Nymphomaniac

Maestro picks up the megaphone with missionary zeal

The marketing campaign has made this release impossible to ignore, and anticipation for a Lars von Trier film has never been higher. However, if it weren’t already obvious, the marketing has little to do with the product.

It’s rare that a filmmaker gives critics such a lot of meat to chew through at any time of the year, let alone during the typically anodyne holiday season, so for that we should  be grateful. Nymphomaniac is everything that people will have anticipated and more. It is shocking, ugly, brutal, brilliant, farcical, challenging, enlightened, disturbing, irritating and absolutely relevant. It’s not just about the human animal – shaped by parental and societal influence – but about a myriad of subjects, from cinema to religion.

There’s a sense that Denmark’s premier provocateur has so much on his chest that these two volumes might have easily spilled over into a third. 

As with several of his previous films, Nymphomaniac is organised, after literary tradition, into ‘chapters’ and begins with Seligman’s (Skarsgaard) discovery of Charlotte Gainsbourg’s character ‘Joe’. Left severely beaten, she’s found prostrate in a back alley. After she refuses an ambulance or police assistance, he takes her home with him and the narrative continues in the form of a conversation between the two.

Joe recounts her life-long sexual odyssey, from toddler up to the present moment, exploring in varying depth, observations on love, polygamy, homosexuality, parenthood, sadomasochism, paedophilia and loneliness. In this sense, the film takes the form of an essay as opposed to a story. Seligman listens and illustrates Joe’s stories with analogies from the natural world and his own book-like sphere of experience. 

Without doubt, the gender-neutrality of her name has been used  to place emphasis on the ease with which one might assign the opposite sex to her character’s exploits, which therefore reminds us of our cultural bias towards sexuality and in particular, the sexually empowered female. We’re reminded that the oppression of female sexuality is deeply ingrained in our cultural history, not least thanks to the efforts of the Western Church. It will be absurdly challenging, likely even threatening, for some to see this rarest of spectacles: a sexually aggressive young woman, liberated, insatiable and uncontrolled by a man, exploring and enjoying her nature.

Adversely, if many of these scenes (particularly those in the first volume) instead featured a male Joe, they would be commonplace, trivial even. 

Having kept schtum for the last two years, LVT re-emerges triumphantly from the Cannes debacle of 2011 – where he claimed to identify with Hitler during a press conference – as something of an unlikely humanitarian. True to form, no-one could accuse the auteur of playing it safe here. His voice is as loud as ever, and the characters are clearly vessels for him.

This is never more transparent than a scene in which the Jewish (by ancestry) Seligman advocates anti-Zionism while making it clear that it is quite another thing to be an anti-Semite. 

The most frustrating aspect of this film/mouthpiece is the work’s inability, or refusal, to disguise its essayistic nature. The film’s final seconds are a good example of how LVT allows his agenda to take priority over his characterisations. That closing moment, while admirable in sentiment, feels dramatically sensationalist – a betrayal of what has gone before. No doubt it proves difficult for LVT to resist occasionally pulling the rug out from under his audience in this way, but ultimately, it serves to weaken the integrity of his monumental construct.

The dirty mac brigade should save their cash, but cinephiles will rejoice as LVT reminds us how utterly banal the cinematic landscape has been without him.

Nymphomaniac, volume 1

Nymphomaniac, volume 2

Dir: Lars Von Trier; Den drama, 2013, 110mins + 130mins; Charlotte Gainsbourg, Stellan Skarsgård, Stacy Martin, Shia LaBeouf, Christian Slater, Jamie Bell, Uma Thurman, Willem Dafoe 

Premieres December 25
Playing Nationwide




  • “No one seems to stand up for internationals”

    “No one seems to stand up for internationals”

    “To some extent, Denmark is not fair to internationals.” Nichlas Walsted, 34 years old, is the CEO of Swap Language, a provider of Danish lessons to more than 10,000 internationals. Tens of thousands of people follow him, and he advocates for internationals: “Because no one else does. I can’t think of a single politician or well-known person in Denmark who stands up for them,” he says.

  • Busy Copenhagen Airport nets a nice profit for the Danish State

    Busy Copenhagen Airport nets a nice profit for the Danish State

    Almost 30 million passengers travelled to or from Copenhagen Airport in 2024. The profit was 1.4 billion DKK and both figures are expected to grow in 2025. Expansions continue, and investments are being made in continued progress

  • Copenhagen ranked 4th for career growth

    Copenhagen ranked 4th for career growth

    Copenhagen is ranked as the fourth-best city in the world for career growth, according to an analysis by EnjoyTravel. This ranking considers various factors such as living costs, salary levels, workforce availability, and overall quality of life. Copenhagen is noted for its blend of historical and modern elements, particularly in the green energy sector, which influences job opportunities.

  • Greenlandic election seen as positive by experts

    Greenlandic election seen as positive by experts

    Last night’s Greenlandic election resulted in a surprising landslide victory for the moderate party Demokraatit, who won 30 percent of the votes – a 20 percent rise for the party since the last election.

  • Greenland moves to the right

    Greenland moves to the right

    A very surprising election gives victory to the right-wing opposition party Demokraatit. The incumbent center-left coalition loses spectacularly. Greenland – and Denmark – anxiously await upcoming government negotiations

  • Raise the voice of internationals. Take the survey and share your experience in Denmark.

    Raise the voice of internationals. Take the survey and share your experience in Denmark.

    Copenhagen Capacity has launched a survey for all internationals living in Denmark to find out if they are happy here and what challenges they face. The Copenhagen Post is the media partner for this initiative. You can find the survey below in the article.

Connect Club is your gateway to a vibrant programme of events and an international community in Denmark.


  • Copenhagen ranked 4th for career growth

    Copenhagen ranked 4th for career growth

    Copenhagen is ranked as the fourth-best city in the world for career growth, according to an analysis by EnjoyTravel. This ranking considers various factors such as living costs, salary levels, workforce availability, and overall quality of life. Copenhagen is noted for its blend of historical and modern elements, particularly in the green energy sector, which influences job opportunities.

  • Data shows that non-Western immigrants have saved local economies in Denmark

    Data shows that non-Western immigrants have saved local economies in Denmark

    A study reveals how only the massive influx of non-Western immigrants has saved many areas in Denmark from a decline in the workforce and a consequently shrinking economy

  • Long-term unemployment is double for non-Western immigrants

    Long-term unemployment is double for non-Western immigrants

    An analysis from the Labour Movement’s Business Council shows that the rate in long-term unemployment for non-Western immigrants is 1.8 times higher than for Danes. In other words, a chronic unemployment situation is way more probable for non-Western internationals.