Friday, March 6, 2026

LIVE, LEARN, & LOVE Series #16. Sentimental Value (film, 2025)

LIVE, LEARN, & LOVE

Do you take delight in watching films or listening to pop music? For English learners, movies, songs, and books are one of the most wonderful sources to explore the language! You can indulge in your favorite pastime and still learn some expressions, words of wisdom, and oftentimes good lessons while you’re at it.

 

#16. SENTIMENTAL VALUE (film, 2025)




 "I think it’s time you and I sat down and had a proper talk.”

ð     This line is spoken by Gustav Borg, the famous film director in the movie, when he meets his estranged daughter Nora at his wife’s wake. He is aware of, and tries to understand, the deep resentment Nora carries toward him, largely because he abandoned the family when she and her younger sister were still children. Although he expresses a desire to have a “proper talk” with her, such a conversation seems nearly impossible, since he lacks the ability to communicate in the way others would consider meaningful or sincere. I found this to be one of the film’s most ironic moments: a man who remained emotionally distant from his own family suddenly attempts to reconnect with his angry daughter while working on a deeply emotional film about family relationships. 

 

"I can't work with him. We can't really talk. My father is a... very difficult person."

ð     Nora immediately turned down his father’s proposal for the movie and refused even to look at the script. She could not imagine collaborating with her father and believed that doing so would only further damage what was essentially a nonexistent relationship. Nora worried that, for a brief period, she would become the focus of her father’s attention, only for him to leave again just when she might start believing their bond had improved. She was unwilling to allow him to play with her emotions. She had already witnessed the impact this had on Agnes, who had appeared in one of Gustav’s films as a child. After the filming ended, Agnes was left longing for her father’s love and attention, but he had already moved on.

 

 


** Jean’s Small Thoughts:

As I see it, and perhaps as director Joachim Trier intended, the film tells a story about the many complicated and deeply connected emotions within families that people often struggle to discuss openly. Is there any family that doesn’t carry some form of past resentment or painful experiences that must be faced? For some people, bringing those feelings into the open may feel overwhelming. For others, it might be healthier to prepare themselves for the moment when they finally choose to confront the grief and sorrow they have long carried.

 

While watching the film, I kept replaying the scene where the two sisters lie next to each other and recall memories from their childhood. In that moment, they share an honest conversation and express tearful gratitude for having supported each other during the hardest times of their youth. When the younger sister, Agnes, tells Nora, “You were there for me,” it deeply moved me. It reminded me of my own childhood, when I would sometimes sleepwalk into my mother’s room and cry while holding her pajamas to smell her scent while she was away on business abroad. During those nights, my sister would always comfort me and guide me back to bed, reassuring me by saying, “Mom will be home in a few days.” Even now, I sometimes have a recurring nightmare in which I suddenly find myself in an unfamiliar place, lost and unable to return home. I believe my sister may also carry her own memories and emotional wounds from the lonely moments we experienced as children.

 

This film made me reflect on an important question: what responsibilities do parents have toward their children, and what do children owe their parents in return? It also raises another thought—are we truly ready to face the less pleasant parts of our past and mature enough to accept them and make peace with them?

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LIVE, LEARN, & LOVE Series #16. Sentimental Value (film, 2025)

LIVE, LEARN, & LOVE Do you take delight in watching films or listening to pop music? For English learners, movies, songs, and books ar...