The Worst Person in the World (2021) Movie Script
THE WORST PERSON IN THE WORLD
A FILM IN 12 CHAPTERS,
A PROLOGUE AND AN EPILOGUE
You've been through the epidermis,
derma and muscles.
PROLOGUE
Julie disappointed herself.
This used to be easy.
She was still among the top students,
but there were too many
interruptions, updates,
feeds,
unsolvable global problems.
She sensed
a gnawing unease
she had tried to suppress by cramming
by drowning it in digital interference.
This was wrong.
This wasn't her.
She'd chosen medicine
because it was
so hard to gain admission.
Where her excellent grades
actually meant something.
But then she had
a revelation.
Her passion had always been the soul.
The mind, not the body.
Surgery is like, so concrete.
It's almost like being a carpenter.
But now...
My passion has always been
what goes on inside thoughts and feelings.
It was like a window had opened.
Not anatomy.
If psychology will make you happy,
then do it.
I think you're really brave.
I can't take it anymore.
I don't want to.
She left him.
Though he was devastated,
he had to respect
the way she took control of her life.
She observed her fellow students.
Norway's future spiritual advisers.
Mostly girls with borderline
eating disorders.
Say you're at a party.
She still felt trapped in
the role of model student.
All this cramming.
When was life supposed to start?
What's your name?
Julie.
The person's name is Julie.
Let's say Julie and I
meet at a party,
and we feel a mutual attraction.
Hypothetically.
Actually, she was a visual person.
Now I know.
I want to be a photographer.
A photographer?
I see.
Julie spent her student loan
on cameras and lenses.
As long as you're serious about it.
No safety net. No holding back.
Need help?
She took a temp job
in a bookstore.
Started a photography course.
Super!
She made new friends.
It felt like coming home.
Suddenly Oslo was a different city.
New places. New faces.
Hi. Aksel.
Right...
You're the comic book artist?
She'd heard
he was the creator of Bobcat.
Sorry, I'm a wild animal.
Have you read it?
Yeah.
So?
She pretended she'd read it.
She only remembered one strip
she'd found vaguely sexist.
I know what you mean.
Nothing's ever good enough.
The only thing worse than
all the idiots is yourself.
But...
If we go on, I'll fall in love with you.
Then it'll be too late.
Maybe we should agree to...
stop seeing each other.
The problem is our age difference.
I'm just afraid we'll fall into
a vicious circle.
You're much younger than I am.
You'll start to question who you are.
I'm past 40.
I've entered a new phase.
Whereas you still need time
to find yourself.
You don't need me waiting.
You need to be completely free.
I'm just afraid we'll hurt each other.
Later she said
that was the precise moment
she fell in love with him.
Shall I put your bag in the bedroom?
Yes, please.
I have two copies of a book!
Huh?
Yeah.
I'll throw one away.
Can I have two shelves?
How many closets do you need?
How many can I have?
No, that's not how it works.
This is antique glass.
All wavy and stuff.
No, don't do that. Not like that.
No!
Lift this catch here.
I'm terrified it'll break.
I gaze out this window.
- No way!
- I'm not kidding.
Hey, that's how relationships work.
She's a bit frosty towards me.
That's new.
Yeah? Why do you think that is?
It's embarrassing to say.
We've been single together.
Lived that life.
Then suddenly I move in with you.
- And you're happy?
- Yeah.
No, no, no...
Did you date this guy?
Yeah, just a fling.
Okay.
Stop!
You're so predictable!
Let's just fuck.
Hello!
CHAPTER 1
THE OTHERS
- Happy to see you!
- Me, too.
- Doing good?
- Yeah.
Hi, Martin.
Welcome.
Thanks for coming.
Dad designed it.
We should renovate,
but don't want to change anything.
It's beautiful.
Yeah, but there's stuff like that. Damp.
We get this room
because we're childless.
Dibs on the top bunk.
I always feel that Tone doesn't like me.
She's just shy.
That's what you say about boring people.
- It's my turn now.
- Okay.
Thank you.
Vin?
Vin de blanc?
Thanks.
Do you have any friends with kids yet?
No. Only one.
Guess this feels unfamiliar.
- They're very sweet.
- Thanks.
So what are you doing now, Julie?
Aksel says you've started writing?
Well, I wouldn't exactly
call it writing.
Being modest?
No.
Seems so.
Is there anything you'd like to do,
as a career?
Questions, questions, Karianne.
That question was vulgar
when we were students.
Lucky you!
Yeah, we were.
True, we had a lot of freedom.
Being young today is different.
The pressure is heart-breaking.
There's no time to think.
Always something on the screen.
Take William.
If we don't set limits,
he spends his life on screens.
Nice try.
Okay.
No, it's not your turn.
It's Martin's turn.
Julie's still the closest.
Bedtime.
- She's exhausted.
- No!
No!
- Yes!
- No!
I don't want to go to bed!
I don't want to!
Eva, don't make another scene.
Come here!
No! I don't want to!
Let go!
- You silly girl!
- I don't want to!
But I want you to!
I don't want to!
Kids can be intense.
Well, it's okay.
- Fun with kids.
- Yeah.
Can't we just enjoy it?
Please. No fights.
There are kids here, and it's chaos.
Just try.
Try playing with them
or something, okay?
Please.
Spare me the kid talk.
Sorry, but I wasn't the one who started.
You're with someone who's
younger than you. There's a gap.
You're almost 30.
Not a bad age to have kids.
I'm 44. I want to go to the next level.
With you.
It has nothing to do with my friends.
You seem to be waiting for something.
I don't know what.
Hello?
Jeez.
I didn't want to get into this.
Really not.
Everything's on your terms.
You have time off,
so we're on holiday.
You agreed.
After you publish, you get bored.
And start talking about kids.
The others here have kids,
so it's an issue.
Not true.
It is true.
And then...
you get a new idea at some point,
and disappear into your drawing board.
What are you saying?
Don't start. It's not cool.
Shut up. Please.
Of course I'd be there if we had kids.
You know that.
You know I want children.
Sure, and I'll also want kids
at some point.
But I don't know...
I have no maternal instinct, right?
No, you'd make a great mom.
I'm sure of it.
I want to have children, too.
At some point.
So what are we waiting for?
What has to happen first?
I don't know what exactly.
I just want to do more first.
Okay, like what?
What's the obstacle?
I don't know! Why do you ask?
Your concept is flawed.
Most people have kids without
sorting out their life first.
- They figure it out.
- Flawed?
That's how most people do it.
But I don't want everything
to happen on your terms,
based on what you want.
Fine. I got it.
But what do you want?
Oh, please! We have to stop.
I need sleep
to put up with those people.
I know a guy
who has a theory about that.
He says we have
a limited number of sperm.
Say... three trillion in your lifetime.
Jerk off too much...
and you run out.
Could be true.
Easy now, Portnoy.
How fascinating.
Personally, I feel like
I know everything
about male problems.
Erectile dysfunction,
morning wood,
infatuation with young women...
premature ejaculation...
Nice work, Aksel.
It's in all the books and movies.
Where's the menstrual period?
Female orgasm and desire? Where?
Good question. Tell us.
In juicy detail.
No, the point is
it shouldn't be taboo.
If men had periods,
that's all we'd hear about.
Can you womansplain it
a bit better?
What do you mean?
Like mansplaining, but womansplaining.
What?
Mansplaining is...
When a 45-year-old man explains
how things really are
to a younger woman.
Nice demonstration!
My pleasure.
Ding! Great!
Whiskey, anyone?
How's the senior citizen club doing?
Come on.
Look who's here!
Are you okay?
Not really.
Show me.
No!
Let me see...
We'll laugh about it later.
It's just a scratch.
Karianne's such a drama queen.
It's my fault.
Not at all, Julie.
It is. I always overdo it.
I know being here isn't easy for you.
I'm not into this whole
"happy family" thing either.
I'm glad it turned into a party tonight.
I hope you had fun!
What the hell's wrong with you?
What's wrong with having a little fun?
I didn't have any fun!
Sorry that happened.
You don't care!
Shut up! Just shut up!
You don't give a shit about me!
Shall we make a baby?
Fuck you.
- Hi.
- Good morning.
There's coffee. And cups.
CHAPTER 2
CHEATING
Sorry, I forgot.
What's your line of work?
I work in a bookstore.
Which one?
Norli, by the university.
Could you excuse me for a moment?
Could you sign?
Sure, I'll just finish this.
Any new Bobcat in the pipeline?
I've moved on.
Do you work full-time there,
or are you just temping on weekends?
- Sorry.
- Bye.
Hey, I think I'll head home.
Okay.
- You good?
- Yeah.
- Sure?
- Yeah, I'm fine.
- I can stay if you like.
- It's okay.
- But I have to stay a bit longer.
- Of course.
Okay. See you at home.
Hi. Can I have a smoke?
Of course.
I had my second child
ten years later.
Now we're supposed
to introduce solids at 4 months.
What made the pediatricians
change their minds?
- Do you cuddle your kids?
- Sure, a lot.
