Robert Award for Best Non-English Language Film
The Robert Award for Best Non-English Language Film, previously named the Robert Award for Best Non-American Film until 2018, is an award presented by the Danish Film Academy at the annual Robert Awards ceremony. The award has been handed out since 1997. Between 1984 and 1996 a Robert Award for Best Foreign Film was handed out.[1]
History
In the first years of the Robert Awards, between 1984 and 1996, only a Robert Award for Best Foreign Film was awarded. Then the category was split into two awards: the Robert Award for Best Non-American Film (from 1997) and the Robert Award for Best American Film (from 1999).[1] The names of these categories were changed in 2019 to the Robert Award for Best English Language Film and Robert Award for Best Non-English Language Film.
Honorees
1990s
- 1997: Il Postino: The Postman – Michael Radford
- 1998: The Full Monty – Peter Cattaneo
- 1999: My Name Is Joe – Ken Loach
2000s
- 2000: All About My Mother by Pedro Almodóvar & Life Is Beautiful by Roberto Benigni
- 2001: Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon – Ang Lee
- 2002: Moulin Rouge! – Baz Luhrmann
- 2003: Amélie – Jean-Pierre Jeunet
- 2004: Good Bye, Lenin! – Wolfgang Becker
- 2005: Evil – Mikael Håfström
- 2006: Downfall – Oliver Hirschbiegel
- 2007: The Lives of Others – Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck
- 2008: Eastern Promises – David Cronenberg
- 2009: Everlasting Moments – Jan Troell
2010s
- 2010: Slumdog Millionaire – Danny Boyle
- 2011: An Education – Lone Scherfig
- 2012: The King's Speech – Tom Hooper
- 2013: Amour – Michael Haneke
- 2014: Blue Is the Warmest Colour – Abdellatif Kechiche
- 2015: Force Majeure – Ruben Östlund
- 2016: Mommy – Xavier Dolan
- 2017: Son of Saul – László Nemes
- 2018: The Square – Ruben Östlund
- 2019: Border – Ali Abbasi
2020s
- 2020: Parasite – Bong Joon-ho
- 2021: Portrait of a Lady on Fire – Céline Sciamma
- 2022: The Innocents – Eskil Vogt
- 2023: The Worst Person in the World – Joachim Trier
- 2024: Close – Lukas Dhont
See also
References
- ^ a b John Sundholm; Isak Thorsen; Lars Gustaf Andersson; Olof Hedling; Gunnar Iversen; Birgir Thor Møller (20 September 2012). Historical Dictionary of Scandinavian Cinema. Scarecrow Press. pp. 328–. ISBN 978-0-8108-7899-0.
External links
- Official website (in Danish)