Close drives home the paradox of a postnational national identity. Whereas Belgian cosmopolitanism in films like Le fidèle and Girl is still somewhat anchored in a cultural reality, Close deliberately leaves existing Belgium behind. At the crossroads between the local and the global, the film oscillates between hyper-Belgian and hyper-universal. The result is an abstract, postnational Belgian identity, stripped of cultural specificity. The film merely expresses a make-believe image of Belgium and leaves out its concrete complexity. In the absence of a meaningful reference to the existing country, the representation of Belgium becomes a self-referential simulacrum whose meaning is limited to the diegetic space.