They'll be drug addicts.
They'll be addicts
because I cuddle them?
Yeah, according to new research.
New research says
you shouldn't cuddle your kids?
I realize it must be counter-intuitive
for a mother.
But motherhood upsets
your limbic system.
So my kids are going to be drug addicts?
That's ridiculous.
Do you have children?
No, but I'm a doctor.
I have a medical perspective.
Babies express themselves by crying.
It's normal for a mother or a father
to comfort them.
Hi.
Not asking me the usual questions?
- Which ones?
- Who I am, what I do.
Who are you? What do you do?
I hate those questions.
They're especially bad
when you're a doctor.
Are you a doctor?
No, you are.
Which questions should I ask?
Ask me who I know here.
- Who do you know here?
- Nobody.
I crashed the party.
You just waltzed in?
Okay.
Nothing's gonna happen.
Of course not.
I'm with someone I love.
Me, too.
And I can't stand cheating.
I've been there. Never again.
- Right, cheating is...
- No good.
But where do you draw the line?
You can feel it.
If I do this...
Is that cheating?
No.
What about this?
- No, that's permissible.
- Is it?
And hurting someone
who's not your partner?
- You hurt your partner?
- Is that cheating?
Did that hurt?
Did it?
- Feel good?
- Yeah, it did.
Okay.
Let me smell your sweat.
- No.
- Yes.
- Seriously?
- Yes, that's allowed.
- It stinks!
- Yes.
The kind of smell you never forget.
My turn to smell you.
No, please.
I regret it now.
Let me smell.
I think you smell nice.
I don't know if...
this is permissible.
Go ahead.
Okay.
You start,
then I'll go next.
I actually think sex is best
when the dick isn't too hard.
Because...
in a way, then I'm the one
who makes it hard, you know?
My secret will be dumb now.
I guess I misunderstood.
I was going to say
I like the Barcode Project.
It looks pretty from the bridge
when I go to work.
I expose my darkest secrets,
and you...
You said "secrets",
not "darkest".
So why is that a secret?
Because everyone thinks it's ugly.
Sorry, we're...
- Can I whisper it?
- Okay.
What?
Sorry, I seem to
be sitting on everything.
My bad.
There's nothing sexual about that.
Not at all.
Although you do like soft dicks.
Yeah.
Okay. Your turn.
I can't pee.
Just relax.
I'm going this way.
Okay.
What's your name?
Julie.
- I'm Eivind. Eivind...
- Don't say it.
Why not?
I'll find you on Facebook, and...
Good thinking.
Okay.
- Bye.
- Bye.
- We didn't cheat.
- No.
- Not at all.
- No.
Bye.
CHAPTER 3
ORAL SEX IN THE AGE OF #METOO
Aksel?
Aksel, I need to tell you something.
Aksel?
"A friend told me she had sex
with a man
"who pumped his dick into her mouth
while he held her head.
"She was confused
because she enjoyed it.
"It really turned her on.
"Can you be a feminist
and still enjoy being mouth-fucked?
"Most women I know are ambivalent
about performing oral sex.
"They must act as if they like...
the pathetic expectation
"that it'll turn them on...
"I like it flaccid.
"So I create the stiffness
"instead of having it thrust upon me."
This is good.
- Yeah?
- It's over the top.
I don't agree with everything,
but it's very well written.
Original. Very good.
What will you do with it?
I don't know.
You really think it's good?
Yeah. Absolutely.
You sure?
Yeah, I'm not lying.
No?
Are you sure?
Don't you dare doubt it.
It's pretty cerebral.
But it turns me on too.
- Right?
- Kinda.
Is that why you wrote it?
Intellectual Viagra?
- Yeah.
- It works.
Her piece
"Oral Sex in the Age of #MeToo"
was published on jubel.no.
It was widely shared and set off
a lively Facebook debate.
With the strong painkillers I'm on,
I can't drive.
CHAPTER 4
OUR OWN FAMILY
I understand.
I hoped I could come, but...
I can't spend an hour on a bus
with this back.
Don't worry about it.
Could you come to Hnefoss
next weekend?
So we can celebrate together.
Nathalie says
happy birthday too.
Say hello from me.
How nice to see you.
- It's been too long.
- Way too long.
Anyway, have a nice birthday.
Thanks.
Okay.
I'm too skinny?
- You work too much.
- True.
We'll talk later.
Happy birthday!
- Why do I always have to go see him?
- He's not coming?
Well, he's got a backache.
There's always something wrong with him.
Hello!
So, he's not coming.
That's not nice.
He wanted to, but he has a backache.
Does he realize how it makes you feel?
- He's...
- It's a backache, Mom.
Sorry.
Please help yourself.
Thank you. It looks delicious.
I hope you like it.
Hurray and happy birthday today!
It's time to celebrate you!
At 30, Julie's mom, Eva,
had been divorced for two years.
A single mom,
and accountant in a publishing house.
Let us dance, hop, jump and turn
Wishing you the very happiest returns
For now it's time for celebration!
Congratulations!
Thanks.
Have you read Julie's article?
Of course.
- And?
- It's great.
- Have you read it, Mom?
- No.
Julie's article. It's excellent.
At 30, Julie's grandmother
had three children.
She played Rebecca West in Rosmersholm
at the National Theater.
At 30,
Julie's great-grandmother, Astrid,
was a widow, alone with four children.
Julie's great-great-grandmother
had seven children.
Two died of tuberculosis.
Julie's great-great-great-grandmother,
Herta, was a merchant's wife
with six children
in a loveless marriage.
Julie's great-great-great-great-grandmother
never turned 30.
The life expectancy for women
at the time was 35 years.
I don't want to bother you
with it, but...
It's getting harder and harder to pee.
I was scared it was prostate cancer,
but it wasn't.
- Well, that's good.
- Yeah.
Still...
I go to the toilet all the time.
And...
there's leakage.
Thanks for the cool jacket.
Good timing.
I want to get into hiking.
Sorry we're late.
You didn't make them coffee?
It's okay.
I'll fix something.
- How'd it go?
- Great.
- How many saves?
- Lots.
Good job.
Happy belated birthday.
30 is pretty major.
Too bad we missed it.
The tournament lasted all day.
So we couldn't come.
No problem. That's okay.
She's the goalkeeper.
You should see her play.
No, she doesn't have to.
She's awesome.
I'll let you know next time.
Yeah, please do.
Cool.
Did you get the article I sent you?
Yeah, I was about to ask you.
I couldn't get the link to work.
My PC acts up.
Know anything about computers?
I can take a look.
But can't she just resend the email?
Wasn't there a...
Did she send it
in an email?
An attachment to an email.
No, I pressed the button on the mouse.
Then I put the arrow on the square.
I tried twice, then it vanished.
It could be my fault.
Maybe I sent the wrong version.
We'll fix it.
You have to read that article.
It's really good.
Very...
Very well written, and...
Clever girl.
When are you coming to see us,
Per Harald?
We'd love it.
Come see where your daughter lives.
Sure, of course.
But it's hard to park in Central Oslo.
They've got that...
resident...
resident parking there.
Yeah.
It's made it much easier
to find a space.
You just have to pay.
And move the car every half hour?
Is that the reason
you don't come to see us?
Because it's hard to drive in town?
That's not it.
Then what is it?
Well, you know...
with my painkillers,
I'm not allowed to drive.
There's that, too.
The good thing is,
he's open about it.
His pains. His prostate.
You have to make your own family.
CHAPTER 5
BAD TIMING
Excuse me?
Hi.
Do you have Green Yoga?
Let me check.
- Which book again?
- Green Yoga.
Published last year.
No, I'll have to order it.
It's not in stock.
How long will it take?
Two weeks.
Okay. No thanks.
They don't have it either.
Okay.
We can try at Ark.
Thank you.
I told her
I forgot my sunglasses.
I just had to say
that I know what we said.
But I think about you a lot.
And...
I don't want to bug you
if you're happy.
Are you?
- I don't know what to say.
- Say nothing.
I'd like to see you again.
Just to talk.
I mean, I'm not going to...
But I'd like to see you again.
Just to...
I'm at pent Bakeri in Barcode
nearly every day.
I work there, I mean.
If you want to.
So...
- Eivind?
- Yes.
Your glasses.
Oh, right. Fuck.
Language opens the door
to the subconscious.
Freud was a great writer.
He could be self-critical.
He never hesitated
to revise his theories.
He viewed each individual patient
as a research subject.
Freud didn't distinguish between
therapy and research.
I find that very compelling.
Especially these days,
when scientific methodology
is applied
even in the humanities.
Enough about Freud.
How's the movie coming along?
Isn't it almost done?
Yeah, I've seen it, but...
- You have?
- Yes.
It's no longer mine at all.
Is it as bad as you feared?
The worst thing is how
they've housetrained Bobcat.
It's all very sanitized and safe.
I'll show you something.
A mock-up of the movie poster.
I have to admit...
I'm embarrassed my name's on it.
Shit.
No! Seriously?
You must be kidding. No way.
That's the poster. For real.
Let's see.
