Category: Fjord

May
19

Photos/Videos: Cannes 2026 – “Fjord” Events + Site Exclusive – Brandon Lewis (@BLewis1103) Press Conference Photos (Do Not Use Without BLewis Credit)

I’ve added 500+UHQ/untagged photos and over 200+ screencaps of Sebastian from The 79th Annual Cannes Film Festival events featuring “Fjord” yesterday to the gallery, click below to view. I’ve also added video + screencaps below, enjoy. Also Brandon Lewis (blewis1103) was at the Fjord press conference, he’s generously given me permission to use his photos on this site for you all. Please do not use his photos without credit to him on other social media platforms. Thank you.

May
19

News: Sebastian Stan Slams Donald Trump and Says What’s Going on in America Is ‘Not a Laughing Matter’: ‘We’re in a Really Bad Place’

Variety

Two years after his Donald Trump biopic “The Apprentice” premiered at Cannes, Sebastian Stan reflected on the role during the press conference for his new movie “Fjord,” saying America is “in a really, really bad place.”

When the actor was asked his thoughts on “The Apprentice” — which premiered just before the 2024 election — now that Trump has been in office again for over a year, journalists in the room erupted into nervous laughter. But Stan responded: “It’s just not a laughing matter, to be honest. It isn’t.”

He continued, “I think we’re in a really, really bad place. I really do. And to be honest with you, when you’re looking at what’s happening, right — if we’re talking about the consolidation of the media, censorship, threats, the supposed lawsuits that seemingly never end but don’t actually go anywhere. You know, the writing was on the wall. We encountered all that with the movie.”

Trump attempted to halt the Ali Abbasi-directed “Apprentice” ahead of its Cannes premiere in 2024, threatening a lawsuit and calling the film “garbage” and “pure fiction.”

“Three days before the festival, [we were] unsure if the movie was going to play the festival,” Stan said. “So maybe people are paying attention more to that film, I think it will stand the test of time for that. But we went through all of it, right before Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert and so on. So, I wish it wasn’t like that.”

Stan’s latest movie, “Fjord,” rocked Cannes on Monday night with a 10-minute standing ovation. Directed by Romanian filmmaker Cristian Mungiu, the heart-wrenching family drama stars Sebastian Stan and Renate Reinsve as the parents of a Romanian family with strict religious beliefs who move to a small village in Norway. When bruises are noticed on their daughter’s body at school, their five children are taken away from them and a legal saga ensues.

The combination of Mungiu, Stan and Reinsve could be enough to earn “Fjord” the Palme d’Or. The director has already won the prestigious award once for 2007’s “4 Months, 3 Weeks and 2 Days,” and Reinsve was awarded the best actress prize for her performance in “The Worst Person in the World.” She was also at the festival last year with “Sentimental Value,” which won the grand prix and went on to score the best international feature Oscar.

May
19

Video: Fjord first look

A french news report has released a few short clips of ‘Fjord’ in a news segment. Click below to watch if you want to, thanks folkcardigan on twitter for the notification.

Apr
24

News: Sebastian Stan: “Trauma either destroys you, gives you birth, or reborns you.”

culturaladuba-ro [Google Translate]

Note: To view the accompanying photos click here

“That’s your responsibility, to look at all the parts of yourself, even the ones you don’t like, the questions you’re afraid of, to see who you are, how you were made, and then ask yourself: okay, now what do you want to do with this? ”

Leaving. For an 8-year-old, leaving can be a concept that comes to mind far too early, especially if they are venturing into the unknown. However, it becomes bearable when they have a mother who is determined to give them a new life.

The departure is rooted in the story of Sebastian Stan’s life. He left Constan?a as a child, leaving behind his beloved grandparents and friends on the stairs of the apartment building. He arrived with his mother in Austria, then in America, in New York. So that later his acting career would involve other and other departures.

But today we will not talk about leaving, but about returning .

