European Film Award for Best Director


The European Film Award for Best Director is an award given out at the annual European Film Awards to recognize a director who has exhibited outstanding directing while working in a film industry. The award is presented by the European Film Academy and was first presented in 1988 to German director Wim Wenders for Wings of Desire.
Michael Haneke is the director with most wins in the category with three, followed by Pedro Almodóvar, Paolo Sorrentino, Paweł Pawlikowski and Ruben Östlund, with two wins each. Almodóvar is the most nominated director with seven nominations for the award. Danish director Susanne Bier was the first female director to receive the award, winning for In a Better World in 2011.

Multiple wins and nominations

Most nominations

NominationsDirector
7Pedro Almodóvar
4Aki Kaurismäki
4Yorgos Lanthimos
4Paolo Sorrentino
3Susanne Bier
3Nuri Bilge Ceylan
3Matteo Garrone
3Michael Haneke
3Ken Loach
3Ruben Östlund
3François Ozon
3Paweł Pawlikowski
3Roman Polanski
3Lars Von Trier
2Ali Abbasi
2Fatih Akın
2Roy Andersson
2Theo Angelopoulos
2Andrea Arnold
2Jacques Audiard
2Marco Bellocchio
2Andreas Dresen
2Agnieszka Holland
2Samuel Maoz
2Steve McQueen
2Cristian Mungiu
2Giuseppe Tornatore
2Thomas Vinterberg
2Paolo Virzì
2Wim Wenders
2Michael Winterbottom
2Andrey Zvyagintsev
2-