Looks like Chip and Dale.
Holy shit.
Should I laugh or cry?
Everything was butchered.
The story. All the details.
They removed the starfish.
Sorry, I'm lost.
What starfish?
It's, you know...
the butthole. The anus.
His butt is smooth in the movie.
This thing is gone.
That's bad in my book.
In underground comics you shit,
you puke, you fuck and all that stuff.
Bobcat is a wild cat
in a world of domestic cats.
He's a rebel against the bourgeoisie.
One of the most iconic buttholes ever.
Coffee?
Yeah.
I don't know what we should do.
I have to go.
Aksel,
we need to talk.
Yeah, of course.
What's wrong?
Julie said she'd been thinking.
It wasn't his fault.
Nothing he could have changed.
It's not anything you've done.
It's not your fault. But I feel...
It was about
all their old arguments.
Things they both knew.
It was bad timing.
They'd met in different phases of life.
They wanted different things.
We want different things.
Are you leaving me?
Yeah.
I want it to be over.
Are you sure you're yourself right now?
What do you mean?
Do you realize...
Do you realize what you're doing?
What you're destroying?
Yes, of course.
That's why it's so hard.
Where will you live?
I don't know.
You don't know?
No. With Mom.
Move home to Mom?
Yeah. Until I find a place.
Okay.
No, come on...
It's over.
I've had it. What else can I say?
Is something else bothering you
and you're venting on me?
No.
I've thought about it for a long time.
It feels right.
Have you met someone?
No.
I'm so sick of all this, Julie.
Dammit.
Sick to death of it.
But okay.
Just leave. If that's what you want.
I'll take a walk while you pack.
Julie said he deserved
a more grounded woman.
Ready for children.
Who was dependable,
didn't flake out every six months.
But I like you flaky.
Aksel said he liked her flaky.
That he needed someone like that.
Who could draw him out
of his drawing board.
And as for having kids...
He said
he'd rather be childless with her
than have kids with anyone else.
You know that's not the only problem.
So what is the problem?
It's a combination of things,
not just that.
I can see you're in a crisis right now.
I can understand that.
But if you love me,
we'll sort it all out.
Yes, I do love you.
And I don't love you.
Julie felt that this sentence,
the way she said it,
her emphasis on certain words,
summed up the impossibility of it all.
I feel like a spectator in my own life.
Like I'm playing a supporting role
in my own life.
I get that you feel stuck.
You need a change.
But is this the solution?
This is exactly my point.
I'm trying to tell you how I feel,
and you're defining my feelings.
I see what you're doing.
What am I doing?
Tell me what I'm doing.
Shut up, and I'll tell you.
You're acting out the confrontation
you never dared have with your father.
- You're taking it out on me.
- Is that so?
What do you know about it?
This is the crux of our relationship.
Everything we feel,
we have to put into words.
Sometimes, I just want to feel things.
You insist on being so
damn strong all the time.
For you,
being strong
is about formulating things.
If you analyze things
at every psychological level,
you think you're strong.
Because I'm less analytical,
you think I'm weaker.
She said she was terrified
of being alone.
Terrified of living without him.
That when she left,
she'd be like Bambi on the ice.
And that was precisely
why she had to do it.
Aksel mumbled soothing words
she didn't hear.
She was thinking about how,
at the age of 30,
she'd just compared herself to Bambi.
No.
I'm pathetic.
No, you're not.
Aksel...
Hey...
I didn't mean what I said.
It's okay.
I said plenty of things, too.
Stay a little longer.
You'll regret it.
I'm sure I will.
The saddest thing,
is one day, you'll want kids.
In any case,
you'll have other relationships.
And you'll realize that
what we had was unique.
I know.
You don't. But I do.
I've had many relationships.
I know how hard it is.
Nobody communicates like we do.
Laughs like we do.
Who knows?
Maybe we'll get back together someday.
Then and there...
she meant it.
I mean it.
CHAPTER 6
FINNMARK HIGHLANDS
- Are you cold?
- Yeah.
- It looked easier on YouTube.
- I told you we should practice.
Wait...
This one first.
- Are you sure?
- Yes, this goes on top.
Right, but is it first?
Isn't the other one first?
- No, that's the top.
- Okay.
Eivind turned it into a funny story
he told everyone.
But it touched
something deeper in her.
Awoke something in her.
She googled her family name.
Her grandfather came
from the Far North.
The DNA sample
she sent to America confirmed it.
Eivind didn't see how
her newfound identity
as 3.1% Sami
connected to mind-expanding substances
and unrelated exotic rituals,
but tried to be supportive.
As she became increasingly militant,
she saw how climate change
was hurting indigenous people.
Inuit starving as seals vanish.
Melting ice ruining reindeer pastures.
Aborigines dying of skin cancer
from the hole in the ozone.
Eivind could forget
about flying to New York.
Breathe in. All the way up.
She made them live
more sustainably.
He could always do better.
Study the ingredients more closely.
Consider the environmental impact
of his purchases.
Plastic is killing the oceans.
Norwegian cod
was ferried to China and back.
Cobalt mining was destroying the Congo.
Batteries had blood on their hands.
The sum of Western guilt
sat beside him on the couch.
Went to bed with him at night.
Everything was weighed against
the greater cause.
He felt he was betraying Sunniva.
Betraying the Sami people.
Felt like the world's worst person,
but couldn't resist.
I forgot my sunglasses inside.
Right.
Be right back.
CHAPTER 7
A NEW CHAPTER
Eivind didn't want kids either.
Climate researchers foresaw
hard times for future generations.
Overpopulation was the reason
everything was falling apart.
Julie liked how this pessimism
added depth
to his cheerful nature.
But she could tell
he had other reasons too.
Eivind's father, like Julie's,
tended to forget birthdays.
Eivind would often say,
"According to my father's calendar..."
I'm 12 years old.
They're all hard. No ripe ones.
People die of thirst in Chile
because avocados need so much water.
Still following Sunniva on Instagram?
Yeah, she posts interesting links
about the environment.
We don't message or anything.
She's got over 30,000 followers.
For showing off her ass?
She's not showing off her ass,
she's doing yoga.
It's yoga.
Okay, she shows it off a bit.
I don't mind you following her.
It's not a problem, but...
I don't want to be
the sensible choice
while she's the sexy one.
There's nothing sensible about you.
- I mean...
- Yeah.
- The angle of her pelvis...
- It's yoga.
That's not yoga.
It is yoga.
You liked it!
Oh, my god!
- That's not cool!
- I had to like it!
That's right.
So, that's why...
CHAPTER 8
JULIE'S NARCISSISTIC CIRCUS
I want people to watch me dance.
It's annoying as hell.
You can make a fool of yourself
on the dance floor and still be cool.
So true! I've noticed that.
When we dance,
you take up all the space.
Yeah, but it's also like,
"Everyone look at me!"
Yeah, that's my point.
You're always so mysterious.
You still have your stash?
What's that?
Where'd you find it?
What is it?
Magic mushrooms.
Have you tried it?
Yeah.
Right.
Why'd you do that?
Yuck.
Tastes like dirt.
Anyone?
I don't feel anything.
They're probably too old.
I gotta go.
Are you sure? Could be risky.
Come on, man.
We've done this before.
- We'll talk tomorrow.
- Call me.
Adil?
Can you speak?
It's kicking in for him.
Julie?
Is it starting to kick in?
You need water.
It's important.
You have to drink lots of water.
Here.
Drink it all.
You'll be okay.
You know I'm here for you.
Julie?
Drink the water.
It's okay! I'm here!
Julie, are you okay?
I thought I'd make it.
Are you okay?
Thought we could use some coffee.
We won't be doing that again.
You should take a shower.
Do I smell bad?
- Is that...
- Oh, my god.
Oh, my god.
I need to take a shower.
Don't worry, it's not urgent.
Shall I make breakfast?
I feel I can be myself with you.
Completely.
You weren't yourself before?
I was, but I felt like...
I had to be...
a bit...
like I was when we first met.
Thanks for putting up with me.
I love you.
CHAPTER 9
BOBCAT WRECKS XMAS
BOBCAT WRECKS XMAS
Have you read your
old Bobcat comics since you grew up?
Because in our day and age,
they seem so inappropriate and murky
that we feel almost sick
reading them.
It's unpleasant to realize
you created a character
who gained popularity
at the expense of women.
Okay, I get it.
You're saying art should be pleasant?
Do you think it's art?
I brought along
some of your early comics.
Bobcat is one thing,
but then there's Dick Wolf Dick,
Pedo the Parrot...
Right, I don't really think
this is the right medium to
explain comic book humor.
Have you ever considered that
some of your readers
may have been victims
of incest or rape?
Do we stop creating
because some people might feel bad?
Artists get killed for drawing things
others find offensive. They're shot.
Are you comparing Mohammed caricatures
with drawings of women with big tits?
Or with incest?
What's your point?
Well, yes and no.
It's a bit of a cop-out
to claim freedom of speech
when people criticize you.
We're discussing your work right now,
so nobody's censoring you.