With an extraordinary capacity for transformation, choosing the most different scenarios possible, Sebastian Stan is now one of the most appreciated actors in Hollywood, winner of a Golden Globe and nominated for an Oscar. He has dual citizenship – American and Romanian.

And in just a few weeks, he will be seen acting for the first time in a Romanian film, Fjord , directed by Cristian Mungiu, where any cinema artist fits perfectly – at the Cannes Film Festival, in the official competition.

To get close to a celebrity like Sebastian Stan, you normally have to go through an army of agents, whether impresarios, publicists, or literally, security guards.

On the set of the film in Fjord , Norway, things were different. For more than a month, Stan took off his invisible superstar cape and integrated himself into the different layers of the film crew, made up of Romanians, Norwegians, Swedes and Finns.

Also normally, such a celebrity rarely gives interviews and only to major, internationally known publications.

The fact that Sebastian Stan decided to give his first interview in Romania, after his Oscar nomination, to a small publication like Cultura la dub?, says much more about him than about us. It is just one of the ways in which he puts his notoriety at the service of others, to support causes he believes in, causes that otherwise do not enjoy much support. With the same reasoning, he supported, as producer and financier, the debut feature film of a Romanian director – Malul Vân?t , by Andreea Bor?un.

The discussion with Sebastian Stan was as natural as possible and touched on personal topics, which help us see him beyond his acting career. From the searches of a child who woke up in a completely different world, to the 42-year-old adult who tries to find his true identity and his role on earth. All this, in the context of the painful loss of his father – “with my father I spoke only in Romanian, which had created a very special intimacy between us, like an invisible thread that was only ours.”

What role does film play in this whole story? It is the art through which Stan can most authentically contribute to a world torn by conflict. And it is also part of his own quest.

The interview took place in Norway, in April 2025, during a filming break. Sebastian chose to speak in Romanian, but in places some ideas were expressed in English.

The material also presents the first images of Sebastian Stan on the set of Fjord , captured by photographer Adi Bulboac for Cultura la dub.

Continue reading

Apr
09

News: ‘Fjord’ at Cannes 2026 + Statement from Cristian Mungiu

Apr
09

News: Cannes Film Festival 2026 Lineup: Asghar Farhadi, Pedro Almodóvar, Ira Sachs, Hirokazu Kore-eda Set for Auteur-Driven Competition

Variety

Competition films with the most star power include Cristian Mungiu’s English-language debut “Fjord,” featuring Renate Reinsve and Sebastian Stan as a couple moving to a remote Norwegian town; Pawlikowski’s Cold War drama “Fatherland,” starring Sandra Hüller; Farhadi’s Paris-set “Parallel Tales,” with a French ensemble led by Isabelle Huppert and Catherine Deneuve; and Rodrigo Sorogoyen’s “The Beloved,” headlined by Javier Bardem playing an acclaimed director estranged from his daughter.

Feb
13

Photo: ‘Fjord’ First Look – Production Still

There are 1 new UHQ/Untagged photo added and it’s the first look photo still from ‘Fjord’. Click the link below, enjoy.

Nov
12

News: Renate Reinsve Was Born to Do This

Elle

She’s building her career outside her homeland, too, including starring in the Apple TV series Presumed Innocent and the A24 thriller A Different Man. She has The Governesses, another A24 film, with Lily-Rose Depp and Hoyeon; Somewhere Out There, from director Alexander Payne; and Fjord, a drama that she’ll lead alongside her A Different Man co-star Sebastian Stan.

[…]

On her craziest Hollywood story

Sebastian Stan and I crashed a wedding. I wasn’t famous at all at that point, though I had done The Worst Person in the World. I thought I would be invisible, but they were getting married because they both had seen that movie and fell in love over it. I was like their mascot.

Nov
12

News: Cristian Mungiu: I would very much like to be born a generation of young people interested in cultural management

revistacariere.ro

We are very curious to see your new film, Fjord, which you made this year, in Norway, with Sebastian Stan and Renate Reinsve. What was it like working with international actors, how was it filming in Norway?

