovation and here’s my verdict

    • Sentimental Value received a remarkable 19-minute standing ovation at Cannes, positioning it as a strong contender for the Palme D’Or, thanks to its emotional depth and dark humour.

    • The film explores the complexities of a dysfunctional family in Oslo, with standout performances from Stellan Skarsgård and Renate Reinsve, highlighting themes of reconciliation and generational trauma.

    • Directed by Joachim Trier, Sentimental Value is noted for its character-driven narrative, with the family home serving as a significant element, though it could benefit from a tighter runtime.

    I saw the 2025 Cannes film with a 19-minute ovation and here’s my verdict

    With Cannes’ closing ceremony on Saturday, Metro reviews the front-runner for the Palme D’Or (Picture: Nordisk Film Norge)

    After making waves at Cannes Film Festival with its 15-minute standing ovation (or 19-minute, depending on which clapometer you trust most), the longest for 2025, I knew I had to go out of my way to make sure I saw Sentimental Value.

    As one of 22 films in competition for Cannes’ top honour, the prestigious Palme D’Or, that rapturous reception put its name on everybody’s lips at the festival – and at the top of the list to win.

    And I’d agree, as one of the most impressive and impactful films I saw at Cannes this year.

    Sentimental Value (Affeksjonsverdi in its native Norway) provides a fascinating window into a dysfunctional family in Oslo and all the hurt they’ve witnessed and carried over the generations in their faded but quirky home.

    It’s emotional and powerful without being overblown, managing to remain entirely realistic in its story and interpersonal relationships without ever slipping into the mundane – and it’s also peppered throughout with quite dark humour.

    In hands less assured than that of director and co-writer Joachim Trier, we might be saying ‘so what?’ of a film about a washed-up filmmaker (Stellan Skarsgård) trying to reconnect with the daughters he walked out on after divorcing their mother as a child, wooing the one who has become a successful actress in her own right with a part written specially for her in his new movie.

    The longest standing ovation of the festival this year went to Sentimental Value, at 19 minutes according to some reports (Picture: Mubi)

    But Sentimental Value not only handles these tensions expertly but makes the house of the Borg family – being packed up by sisters Nora (Renate Reinsve) and Agnes (Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas) after their mother’s death – a character in its own right.

    Indeed, it’s introduced first of anyone in the film’s opening moments, and we learn more about its curious composition and its previous inhabitants in scenes interspersed throughout the film.

    Skarsgård’s Gustav actually wants to make a film about his mother, who died by suicide in the house when he was a young boy after being tortured by Nazis during the war.

    Trier previously delighted Cannes in 2021 with The Worst Person in the World, which won previous collaborator Reinsve the best actress prize and went on to nab two Oscar nominations.

    It stars previous best actress winner Renate Reinsve, also as an actress, reluctant to build bridges with her filmmaker father (Stellan Skarsgård) who walked out on the family (Picture: Nordisk Film Norge)

    And not that this should count for the quality of Sentimental Value, which speaks for itself, but – curiously – should it win, it would give co-distributor Neon the record-breaking honour of a sixth consecutive Palme win, following previous victors Parasite, Titane, Triangle of Sadness, Anatomy of a Fall, and last year’s winner, Anora.

    Perhaps Sentimental Value’s loudest argument for victory at Cannes though is its brilliant powerhouse performances: Skarsgård enjoys the best role he’s had in years as a charismatic but arrogant and slightly desperate 70-year-old, determined to evoke past glories.

    Capturing all the shades required in a role this complex – and some – this could mark Skarsgård’s first Oscar nomination in an otherwise storied career.

    And as for his character’s comeback goal, that would also mean casting his grandson in his new film – despite the reluctance of the boy’s mother, younger sister Agnes (Lilleaas), who once starred in a film of her father’s 20 years ago, before leaving the profession after feeling abandoned by him post-production.

    Sentimental Value also makes a character of the family’s house and its previous inhabitants (Picture: Nordisk Film Norge)

    The film boasts powerhouse performances from Skarsgård and Reinsve (Picture: Nordisk Film Norge)

    Lilleaas provides a perfect counter-balance to Reinsve’s anger and hostility towards her father as Nora, which manifests in a panic attack ahead of her new stage performance. When Nora turns down her father’s offer of a role, he instead recruits Hollywood starlet Rachel Kemp (Elle Fanning, continuing a run of great performances in a notably wide variety of films), who is charmed by him at a film festival and eager to please.

    But the film is, undeniably, Reinsve’s, who allows Trier to expose the full range of her talents like a raw nerve; I expect to see her name in contention too come awards season.

    Lest this all sound overly angsty though, the family shares a propensity towards dry humour which flares up from time to time – like when Gustav tells Rachel she’s sitting on the stool his mother stepped off to end he life, only for Agnes to later reveal it’s from Ikea. Or when Gustav buys his grandson a bunch of arthouse DVDs for his ninth birthday, including cult erotic thriller The Piano Teacher, as you do.

    If it were to win, it would be a sixth straight Palme D’Or for co-distributor Neon (Picture: Mubi)

    Director Joachim Trier (pictured) demonstrates an extraordinary power via his collaboration with actress Reinsve (Picture: SIPA/Rex/Shutterstock)

    Elle Fanning shows her support for her director at the film’s Cannes photocall (Picture: AFP via Getty Images)

    There’s also an all-too-familiar junket scene in which Gustav and Rachel, pre-plugging the film after partnering with Netflix, end up partaking in an interview that becomes every journalist’s most embarrassing nightmare.

    My only quibble with Sentimental Value is that it does start to tread water a little as it nears the end. As with virtually every film I’ve seen during the 2025 edition of Cannes, it could have lost 20 minutes from its 135-minute run-time.

    But should it prove victorious at Saturday’s closing ceremony then I’ll consider it a worthy victor.

    Sentimental Value premiered at the Cannes Film Festival. It is yet to receive a UK release date.

    Arts and Entertainment UK Entertainment
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    Savanah Al Badri
    • X (Twitter)

    Savanah is the Fashion news correspondent for WTX News. She has over 15 years experience in journalism and communications on a range of organisations, with roles that range from Reporting and Editorial to Brand Account Manager and production roles. She regularly writes features in Middle eastern Fashion and the latest trends coming through the world of fashion.

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