As a woman, I'm upset.
I'm offended,
though we're not supposed to say that.
You have a choice.
You don't have to feel offended.
It's not a choice.
This is very generational.
One author cannot be held
solely responsible.
I think art has to be messy and free.
It has to be a bit dangerous
to be fun.
I want art to be a form of therapy
where I can express and work through
all my unacceptable thoughts,
all my darkest impulses.
But you're using your male privilege
to mock people weaker than you.
It's hardly art, or even humor.
Sorry, it's not
smart enough to be satire.
But this isn't about me.
Like, when I create something,
it's not just me talking.
- I know that much.
- Do you?
Let's say I draw this interview
as a cartoon.
The comic version of me
might call you a whore.
It doesn't mean I think that.
It could be
a parody of a certain type
of insecure male...
You used the word "whore"?
Yes, I said "whore".
You're not interested in what I mean.
Can't you see
that's crass sexualization?
I think we're on a slippery slope here.
All you post-feminists
are so fucking self-righteous!
Thank you, Marthe Refstad
and Aksel Willmann.
The term is "sex worker" now,
by the way.
CHAPTER 10
FIRST PERSON SINGULAR
I'm happy to help!
Long time no see!
- Yeah.
- How are you?
Okay. And you?
I'm good.
Do you ever talk to Aksel?
Is he okay?
Yeah, well...
I heard the radio interview.
Yeah.
He went a bit far.
He's not doing that well.
Did you know he's sick?
Aksel?
Haven't you heard?
He has cancer.
Sorry, I thought you knew.
It spread quickly.
They discovered it too late.
Cancer?
Pancreatic.
But...
How is he coping?
Pretty well, under the circumstances.
But it's hard.
The prognosis
is not good.
It's incurable.
Thanks for letting me know.
I thought you knew.
No, I hadn't heard anything.
It's just...
I didn't know.
When did you write this?
Have you read it?
I was moving it to paper recycling.
It's very good.
You think?
Yeah, it sucked me right in.
It's really, really great.
I mean...
It's like...
What?
Well...
I have to say,
it's really nice to read about you.
But it's not about me.
But the Christmas scene
is your family, right?
Yeah, but it's fiction.
You didn't get that?
I made it up.
Okay, it's fiction.
In any case...
- It's good.
- Because it's me?
No, because it's nice.
"Nice"?
Yeah, nice. Good.
Well written.
The way you write
is really great.
Like here:
"Too many memories overlapping,
blending into a blur."
That resonates with me.
It's well written. Truly good.
It's not well written.
What's wrong?
Suddenly you're into literature?
What was the last book you read?
- Are you okay? What's up?
- Why?
You criticize
everything I do these days.
Sorry, but going through my trash
is pretty invasive.
- Can't you see that?
- Relax.
- "Relax"?
- Calm down.
Relaxing is your specialty!
You don't mind
serving coffee till you're 50.
But I want more!
That's hurtful.
I don't know what to say.
CHAPTER 11
POSITIVE
Hello?
Hey...
Have you eaten?
Yeah, but I can make pasta if you like.
No, I don't need any if you've eaten.
Oops, sorry.
It started with a backache.
I've had backaches before.
I didn't worry.
Then my skin turned almost golden.
I thought I looked good.
It turned out to be jaundice.
Mom said I was born jaundiced.
They put me in a light box.
Is it painful?
No, not really.
It's okay.
They block selected
neural pathways with Botox.
That's good.
Yeah, it keeps me from taking
too many painkillers.
How's your family doing?
Fine, I guess.
Mom still follows your every move.
And your dad?
I've basically cut him off.
Good.
He can chase me if he likes.
Does he?
No, not really.
Two coffees.
They thought it was hilarious.
In some circumstances,
morbid humour can be funny.
Even anal sex at a bar mitzvah?
It makes me laugh.
But I'm an old guy now.
No.
Well, you know...
I kind of expected this.
I'd given up long before I got sick.
Really. I just watch
my favourite old movies over and over.
Lynch, The Godfather Part II...
How many times can you watch
Dog Day Afternoon?
Many times!
You should.
Absolutely.
Sometimes I listen to music...
I haven't heard before.
But...
It's old as well.
Music I didn't know about,
but from when I grew up.
It felt as though I'd already given up.
I grew up in an age
without Internet and mobile phones.
No, but honestly...
I sound like an old fart.
But I think about it a lot.
The world that I knew...
has disappeared.
For me it was all about going to stores.
Record stores.
I'd take the tram
to Voices record store in Grnerlkka.
Leaf through
used comics at Pretty Price.
I can close my eyes and see
the aisles at Video Nova in Majorstua.
I grew up in a time
when culture was passed along
through objects.
They were interesting because
we could live among them.
We could pick them up.
Hold them in our hands.
Compare them.
A bit like books?
Yeah, a bit like books.
That's all I have.
I spent my life doing that.
Collecting all that stuff,
comics, books...
And...
I just continued,
even when it stopped giving me
the powerful emotions
I felt in my early 20s.
I continued anyway.
And...
now it's all I have left.
Knowledge and memories
of stupid, futile things
nobody cares about.
Don't say that.
You've got the comics you created.
I wish I'd had what you had.
To be able to draw
without doubting that you're doing
what you're supposed to do.
I really wish I had that.
Yeah, but...
I've got cancer. I'm dying.
Of course I'm being retrospective.
You said you've done that for ages.
Not for that long.
In recent years. I reached
a point in life when suddenly...
It just happened.
When...
I began to worship what had been.
And now I have nothing else.
I have no future.
I can only look back.
And...
It's not even nostalgia.
It's...
fear of death.
It's because I'm scared.
It has nothing to do with art.
I'm just trying to process...
I have surgery tomorrow at 9.
I felt I could tell you anything.
You wouldn't judge me.
You're the least
judgemental person I know.
I don't have anyone I can talk to...
the way we used to talk.
Can you tell me
what you used to tell me?
I hated hearing it at the time,
but can you tell me...
I'll be a good mother?
Are you pregnant?
Congratulations?
How do you feel?
Good or bad?
I don't know.
I'm not sure.
It was an accident.
I must've been careless.
I mean, clearly I was.
Were you really sure?
Sure you wanted kids?
I was scared, too.
I had doubts, of course.
But I didn't want to show them,
to keep you from...
I never doubted
you'd make a good mother.
I saw that you doubted it.
If I regret one thing,
it's that I never managed
to make you see how wonderful you are.
What are you thinking?
This is hard to hear.
But... will you keep it?
I don't know.
I wasted so much time
worrying about what could go wrong.
But what did go wrong,
was never the things I worried about.
If he's a kind man, then go for it.
With a kind father,
and you as the mother,
everything will be fine.
Your voice has stayed in my head.
We still have great conversations.
No way?
About what?
Mostly about comics.
Eclectic tastes.
Same here.
I have imaginary conversations with you.
I'm sure I remember things about you
that you've forgotten.
And the other way round.
Yeah, maybe.
When I'm gone,
all that stuff about you
will go with me.
May I ask you a question?
Had you already met him
when you broke up with me?
Yeah.
Why didn't you tell me?
I don't know.
I didn't dare.
And now you're breaking up with him?
No, why do you say that?
Maybe because you don't seem happy
about the baby.
And that's what you do
when things get tough.
I'm glad I'm pregnant.
I'm sorry.
It's alright.
You were the most important
relationship in my life.
You don't have to say anything.
I know it's not the same for you.
That's normal.
You have many years left to live.
But I know, I feel it.
And I want you to know.
You were the love of my life.
You're a damn good person.
I should've told you before.
But I couldn't.
I'm pregnant.
How long have you known?
I know we don't want kids.
No...
I don't know if I do.
I feel like I never see anything through.
I go from one thing to another.
I need time
to think about all this.
About us.
It's okay.
CHAPTER 12
EVERYTHING COMES TO AN END
That's where I lived.
We moved there when I was 8.
Shall we knock?
No. I don't think so.
What do you remember from here?
I remember these colours.
They were always my reference
when I drew my comics.
These colours.
And I remember
the local drunk,
who was super nice.
I'm so tired of pretending
everything is okay.
It sucks being in so much pain.
It sucks.
Everything sucks.
And...
I don't want to be a memory for you.
I don't want to be a voice in your head.
I don't want to live on through my art.
I want to live in my flat.
I want to live...
I want to live in my flat with you.
I want to be happy together.
Bye.
Bye.
Hi, Julie.
Aksel's condition has suddenly worsened.
He's too ill for his planned treatment.
He may not make it through the night.
His family is with him,
but I thought you should know.
EPILOGUE
There's nothing more to say.
Cut!
One more.
One more quick take.
Slight adjustment.
Be sadder.
Okay.
But he gets up so quickly.
Hey!
Okay, camera ready.
Action!
There's nothing more to say.
Cut! Great.
Let's move on.
Right, stills.
Sorry, I need some shots of you.
- Sure. Here?
- Yeah.
- Are you okay?
- Yeah.
But I think I was pretty terrible.
Then use that.
