fbpx
Loading Events

The Worst Person In The World

Directed by: Joachim Trier | 2021 | 2h 8m | Rated R | In Norwegian w/ English subtitles

Purchase a ticket

Select your showtime below.

O Cinema South Beach

1130 Washington Ave, Miami Beach (786) 471-3269

Additional information

• Adults – $11.00
• Older Adults (62+ years old w/ valid ID) – $9.50
• Students & Teachers (w/ valid ID) – $9.50
• Children (12 years old & under) – $9.50
• Military (w/ valid ID) – $9.50
• O Cinema Members – $7.50
(All tickets are available online and at the box office. Prices for special events and select screenings may vary. Please note ticket prices before you complete your purchase. All prices are subject to change without notice.)

All Miami Beach residents get 20% off Adult tickets on the FIRST MONDAY OF EVERY MONTH @ O Cinema Miami Beach! (w/ valid proof of residency)

ALL FILMS START EXACTLY AT THE LISTED TIME, AND ALL TICKET SALES ARE FINAL. NO REFUNDS, NO EXCHANGES, NO EXCEPTIONS.

PLEASE NOTE: This event has passed.

In this delightfully charming and insightful comedy/drama, twenty-something Julie is experiencing an existential crisis of life and love.

She’s altered her career path a handful of times and begins dating Aksel, an older and successful graphic novelist. As time goes on, Julie bristles against his need to settle down. When Julie crashes a party one night, she meets the charming and equally carefree Eivind and throws herself into a new relationship with wild abandon. Framed around Julie’s chronic indecisiveness, the film follows four years of ups and downs, important relationships, and what-if’s as our heroine hurtles into her thirties. Featuring a stellar performance by Cannes Best Actress winner Renate Reinsve as Julie, the latest film by celebrated Norwegian filmmaker Joachim Trier is a wry and at times melancholy romance, portraying a young woman navigating her way through her evolving identity, happiness and mistakes, in the process reminding us how quickly life can pass us by and to make the most of every opportunity.

“Worst has no shortage of gorgeous-people problems — more than enough, in fact, to fill 12 cinematic “chapters” — but it vibrates with real life, a film so fresh and untethered to rom-com cliché it might actually reshape the idea of what movies like this can be.”
– ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY

“Any film that can combine questions of mortality with funny, fully alive scenes of sex, social awkwardness, professional screw-ups and throwaway fun is a rich one. Its brilliant, full-on performance from Reinsve deserves to be celebrated far and wide.”
– TIME OUT

“Trier pulls a lot of stylistic tricks in the film, but they somehow never play like gimmicks, like adornments merely there to show off the talent of their creator. The film has a lilting, lively rhythm; the glimpses we see of months and years in Julie’s life ably provide a whole picture.”
– VANITY FAIR

“Funny and charming and sexy as all get-out, but with melancholy shadows that unsurprisingly lengthen as time passes, it’s a portrait of millennial angst and indecision that Trier rattles off with some of the same dazzling formal energy — and all the boundless sympathy — that he brought to his earlier youth dramas like ‘Reprise’ and ‘Oslo’, ‘August 31st.’ “
– LOS ANGELES TIMES