![]() A heavy-set man, he shaves his head and wears a scraggly, gray beard. Little escapes his stony, piercing gaze, but his face occasionally lights up with a tender and childlike delight. Jensen was serious for most of the trip and said little, perhaps because of his medication. One autumn morning, around the time of the film’s pre-pandemic premiere, Jensen agreed to take a car trip with me and his legal guardian to Larkollen, the coastal village in southeastern Norway where his mother was born. The documentary was filmed shortly before the outbreak of the pandemic and could only be released in Norway and the US, but plans are now underway for a broader, international distribution. “It can be a bit difficult to remember the things you just want to forget… but now I live in a nice place,” he says in the film. Jensen tells the story of growing up with Cohen in the documentary film, Little Axel, directed by Fabien Greenberg and Bård Kjøge Rønning. His mother was Marianne Ihlen, who was one of singer/songwriter Leonard Cohen’s great loves and muses. ![]() The 63-year-old Jensen has been in and out of various mental health facilities since he turned 19. ![]() The house is part of a psychiatric facility near Oslo (Norway), in a tranquil location where bird songs and chirps are the only sounds to be heard. For the past few years, Axel Joachim Jensen has lived in a small, wooden house with a porch, where he likes to go out for a smoke, and a window with a view of meadows and pine forests. ![]()
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