Hold on to that feeling.
Act like you're looking at him.
A FILM IN 12 CHAPTERS,
A PROLOGUE AND AN EPILOGUE
You've been through the epidermis,
derma and muscles.
PROLOGUE
Julie disappointed herself.
This used to be easy.
She was still among the top students,
but there were too many
interruptions, updates,
feeds,
unsolvable global problems.
She sensed
a gnawing unease
she had tried to suppress by cramming
by drowning it in digital interference.
This was wrong.
This wasn't her.
She'd chosen medicine
because it was
so hard to gain admission.
Where her excellent grades
actually meant something.
But then she had
a revelation.
Her passion had always been the soul.
The mind, not the body.
Surgery is like, so concrete.
It's almost like being a carpenter.
But now...
My passion has always been
what goes on inside thoughts and feelings.
It was like a window had opened.
Not anatomy.
If psychology will make you happy,
then do it.
I think you're really brave.
I can't take it anymore.
I don't want to.
She left him.
Though he was devastated,
he had to respect
the way she took control of her life.
She observed her fellow students.
Norway's future spiritual advisers.
Mostly girls with borderline
eating disorders.
Say you're at a party.
She still felt trapped in
the role of model student.
All this cramming.
When was life supposed to start?
What's your name?
Julie.
The person's name is Julie.
Let's say Julie and I
meet at a party,
and we feel a mutual attraction.
Hypothetically.
Actually, she was a visual person.
Now I know.
I want to be a photographer.
A photographer?
I see.
Julie spent her student loan
on cameras and lenses.
As long as you're serious about it.
No safety net. No holding back.
Need help?
She took a temp job
in a bookstore.
Started a photography course.
Super!
She made new friends.
It felt like coming home.
Suddenly Oslo was a different city.
New places. New faces.
Hi. Aksel.
Right...
You're the comic book artist?
She'd heard
he was the creator of Bobcat.
Sorry, I'm a wild animal.
Have you read it?
Yeah.
So?
She pretended she'd read it.
She only remembered one strip
she'd found vaguely sexist.
I know what you mean.
Nothing's ever good enough.
The only thing worse than
all the idiots is yourself.
But...
If we go on, I'll fall in love with you.
Then it'll be too late.
Maybe we should agree to...
stop seeing each other.
The problem is our age difference.
I'm just afraid we'll fall into
a vicious circle.
You're much younger than I am.
You'll start to question who you are.
I'm past 40.
I've entered a new phase.
Whereas you still need time
to find yourself.
You don't need me waiting.
You need to be completely free.
I'm just afraid we'll hurt each other.
Later she said
that was the precise moment
she fell in love with him.
Shall I put your bag in the bedroom?
Yes, please.
I have two copies of a book!
Huh?
Yeah.
I'll throw one away.
Can I have two shelves?
How many closets do you need?
How many can I have?
No, that's not how it works.
This is antique glass.
All wavy and stuff.
No, don't do that. Not like that.
No!
Lift this catch here.
I'm terrified it'll break.
I gaze out this window.
- No way!
- I'm not kidding.
Hey, that's how relationships work.
She's a bit frosty towards me.
That's new.
Yeah? Why do you think that is?
It's embarrassing to say.
We've been single together.
Lived that life.
Then suddenly I move in with you.
- And you're happy?
- Yeah.
No, no, no...
Did you date this guy?
Yeah, just a fling.
Okay.
Stop!
You're so predictable!
Let's just fuck.
Hello!
CHAPTER 1
THE OTHERS
- Happy to see you!
- Me, too.
- Doing good?
- Yeah.
Hi, Martin.
Welcome.
Thanks for coming.
Dad designed it.
We should renovate,
but don't want to change anything.
It's beautiful.
Yeah, but there's stuff like that. Damp.
We get this room
because we're childless.
Dibs on the top bunk.
I always feel that Tone doesn't like me.
She's just shy.
That's what you say about boring people.
- It's my turn now.
- Okay.
Thank you.
Vin?
Vin de blanc?
Thanks.
Do you have any friends with kids yet?
No. Only one.
Guess this feels unfamiliar.
- They're very sweet.
- Thanks.
So what are you doing now, Julie?
Aksel says you've started writing?
Well, I wouldn't exactly
call it writing.
Being modest?
No.
Seems so.
Is there anything you'd like to do,
as a career?
Questions, questions, Karianne.
That question was vulgar
when we were students.
Lucky you!
Yeah, we were.
True, we had a lot of freedom.
Being young today is different.
The pressure is heart-breaking.
There's no time to think.
Always something on the screen.
Take William.
If we don't set limits,
he spends his life on screens.
Nice try.
Okay.
No, it's not your turn.
It's Martin's turn.
Julie's still the closest.
Bedtime.
- She's exhausted.
- No!
No!
- Yes!
- No!
I don't want to go to bed!
I don't want to!
Eva, don't make another scene.
Come here!
No! I don't want to!
Let go!
- You silly girl!
- I don't want to!
But I want you to!
I don't want to!
Kids can be intense.
Well, it's okay.
- Fun with kids.
- Yeah.
Can't we just enjoy it?
Please. No fights.
There are kids here, and it's chaos.
Just try.
Try playing with them
or something, okay?
Please.
Spare me the kid talk.
Sorry, but I wasn't the one who started.
You're with someone who's
younger than you. There's a gap.
You're almost 30.
Not a bad age to have kids.
I'm 44. I want to go to the next level.
With you.
It has nothing to do with my friends.
You seem to be waiting for something.
I don't know what.
Hello?
Jeez.
I didn't want to get into this.
Really not.
Everything's on your terms.
You have time off,
so we're on holiday.
You agreed.
After you publish, you get bored.
And start talking about kids.
The others here have kids,
so it's an issue.
Not true.
It is true.
And then...
you get a new idea at some point,
and disappear into your drawing board.
What are you saying?
Don't start. It's not cool.
Shut up. Please.
Of course I'd be there if we had kids.
You know that.
You know I want children.
Sure, and I'll also want kids
at some point.
But I don't know...
I have no maternal instinct, right?
No, you'd make a great mom.
I'm sure of it.
I want to have children, too.
At some point.
So what are we waiting for?
What has to happen first?
I don't know what exactly.
I just want to do more first.
Okay, like what?
What's the obstacle?
I don't know! Why do you ask?
Your concept is flawed.
Most people have kids without
sorting out their life first.
- They figure it out.
- Flawed?
That's how most people do it.
But I don't want everything
to happen on your terms,
based on what you want.
Fine. I got it.
But what do you want?
Oh, please! We have to stop.
I need sleep
to put up with those people.
I know a guy
who has a theory about that.
He says we have
a limited number of sperm.
Say... three trillion in your lifetime.
Jerk off too much...
and you run out.
Could be true.
Easy now, Portnoy.
How fascinating.
Personally, I feel like
I know everything
about male problems.
Erectile dysfunction,
morning wood,
infatuation with young women...
premature ejaculation...
Nice work, Aksel.
It's in all the books and movies.
Where's the menstrual period?
Female orgasm and desire? Where?
Good question. Tell us.
In juicy detail.
No, the point is
it shouldn't be taboo.
If men had periods,
that's all we'd hear about.
Can you womansplain it
a bit better?
What do you mean?
Like mansplaining, but womansplaining.
What?
Mansplaining is...
When a 45-year-old man explains
how things really are
to a younger woman.
Nice demonstration!
My pleasure.
Ding! Great!
Whiskey, anyone?
How's the senior citizen club doing?
Come on.
Look who's here!
Are you okay?
Not really.
Show me.
No!
Let me see...
We'll laugh about it later.
It's just a scratch.
Karianne's such a drama queen.
It's my fault.
Not at all, Julie.
It is. I always overdo it.
I know being here isn't easy for you.
I'm not into this whole
"happy family" thing either.
I'm glad it turned into a party tonight.
I hope you had fun!
What the hell's wrong with you?
What's wrong with having a little fun?
I didn't have any fun!
Sorry that happened.
You don't care!
Shut up! Just shut up!
You don't give a shit about me!
Shall we make a baby?
Fuck you.
- Hi.
- Good morning.
There's coffee. And cups.
CHAPTER 2
CHEATING
Sorry, I forgot.
What's your line of work?
I work in a bookstore.
Which one?
Norli, by the university.
Could you excuse me for a moment?
Could you sign?
Sure, I'll just finish this.
Any new Bobcat in the pipeline?
I've moved on.
Do you work full-time there,
or are you just temping on weekends?
- Sorry.
- Bye.
Hey, I think I'll head home.
Okay.
- You good?
- Yeah.
- Sure?
- Yeah, I'm fine.
- I can stay if you like.
- It's okay.
- But I have to stay a bit longer.
- Of course.
Okay. See you at home.
Hi. Can I have a smoke?
Of course.
I had my second child
ten years later.
Now we're supposed
to introduce solids at 4 months.
What made the pediatricians
change their minds?
- Do you cuddle your kids?
- Sure, a lot.
They'll be drug addicts.
They'll be addicts
because I cuddle them?