Filming itself with them was not very different from what we always did in a Romanian film with Romanian actors. What is very different is working with a team that has a little other habits.

You know that we, in Romania, are very hardworking in the field of cinema because we work against the clock and against the budget. We work 12 hours a day and we pull hard to finish as soon as possible, we don’t have such moments when we beat the plains on the plateau and relax when it’s not the case, we can’t.

While in Norway, we had to somehow go through this small period of knowing each other and, in the end, it was OK, but we met somewhere in the middle.

They work, as a rule, 8 hours and, in the end, our 12, we agreed to work somewhere at 10 hours, with pause, with everything, with roads, with everything, but after that the punctual way in which we worked with Sebastian and Renate was no different.

They lived with us, they rehearsed with us, as with the other actors. Sebastian was very generous and did not come with a publicist, agent, I know what, on the plateau, he did not have a special caravan and treatment. Sure, he had his peace of mind, which he needed, but which all the actors had.

And this has helped us advance into some kind of European-American project, but mostly European. That is, he admitted to work less on the American model that we have no way to replicate here and fold on our way of working.

Nov
06

News: Cristian Mungiu Interview (‘Fjord’/Sebastian mentions)

cotidianul.ro

For Mungiu, the film is not the exact mirror of reality, but a laboratory of truth – a space where you can test the limits of identity and empathy. The director points out that when you make art, from a peripheral culture, verticality, rigor and courage to show “what is not seen” become all the more emblematic. This is how Romanian artists are more appreciated abroad than they at home, where they are “tolerated, not respected”. Once again, with “Fjord”, his next feature film filmed in Norway, starring Sebastian Stan, the director escaped “from the Mioritic Paradigm of Deal-velale”.

“The Daily”: How was the experience of returning to Norway to film “Fjord”? How did you furnish the northern space, beyond cold and dark, in the footsteps of Bergman and Strindberg?

Cristian Mungiu: I felt great in Norway and, speaking of identity, I sometimes felt more “home” there than at home. People were fair, parolistic, positive, respectful, involved, but alike with a sense of humor, very communicative, if you knew how to melt the ice of the early politeness. We didn’t do anything special to understand ourselves – but we were ourselves respecting what we were detecting the politeness and habits of the place. But somehow, our directness, warmth and familiarity rushed communication, and at “Fjord” we worked as a team formed, say, from Moldovans, Bucharesters and Norwegians, Danes and so on.

The film cast in Norway means a major decorum change from the urban or rural landscapes in Romania. How did this frame affect the story?

“Fjord” is still a film very close to what I did before, even if it is spoken in another language and is filmed in another country. It’s a also realistic story, also inspired by our daily life, while reflecting on our differences in understanding society and the consequences that relocation to another mental space, when you come with your home ideas. The fact that we escaped from the Mioritic hill-wave paradigm did not majorly influence the structure of the film, because that paradigm is integrated into our DNA is not related to tourist landscapes. But yes, there is an extraordinary greatness of those places – which I hope I have captured in the film – and which speaks of how the landscape, distance, loneliness and population density also influence the worldview.
Sebastian Stan, rhythm and depth

How did Sebastian Stan’s presence influence in the film’s cast? Have you felt major differences in rhythm, working style or approach to the role on the part of it?

– No. We worked very well together, in the style in which we work here, in Europe, in Romania: in the plane-sequence, on a precise text, with a repeated and harsh choreography. Sebastian is a very gifted and subtle actor and gives a lot of strength and naturalness to the character he plays. He had no problem getting into the skin of a character as he can no more different than those he gives life in the series “Marvel”. But yes, from what I talked to him, our working styles (American and Romanian) are as different as it can be – much like the difference between a factory, with assembly line, and a creative boutique.

[…]

When will the film “Fjord” premiere?

We hope that “Fjord” will have its premiere next year, both on the international one and the premiers in the territories. The film is sold from the script phase in more than 60 countries.