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Joachim Trier's third "Oslo" film became renowned for a very good reason. Well, really many very good reasons. Perfect film for anyone going through a mid-20s crisis, Renate Reinsve's Julie is a wonderfully deep, nuanced, and relateable character who makes a lot of terrible decisions alongside a lot of wonderful ones. The film's cast is pretty stellar (standout being Anders Danielsen Lie) and its structure sucks you into all the petty or powerful dramas that happen in four years of life. Because a lot of the production is so naturalistic, the stylised elements hit even harder. It's a beautiful film.
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Jan 12, 2025

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Necessary viewing for anybody who enjoyed Worst Person in the World. Beautifully photographs the city of Oslo. Anders Danielsen Lie is sneakily the best actor working
Apr 5, 2025
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Never seen a relationship depicted like this in another film. It helped me process my first heartbreak. There's a comment on Letterboxd which says "what on god's green earth."
Sep 30, 2024
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The 2021 Joachim Trier movie where this girl is running and where she didn’t say the line about the things one fears the most, no, that was actually her dying of cancer ex. So my best friend and his new partner (my friend-in-law) are harsh on the main character for her allegedly unmoral doings (cheating, being a pain in the ass, never settling for what’s good for her), but I like the little norwegian sinner. The way she already cheated in her mind and heart, but will state otherwise out loud to jam her thoughts. Im not going for the disturbing the comfortable quote, no, that’s a low hanging fruit. But why consume works of fiction to judge the sinful, and not find our own worst fears and weaknesses in them? As if the title didn’t have it coming. By the way, the ending sucks ass 5/5 in first rewatch
Jan 24, 2024

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