Yeah, according to new research.
New research says
you shouldn't cuddle your kids?
I realize it must be counter-intuitive
for a mother.
But motherhood upsets
your limbic system.
So my kids are going to be drug addicts?
That's ridiculous.
Do you have children?
No, but I'm a doctor.
I have a medical perspective.
Babies express themselves by crying.
It's normal for a mother or a father
to comfort them.
Hi.
Not asking me the usual questions?
- Which ones?
- Who I am, what I do.
Who are you? What do you do?
I hate those questions.
They're especially bad
when you're a doctor.
Are you a doctor?
No, you are.
Which questions should I ask?
Ask me who I know here.
- Who do you know here?
- Nobody.
I crashed the party.
You just waltzed in?
Okay.
Nothing's gonna happen.
Of course not.
I'm with someone I love.
Me, too.
And I can't stand cheating.
I've been there. Never again.
- Right, cheating is...
- No good.
But where do you draw the line?
You can feel it.
If I do this...
Is that cheating?
No.
What about this?
- No, that's permissible.
- Is it?
And hurting someone
who's not your partner?
- You hurt your partner?
- Is that cheating?
Did that hurt?
Did it?
- Feel good?
- Yeah, it did.
Okay.
Let me smell your sweat.
- No.
- Yes.
- Seriously?
- Yes, that's allowed.
- It stinks!
- Yes.
The kind of smell you never forget.
My turn to smell you.
No, please.
I regret it now.
Let me smell.
I think you smell nice.
I don't know if...
this is permissible.
Go ahead.
Okay.
You start,
then I'll go next.
I actually think sex is best
when the dick isn't too hard.
Because...
in a way, then I'm the one
who makes it hard, you know?
My secret will be dumb now.
I guess I misunderstood.
I was going to say
I like the Barcode Project.
It looks pretty from the bridge
when I go to work.
I expose my darkest secrets,
and you...
You said "secrets",
not "darkest".
So why is that a secret?
Because everyone thinks it's ugly.
Sorry, we're...
- Can I whisper it?
- Okay.
What?
Sorry, I seem to
be sitting on everything.
My bad.
There's nothing sexual about that.
Not at all.
Although you do like soft dicks.
Yeah.
Okay. Your turn.
I can't pee.
Just relax.
I'm going this way.
Okay.
What's your name?
Julie.
- I'm Eivind. Eivind...
- Don't say it.
Why not?
I'll find you on Facebook, and...
Good thinking.
Okay.
- Bye.
- Bye.
- We didn't cheat.
- No.
- Not at all.
- No.
Bye.
CHAPTER 3
ORAL SEX IN THE AGE OF #METOO
Aksel?
Aksel, I need to tell you something.
Aksel?
"A friend told me she had sex
with a man
"who pumped his dick into her mouth
while he held her head.
"She was confused
because she enjoyed it.
"It really turned her on.
"Can you be a feminist
and still enjoy being mouth-fucked?
"Most women I know are ambivalent
about performing oral sex.
"They must act as if they like...
the pathetic expectation
"that it'll turn them on...
"I like it flaccid.
"So I create the stiffness
"instead of having it thrust upon me."
This is good.
- Yeah?
- It's over the top.
I don't agree with everything,
but it's very well written.
Original. Very good.
What will you do with it?
I don't know.
You really think it's good?
Yeah. Absolutely.
You sure?
Yeah, I'm not lying.
No?
Are you sure?
Don't you dare doubt it.
It's pretty cerebral.
But it turns me on too.
- Right?
- Kinda.
Is that why you wrote it?
Intellectual Viagra?
- Yeah.
- It works.
Her piece
"Oral Sex in the Age of #MeToo"
was published on jubel.no.
It was widely shared and set off
a lively Facebook debate.
With the strong painkillers I'm on,
I can't drive.
CHAPTER 4
OUR OWN FAMILY
I understand.
I hoped I could come, but...
I can't spend an hour on a bus
with this back.
Don't worry about it.
Could you come to Hnefoss
next weekend?
So we can celebrate together.
Nathalie says
happy birthday too.
Say hello from me.
How nice to see you.
- It's been too long.
- Way too long.
Anyway, have a nice birthday.
Thanks.
Okay.
I'm too skinny?
- You work too much.
- True.
We'll talk later.
Happy birthday!
- Why do I always have to go see him?
- He's not coming?
Well, he's got a backache.
There's always something wrong with him.
Hello!
So, he's not coming.
That's not nice.
He wanted to, but he has a backache.
Does he realize how it makes you feel?
- He's...
- It's a backache, Mom.
Sorry.
Please help yourself.
Thank you. It looks delicious.
I hope you like it.
Hurray and happy birthday today!
It's time to celebrate you!
At 30, Julie's mom, Eva,
had been divorced for two years.
A single mom,
and accountant in a publishing house.
Let us dance, hop, jump and turn
Wishing you the very happiest returns
For now it's time for celebration!
Congratulations!
Thanks.
Have you read Julie's article?
Of course.
- And?
- It's great.
- Have you read it, Mom?
- No.
Julie's article. It's excellent.
At 30, Julie's grandmother
had three children.
She played Rebecca West in Rosmersholm
at the National Theater.
At 30,
Julie's great-grandmother, Astrid,
was a widow, alone with four children.
Julie's great-great-grandmother
had seven children.
Two died of tuberculosis.
Julie's great-great-great-grandmother,
Herta, was a merchant's wife
with six children
in a loveless marriage.
Julie's great-great-great-great-grandmother
never turned 30.
The life expectancy for women
at the time was 35 years.
I don't want to bother you
with it, but...
It's getting harder and harder to pee.
I was scared it was prostate cancer,
but it wasn't.
- Well, that's good.
- Yeah.
Still...
I go to the toilet all the time.
And...
there's leakage.
Thanks for the cool jacket.
Good timing.
I want to get into hiking.
Sorry we're late.
You didn't make them coffee?
It's okay.
I'll fix something.
- How'd it go?
- Great.
- How many saves?
- Lots.
Good job.
Happy belated birthday.
30 is pretty major.
Too bad we missed it.
The tournament lasted all day.
So we couldn't come.
No problem. That's okay.
She's the goalkeeper.
You should see her play.
No, she doesn't have to.
She's awesome.
I'll let you know next time.
Yeah, please do.
Cool.
Did you get the article I sent you?
Yeah, I was about to ask you.
I couldn't get the link to work.
My PC acts up.
Know anything about computers?
I can take a look.
But can't she just resend the email?
Wasn't there a...
Did she send it
in an email?
An attachment to an email.
No, I pressed the button on the mouse.
Then I put the arrow on the square.
I tried twice, then it vanished.
It could be my fault.
Maybe I sent the wrong version.
We'll fix it.
You have to read that article.
It's really good.
Very...
Very well written, and...
Clever girl.
When are you coming to see us,
Per Harald?
We'd love it.
Come see where your daughter lives.
Sure, of course.
But it's hard to park in Central Oslo.
They've got that...
resident...
resident parking there.
Yeah.
It's made it much easier
to find a space.
You just have to pay.
And move the car every half hour?
Is that the reason
you don't come to see us?
Because it's hard to drive in town?
That's not it.
Then what is it?
Well, you know...
with my painkillers,
I'm not allowed to drive.
There's that, too.
The good thing is,
he's open about it.
His pains. His prostate.
You have to make your own family.
CHAPTER 5
BAD TIMING
Excuse me?
Hi.
Do you have Green Yoga?
Let me check.
- Which book again?
- Green Yoga.
Published last year.
No, I'll have to order it.
It's not in stock.
How long will it take?
Two weeks.
Okay. No thanks.
They don't have it either.
Okay.
We can try at Ark.
Thank you.
I told her
I forgot my sunglasses.
I just had to say
that I know what we said.
But I think about you a lot.
And...
I don't want to bug you
if you're happy.
Are you?
- I don't know what to say.
- Say nothing.
I'd like to see you again.
Just to talk.
I mean, I'm not going to...
But I'd like to see you again.
Just to...
I'm at pent Bakeri in Barcode
nearly every day.
I work there, I mean.
If you want to.
So...
- Eivind?
- Yes.
Your glasses.
Oh, right. Fuck.
Language opens the door
to the subconscious.
Freud was a great writer.
He could be self-critical.
He never hesitated
to revise his theories.
He viewed each individual patient
as a research subject.
Freud didn't distinguish between
therapy and research.
I find that very compelling.
Especially these days,
when scientific methodology
is applied
even in the humanities.
Enough about Freud.
How's the movie coming along?
Isn't it almost done?
Yeah, I've seen it, but...
- You have?
- Yes.
It's no longer mine at all.
Is it as bad as you feared?
The worst thing is how
they've housetrained Bobcat.
It's all very sanitized and safe.
I'll show you something.
A mock-up of the movie poster.
I have to admit...
I'm embarrassed my name's on it.
Shit.
No! Seriously?
You must be kidding. No way.
That's the poster. For real.
Let's see.
Looks like Chip and Dale.
