Archive for the ‘Joachim Trier’ Category
98th Oscar Awards
98th Academy Awards took place on Sunday 15th March 2026 at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood, Los Angeles.
Oscar winners 2026: Full List of Winners

Best Picture: One Battle After Another
Best Director: Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another

Best Actor: Michael B. Jordan – Sinners

Best Actress: Jessie Buckley – Hamnet

Best Supporting Actor: Sean Penn – One Battle After Another

Best Supporting Actress: Amy Madigan – Weapons
Best Original Screenplay: Ryan Coogler – Sinners
Best Adapted Screenplay: Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another adapted from the novel Vineland by Thomas Pynchon.
Best Cinematography: Autumn Durald Arkapaw – Sinners

Best Costume Design: Kate Hawley – Frankenstein
Best Make up & Hairstyling: Frankenstein

Best Visual Effects: Avatar: Fire and Ash
Best Film Editing: Andy Jurgensen – One Battle After Another

Best Sound: F1
Best Production Design: Frankenstein

Best Documentary Feature: Mr Nobody Against Putin
Best Documentary Short Subject: All the Empty Rooms
Best Original Score: Ludwig Goransson – Sinners

Best Original Song: K-Pop Demon Hunters
Best Animated Feature Film: K-Pop Demon Hunters
Best Animated Short: The Girl Who Cried Pearls.
Best Live Action Short Film: The Singers & People Exchanging Saliva -Tied Winner

Best International Feature Film: Sentimental Value directed by Joachim Trier (Norway)
The 79th BAFTA Film Awards
The British Academy Film Awards –
The 78th British Academy Film Awards, also known as the BAFTAs, were held on 22nd February 2026 at the Royal Festival Hall in London, honouring the best national and foreign films of 2025.

Best Film: One Battle After Another
Best Director: Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another

Best Actor: Robert Aramayo – I Swear

Best Actress: Jessie Buckley – Hamnet

Best Supporting Actor: Sean Penn – One Battle After Another

Best Supporting Actress: Wunmi Mosaku – Sinners
Best British Film: Hamnet
Best Original Screenplay: Ryan Coogler – Sinners
Best Adapted Screenplay: Paul Thomas Anderson – One Battle After Another

Best Costume Design: Frankenstein

Best Foreign Language Film: Sentimental Value directed by Joachim Trier
Rising Star Award: Robert Aramayo
A Wildcat against Domesticity
The Worst Person in the World

Director: Joachim Trier
Cast: Renate Reinsve, Anders Danielsen Lie, Herbert Nordrum, Hans Olav Brenner, Maria Grazia Di Meo
Film Rating: 7.5 out of 10
This film is in Norwegian with English Subtitles
Best Actress Winner at the Cannes Film Festival in 2021, Renate Reinsve is superb as the troubled millennial Julie in director Joachim Trier’s quirky and bizarre episodic film The Worst Person in the World, Norway’s official entry for the 2021 Best International Feature Film category at the Oscars.
Renate Reinsve is Norway’s version of British actress Keira Knightley both in looks and acting style. Reinsve plays an indecisive young woman Julie in contemporary Oslo who frequently changes career paths as often as she changes men.
However, the film focuses on a formative four years in Julie’s life as she begins a more serious relationship with a much older cartoon artist Arkel played by Anders Danielsen Lie. As Aksel introduces Julie to his friends in his age group, most of whom have children, the conversation turns to whether the couple would like to have children. At the prospect of Julie settling down with a much older man and having kids, this idea freaks her out and Julie promptly gate crashes a very hip party in central Oslo where she meets a man her own age, the handsome and muscular Ervind played by Herbert Nordrum.
Julie in between navigating the complicated relationship with her family and watching her own relationship with Aksel disintegrate, she begins an affair with Ervind and much Aksel’s shock, she unexpectedly breaks up with him. This leaves Aksel utterly bereft and lonely. This makes the selfish and indecisive Julie possibly the Worst Person in the World, a sort of Wildcat who is against any form of domesticity.
Julie and Ervind move into together and she thinks nothing more of her older ex-boyfriend besides seeing his controversial fame increase on Norwegian TV chat shows. After Julie accidentally bumps into one of Aksel’s friends Ole played by Hans Olav Brenner who tells her some distressing news about Aksels health, she reaches a cross roads in her life as she re-evaluates her relationship with Ervind while making some critical life choices.

The screenplay of The Worst Person in the World is excellent and the entire episodic film is held together tightly by a riveting performance by the ravishing Renate Reinsve. Director Joachim Trier’s Woody Allen like social comedy set in contemporary Norway is filled with angst, drama and many loose ends that leaves the viewer wishing for some form of cathartic release, something which Scandinavian film makers are not known for delivering.
The Worst Person in the World has a great title, a superb central performance and a cracking sound track but unfortunately as an episodic film some scenes could have been edited out especially the weird trippy sequence in the middle. The Worst Person in the World gets a film rating of 7.5 out of 10 and is entertaining, but not brilliant.