
The Love That Remains
Charting the gradual evolution of a family in the midst of an irreparable fracture, Hlynur Pálmason’s follow-up to Godland is a poignant domestic drama that observes life’s changes with humor and whimsy, set against the majestic, ever-shifting Icelandic landscape. Iceland’s official selection for Best International Feature at the 2026 Academy Awards.
The Knight, a special exhibition of photographs from Hlynur Pálmason’s Joan of Arc, will be on display in the Furman Gallery at the Walter Reade Theater to celebrate the release of The Love That Remains. Free to the public.
Charting the gradual evolution of a family in the midst of an irreparable fracture, The Love That Remains is a poignant, crisply pointillistic domestic drama that observes life’s changes with humor and whimsy, set against the majestic, ever-shifting Icelandic landscape. Visual artist Anna (Saga Garðarsdóttir) and fisherman Magnús (Sverrir Guðnason) were teenage sweethearts but have recently grown apart, and Magnús has moved out of the house. As long as the newly estranged parents put on a good face, the children—and their adorable sheepdog Panda (who won the prestigious Palme Dog award at Cannes)—seem to take the split in stride. Yet as Magnús becomes increasingly alienated from his domestic life, harsh reality can’t help but bubble to the surface. Hlynur Pálmason’s follow-up to his austere 19th-century drama Godland is a constantly surprising film with an immaculate sense of framing and pacing—and an evocative, dulcet piano score by Harry Hunt—dotted with idiosyncratic flights of fancy that never detract from the central emotional authenticity. A Janus Films release.

Palmason signals the changing of the seasons by showing us all of its beauty.
—Alissa Wilkinson, The New York Times









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