Holy shit.
Should I laugh or cry?
Everything was butchered.
The story. All the details.
They removed the starfish.
Sorry, I'm lost.
What starfish?
It's, you know...
the butthole. The anus.
His butt is smooth in the movie.
This thing is gone.
That's bad in my book.
In underground comics you shit,
you puke, you fuck and all that stuff.
Bobcat is a wild cat
in a world of domestic cats.
He's a rebel against the bourgeoisie.
One of the most iconic buttholes ever.
Coffee?
Yeah.
I don't know what we should do.
I have to go.
Aksel,
we need to talk.
Yeah, of course.
What's wrong?
Julie said she'd been thinking.
It wasn't his fault.
Nothing he could have changed.
It's not anything you've done.
It's not your fault. But I feel...
It was about
all their old arguments.
Things they both knew.
It was bad timing.
They'd met in different phases of life.
They wanted different things.
We want different things.
Are you leaving me?
Yeah.
I want it to be over.
Are you sure you're yourself right now?
What do you mean?
Do you realize...
Do you realize what you're doing?
What you're destroying?
Yes, of course.
That's why it's so hard.
Where will you live?
I don't know.
You don't know?
No. With Mom.
Move home to Mom?
Yeah. Until I find a place.
Okay.
No, come on...
It's over.
I've had it. What else can I say?
Is something else bothering you
and you're venting on me?
No.
I've thought about it for a long time.
It feels right.
Have you met someone?
No.
I'm so sick of all this, Julie.
Dammit.
Sick to death of it.
But okay.
Just leave. If that's what you want.
I'll take a walk while you pack.
Julie said he deserved
a more grounded woman.
Ready for children.
Who was dependable,
didn't flake out every six months.
But I like you flaky.
Aksel said he liked her flaky.
That he needed someone like that.
Who could draw him out
of his drawing board.
And as for having kids...
He said
he'd rather be childless with her
than have kids with anyone else.
You know that's not the only problem.
So what is the problem?
It's a combination of things,
not just that.
I can see you're in a crisis right now.
I can understand that.
But if you love me,
we'll sort it all out.
Yes, I do love you.
And I don't love you.
Julie felt that this sentence,
the way she said it,
her emphasis on certain words,
summed up the impossibility of it all.
I feel like a spectator in my own life.
Like I'm playing a supporting role
in my own life.
I get that you feel stuck.
You need a change.
But is this the solution?
This is exactly my point.
I'm trying to tell you how I feel,
and you're defining my feelings.
I see what you're doing.
What am I doing?
Tell me what I'm doing.
Shut up, and I'll tell you.
You're acting out the confrontation
you never dared have with your father.
- You're taking it out on me.
- Is that so?
What do you know about it?
This is the crux of our relationship.
Everything we feel,
we have to put into words.
Sometimes, I just want to feel things.
You insist on being so
damn strong all the time.
For you,
being strong
is about formulating things.
If you analyze things
at every psychological level,
you think you're strong.
Because I'm less analytical,
you think I'm weaker.
She said she was terrified
of being alone.
Terrified of living without him.
That when she left,
she'd be like Bambi on the ice.
And that was precisely
why she had to do it.
Aksel mumbled soothing words
she didn't hear.
She was thinking about how,
at the age of 30,
she'd just compared herself to Bambi.
No.
I'm pathetic.
No, you're not.
Aksel...
Hey...
I didn't mean what I said.
It's okay.
I said plenty of things, too.
Stay a little longer.
You'll regret it.
I'm sure I will.
The saddest thing,
is one day, you'll want kids.
In any case,
you'll have other relationships.
And you'll realize that
what we had was unique.
I know.
You don't. But I do.
I've had many relationships.
I know how hard it is.
Nobody communicates like we do.
Laughs like we do.
Who knows?
Maybe we'll get back together someday.
Then and there...
she meant it.
I mean it.
CHAPTER 6
FINNMARK HIGHLANDS
- Are you cold?
- Yeah.
- It looked easier on YouTube.
- I told you we should practice.
Wait...
This one first.
- Are you sure?
- Yes, this goes on top.
Right, but is it first?
Isn't the other one first?
- No, that's the top.
- Okay.
Eivind turned it into a funny story
he told everyone.
But it touched
something deeper in her.
Awoke something in her.
She googled her family name.
Her grandfather came
from the Far North.
The DNA sample
she sent to America confirmed it.
Eivind didn't see how
her newfound identity
as 3.1% Sami
connected to mind-expanding substances
and unrelated exotic rituals,
but tried to be supportive.
As she became increasingly militant,
she saw how climate change
was hurting indigenous people.
Inuit starving as seals vanish.
Melting ice ruining reindeer pastures.
Aborigines dying of skin cancer
from the hole in the ozone.
Eivind could forget
about flying to New York.
Breathe in. All the way up.
She made them live
more sustainably.
He could always do better.
Study the ingredients more closely.
Consider the environmental impact
of his purchases.
Plastic is killing the oceans.
Norwegian cod
was ferried to China and back.
Cobalt mining was destroying the Congo.
Batteries had blood on their hands.
The sum of Western guilt
sat beside him on the couch.
Went to bed with him at night.
Everything was weighed against
the greater cause.
He felt he was betraying Sunniva.
Betraying the Sami people.
Felt like the world's worst person,
but couldn't resist.
I forgot my sunglasses inside.
Right.
Be right back.
CHAPTER 7
A NEW CHAPTER
Eivind didn't want kids either.
Climate researchers foresaw
hard times for future generations.
Overpopulation was the reason
everything was falling apart.
Julie liked how this pessimism
added depth
to his cheerful nature.
But she could tell
he had other reasons too.
Eivind's father, like Julie's,
tended to forget birthdays.
Eivind would often say,
"According to my father's calendar..."
I'm 12 years old.
They're all hard. No ripe ones.
People die of thirst in Chile
because avocados need so much water.
Still following Sunniva on Instagram?
Yeah, she posts interesting links
about the environment.
We don't message or anything.
She's got over 30,000 followers.
For showing off her ass?
She's not showing off her ass,
she's doing yoga.
It's yoga.
Okay, she shows it off a bit.
I don't mind you following her.
It's not a problem, but...
I don't want to be
the sensible choice
while she's the sexy one.
There's nothing sensible about you.
- I mean...
- Yeah.
- The angle of her pelvis...
- It's yoga.
That's not yoga.
It is yoga.
You liked it!
Oh, my god!
- That's not cool!
- I had to like it!
That's right.
So, that's why...
CHAPTER 8
JULIE'S NARCISSISTIC CIRCUS
I want people to watch me dance.
It's annoying as hell.
You can make a fool of yourself
on the dance floor and still be cool.
So true! I've noticed that.
When we dance,
you take up all the space.
Yeah, but it's also like,
"Everyone look at me!"
Yeah, that's my point.
You're always so mysterious.
You still have your stash?
What's that?
Where'd you find it?
What is it?
Magic mushrooms.
Have you tried it?
Yeah.
Right.
Why'd you do that?
Yuck.
Tastes like dirt.
Anyone?
I don't feel anything.
They're probably too old.
I gotta go.
Are you sure? Could be risky.
Come on, man.
We've done this before.
- We'll talk tomorrow.
- Call me.
Adil?
Can you speak?
It's kicking in for him.
Julie?
Is it starting to kick in?
You need water.
It's important.
You have to drink lots of water.
Here.
Drink it all.
You'll be okay.
You know I'm here for you.
Julie?
Drink the water.
It's okay! I'm here!
Julie, are you okay?
I thought I'd make it.
Are you okay?
Thought we could use some coffee.
We won't be doing that again.
You should take a shower.
Do I smell bad?
- Is that...
- Oh, my god.
Oh, my god.
I need to take a shower.
Don't worry, it's not urgent.
Shall I make breakfast?
I feel I can be myself with you.
Completely.
You weren't yourself before?
I was, but I felt like...
I had to be...
a bit...
like I was when we first met.
Thanks for putting up with me.
I love you.
CHAPTER 9
BOBCAT WRECKS XMAS
BOBCAT WRECKS XMAS
Have you read your
old Bobcat comics since you grew up?
Because in our day and age,
they seem so inappropriate and murky
that we feel almost sick
reading them.
It's unpleasant to realize
you created a character
who gained popularity
at the expense of women.
Okay, I get it.
You're saying art should be pleasant?
Do you think it's art?
I brought along
some of your early comics.
Bobcat is one thing,
but then there's Dick Wolf Dick,
Pedo the Parrot...
Right, I don't really think
this is the right medium to
explain comic book humor.
Have you ever considered that
some of your readers
may have been victims
of incest or rape?
Do we stop creating
because some people might feel bad?
Artists get killed for drawing things
others find offensive. They're shot.
Are you comparing Mohammed caricatures
with drawings of women with big tits?
Or with incest?
What's your point?
Well, yes and no.
It's a bit of a cop-out
to claim freedom of speech
when people criticize you.
We're discussing your work right now,
so nobody's censoring you.
As a woman, I'm upset.
I'm offended,
though we're not supposed to say that.
You have a choice.
You don't have to feel offended.
It's not a choice.
This is very generational.
One author cannot be held
solely responsible.
I think art has to be messy and free.
It has to be a bit dangerous
to be fun.
I want art to be a form of therapy
where I can express and work through
all my unacceptable thoughts,
all my darkest impulses.
But you're using your male privilege
to mock people weaker than you.
It's hardly art, or even humor.
Sorry, it's not
smart enough to be satire.
But this isn't about me.
Like, when I create something,
it's not just me talking.
- I know that much.
- Do you?
Let's say I draw this interview
as a cartoon.
The comic version of me
might call you a whore.
It doesn't mean I think that.
It could be
a parody of a certain type
of insecure male...
You used the word "whore"?
Yes, I said "whore".
You're not interested in what I mean.
Can't you see
that's crass sexualization?
I think we're on a slippery slope here.
All you post-feminists
are so fucking self-righteous!
Thank you, Marthe Refstad
and Aksel Willmann.
The term is "sex worker" now,
by the way.
CHAPTER 10
FIRST PERSON SINGULAR
I'm happy to help!
Long time no see!
- Yeah.
- How are you?
Okay. And you?
I'm good.
Do you ever talk to Aksel?
Is he okay?
Yeah, well...
I heard the radio interview.
Yeah.
He went a bit far.
He's not doing that well.
Did you know he's sick?
Aksel?
Haven't you heard?
He has cancer.
Sorry, I thought you knew.
It spread quickly.
They discovered it too late.
Cancer?
Pancreatic.
But...
How is he coping?
Pretty well, under the circumstances.
But it's hard.
The prognosis
is not good.
It's incurable.
Thanks for letting me know.
I thought you knew.
No, I hadn't heard anything.
It's just...
I didn't know.
When did you write this?
Have you read it?
I was moving it to paper recycling.
It's very good.
You think?
Yeah, it sucked me right in.
It's really, really great.
I mean...
It's like...
What?
Well...
I have to say,
it's really nice to read about you.
But it's not about me.
But the Christmas scene
is your family, right?
Yeah, but it's fiction.
You didn't get that?
I made it up.
Okay, it's fiction.
In any case...
- It's good.
- Because it's me?
No, because it's nice.
"Nice"?
Yeah, nice. Good.
Well written.
The way you write
is really great.
Like here:
"Too many memories overlapping,
blending into a blur."
That resonates with me.
It's well written. Truly good.
It's not well written.
What's wrong?
Suddenly you're into literature?
What was the last book you read?
- Are you okay? What's up?
- Why?
You criticize
everything I do these days.
Sorry, but going through my trash
is pretty invasive.
- Can't you see that?
- Relax.
- "Relax"?
- Calm down.
Relaxing is your specialty!
You don't mind
serving coffee till you're 50.
But I want more!
That's hurtful.
I don't know what to say.
CHAPTER 11
POSITIVE
Hello?
Hey...
Have you eaten?
Yeah, but I can make pasta if you like.
No, I don't need any if you've eaten.
Oops, sorry.
It started with a backache.
I've had backaches before.
I didn't worry.
Then my skin turned almost golden.
I thought I looked good.
It turned out to be jaundice.
Mom said I was born jaundiced.
They put me in a light box.
Is it painful?
No, not really.
It's okay.
They block selected
neural pathways with Botox.
That's good.
Yeah, it keeps me from taking
too many painkillers.
How's your family doing?
Fine, I guess.
Mom still follows your every move.
And your dad?
I've basically cut him off.
Good.
He can chase me if he likes.
Does he?
No, not really.
Two coffees.
They thought it was hilarious.
In some circumstances,
morbid humour can be funny.
Even anal sex at a bar mitzvah?
It makes me laugh.
But I'm an old guy now.
No.
Well, you know...
I kind of expected this.
I'd given up long before I got sick.
Really. I just watch
my favourite old movies over and over.
Lynch, The Godfather Part II...
How many times can you watch
Dog Day Afternoon?
Many times!
You should.
Absolutely.
Sometimes I listen to music...
I haven't heard before.
But...
It's old as well.
Music I didn't know about,
but from when I grew up.
It felt as though I'd already given up.
I grew up in an age
without Internet and mobile phones.
No, but honestly...
I sound like an old fart.
But I think about it a lot.
The world that I knew...
has disappeared.
For me it was all about going to stores.
Record stores.
I'd take the tram
to Voices record store in Grnerlkka.
Leaf through
used comics at Pretty Price.
I can close my eyes and see
the aisles at Video Nova in Majorstua.
I grew up in a time
when culture was passed along
through objects.
They were interesting because
we could live among them.
We could pick them up.
Hold them in our hands.
Compare them.
A bit like books?
Yeah, a bit like books.
That's all I have.
I spent my life doing that.
Collecting all that stuff,
comics, books...
And...
I just continued,
even when it stopped giving me
the powerful emotions
I felt in my early 20s.
I continued anyway.
And...
now it's all I have left.
Knowledge and memories
of stupid, futile things
nobody cares about.
Don't say that.
You've got the comics you created.
I wish I'd had what you had.
To be able to draw
without doubting that you're doing
what you're supposed to do.
I really wish I had that.
Yeah, but...
I've got cancer. I'm dying.
Of course I'm being retrospective.
You said you've done that for ages.
Not for that long.
In recent years. I reached
a point in life when suddenly...
It just happened.
When...
I began to worship what had been.
And now I have nothing else.
I have no future.
I can only look back.
And...
It's not even nostalgia.
It's...
fear of death.
It's because I'm scared.
It has nothing to do with art.
I'm just trying to process...
I have surgery tomorrow at 9.
I felt I could tell you anything.
You wouldn't judge me.
You're the least
judgemental person I know.
I don't have anyone I can talk to...
the way we used to talk.
Can you tell me
what you used to tell me?
I hated hearing it at the time,
but can you tell me...
I'll be a good mother?
Are you pregnant?
Congratulations?
How do you feel?
Good or bad?
I don't know.
I'm not sure.
It was an accident.
I must've been careless.
I mean, clearly I was.
Were you really sure?
Sure you wanted kids?
I was scared, too.
I had doubts, of course.
But I didn't want to show them,
to keep you from...
I never doubted
you'd make a good mother.
I saw that you doubted it.
If I regret one thing,
it's that I never managed
to make you see how wonderful you are.
What are you thinking?
This is hard to hear.
But... will you keep it?
I don't know.
I wasted so much time
worrying about what could go wrong.
But what did go wrong,
was never the things I worried about.
If he's a kind man, then go for it.
With a kind father,
and you as the mother,
everything will be fine.
Your voice has stayed in my head.
We still have great conversations.
No way?
About what?
Mostly about comics.
Eclectic tastes.
Same here.
I have imaginary conversations with you.
I'm sure I remember things about you
that you've forgotten.
And the other way round.
Yeah, maybe.
When I'm gone,
all that stuff about you
will go with me.
May I ask you a question?
Had you already met him
when you broke up with me?
Yeah.
Why didn't you tell me?
I don't know.
I didn't dare.
And now you're breaking up with him?
No, why do you say that?
Maybe because you don't seem happy
about the baby.
And that's what you do
when things get tough.
I'm glad I'm pregnant.
I'm sorry.
It's alright.
You were the most important
relationship in my life.
You don't have to say anything.
I know it's not the same for you.
That's normal.
You have many years left to live.
But I know, I feel it.
And I want you to know.
You were the love of my life.
You're a damn good person.
I should've told you before.
But I couldn't.
I'm pregnant.
How long have you known?
I know we don't want kids.
No...
I don't know if I do.
I feel like I never see anything through.
I go from one thing to another.
I need time
to think about all this.
About us.
It's okay.
CHAPTER 12
EVERYTHING COMES TO AN END
That's where I lived.
We moved there when I was 8.
Shall we knock?
No. I don't think so.
What do you remember from here?
I remember these colours.
They were always my reference
when I drew my comics.
These colours.
And I remember
the local drunk,
who was super nice.
I'm so tired of pretending
everything is okay.
It sucks being in so much pain.
It sucks.
Everything sucks.
And...
I don't want to be a memory for you.
I don't want to be a voice in your head.
I don't want to live on through my art.
I want to live in my flat.
I want to live...
I want to live in my flat with you.
I want to be happy together.
Bye.
Bye.
Hi, Julie.
Aksel's condition has suddenly worsened.
He's too ill for his planned treatment.
He may not make it through the night.
His family is with him,
but I thought you should know.
EPILOGUE
There's nothing more to say.
Cut!
One more.
One more quick take.
Slight adjustment.
Be sadder.
Okay.
But he gets up so quickly.
Hey!
Okay, camera ready.
Action!
There's nothing more to say.
Cut! Great.
Let's move on.
Right, stills.
Sorry, I need some shots of you.
- Sure. Here?
- Yeah.
- Are you okay?
- Yeah.
But I think I was pretty terrible.
Then use that.
Hold on to that feeling.
Act like you're looking at him.