Guldbagge Award for Best Director


The Guldbagge for Best Director is a Swedish film award presented annually by the Swedish Film Institute as part of the Guldbagge Awards to directors working in the Swedish motion picture industry.

History

Throughout the past 50 years, SFI has presented a total of 50 Best Director awards to 40 different directors. Along with the categories Best Film, Best Actor in a Leading Role and Best Actress in a Leading Role, the award for Best director were one of the four original price categories which was presented at the first award ceremony in 1964. At the 1st Guldbagge Awards, Ingmar Bergman was awarded the first Guldbagge for his film The Silence. Since then, the prize has been awarded every year, except in 1971 where the only prize for best film was awarded, and in 1980 where only the categories Best Film, Best Actor along with the Ingmar Bergman Award. At both the 30th Guldbagge Awards and the 42nd Guldbagge Awards, Best Director was presented to a co-directing team, rather than to an individual director.
The Guldbagge Awards for Best Director and Best Film have been very closely linked throughout their history. Of the 55 films that have been awarded Best Film, 24 have also been awarded Best Director. The first one to achieve this was Ingmar Bergman, whose film The Silence won the Best Film award at the first 1st Guldbagge Awards. The last one who achieved this was Magnus von Horn through his film, The Here After at the 51st Guldbagge Awards.
The first woman who won the award for Best Director was Marianne Ahrne, for the film Near and Far Away. Besides her, only nine women have ever been awarded for Best Director: Suzanne Osten for The Mozart Brothers, Åsa Faringer for The Daughter of the Puma, Ella Lemhagen for Tsatsiki, morsan och polisen, Catti Edfeldt and Ylva Gustavsson for Kidz in da Hood, Lisa Siwe for Glowing Stars, Pernilla August for Beyond, and Gabriela Pichler for Eat Sleep Die. Since 1991, when the nomination system was introduced with three nominees, the number of female directors has increased significantly, with a total of 22 women. The first woman that got nominated was Susanne Bier for the film Freud's Leaving Home.

Winners and nominees

Each Guldbagge Awards ceremony is listed chronologically below along with the winner of the Guldbagge Award for Directing and the film associated with the award. Before 1991 the awards did not announce nominees, only winners. In the columns under the winner of each award are the other nominees for best director, which are listed from 1991 and forward.
For the first nineteen ceremonies, the eligibility period spanned two calendar years. For example, the 2nd Guldbagge Awards presented on October 15, 1965, recognized films that were released between July, 1964 and June, 1965. Starting with the 20th Guldbagge Awards, held in 1985, the period of eligibility became the full previous calendar year from January 1 to December 31. The Awards presented at that ceremony were in respect of 18 months of film production owing to the changeover from the broken calendar year to the standard calendar year during 1984. Due to a mediocre film year, no awards ceremony was held in 1971.
YearDirectorFilm
1963/64
(1st)
'The Silence
1964/65
(2nd)
'My Home Is Copacabana
1965/66
(3rd)
'Ön
1966/67
(4th)
'Here's Your Life
1967/68
(5th)
'Hugo and Josephine
1968/69
(6th)
'Ådalen 31
1969/70
(7th)
'Mistreatment
1970/71

1971/72
(8th)
'The Apple War
1972/73
(9th)
'Foreigners
1973/74
(10th)
'A Handful of Love
1974/75
(11th)
'Egg! Egg! A Hardboiled Story
1975/76
(12th)
'Buddies
1976/77
(13th)
'Near and Far Away
1977/78
(14th)
'The Brothers Lionheart
1978/79
(15th)
'A Respectable Life
1979/80
(16th)


1980/81
(17th)
'Children's Island
1981/82
(18th)
'The Simple-Minded Murderer
1982/83
(19th)
'Fanny and Alexander
1984
(20th)
'When the Raven Flies
1985
(21st)
'False as Water
1986
(22nd)
'The Mozart Brothers
1987
(23rd)
'Hip hip hurra!
1988
(24th)
'Katinka
1989
(25th)
'The Miracle in Valby
1990
(26th)
'Good Evening, Mr. Wallenberg
1991
(27th)
'Agnes Cecilia – en sällsam historia
1991
(27th)
Freud's Leaving Home
1991
(27th)
Underground Secrets
1992
(28th)
'House of Angels
1992
(28th)
Night of the Orangutan
1992
(28th)
The Best Intentions
1993
(29th)
'The Ferris Wheel
1993
(29th)
The Man on the Balcony
1993
(29th)
The Slingshot
1994
(30th)
'
'
The Daughter of the Puma
1994
(30th)
Sixten
1994
(30th)
A Pizza in Jordbro
1995
(31st)
'All Things Fair
1995
(31st)
Between Summers
1995
(31st)
Bert: The Last Virgin
1996
(32nd)
'The Hunters
1996
(32nd)
Christmas Oratorio
1996
(32nd)
The Dream Prince
1997
(33rd)
'Tic Tac
1997
(33rd)

Adam & Eva
1997
(33rd)
Sanning eller konsekvens
1998
(34th)
'Show Me Love
1998
(34th)
Nelio's Story
1998
(34th)
Waiting for the Tenor
1999
(35th)
'Tsatsiki, morsan och polisen
1999
(35th)
Zero Tolerance
1999
(35th)
In Bed with Santa
2000
(36th)
'Songs from the Second Floor
2000
(36th)
The New Country
2000
(36th)
Together
2001
(37th)
'As White as in Snow
2001
(37th)
Days Like This
2001
(37th)
A Song for Martin
2002
(38th)
'Lilya 4-ever
2002
(38th)
We Can Be Heroes!
2002
(38th)
Grabben i graven bredvid
2003
(39th)
'Daybreak
2003
(39th)
Evil
2003
(39th)
Details
2004
(40th)
'Four Shades of Brown
2004
(40th)
Dalecarlians
2004
(40th)
As It Is in Heaven
2005
(41st)
'Tjenare kungen
2005
(41st)
Zozo
2005
(41st)
Mouth to Mouth
2006
(42nd)
'
'
Kidz in da Hood
2006
(42nd)
Falkenberg Farewell
2006
(42nd)
When Darkness Falls
2007
(43rd)
'You, the Living
2007
(43rd)
Leo
2007
(43rd)
Darling
2008
(44th)
'Let the Right One In
2008
(44th)
Everlasting Moments
2008
(44th)
Involuntary
2009
(45th)
'Glowing Stars
2009
(45th)
Starring Maja
2009
(45th)
The Girl
2010
(46th)
'Beyond
2010
(46th)
Pure
2010
(46th)
Sebbe
2011
(47th)
'Play
2011
(47th)
She Monkeys
2011
(47th)
Simon and the Oaks
2012
(48th)
'Eat Sleep Die
2012
(48th)
Call Girl
2012
(48th)
The Last Sentence
2013
(49th)
'Waltz for Monica
2013
(49th)
The Reunion
2013
(49th)

Shed No Tears
2014
(50th)
'Force Majeure
2014
(50th)
Gentlemen
2014
(50th)
A Pigeon Sat on a Branch Reflecting on Existence
2015
(51st)
'The Here After
2015
(51st)
My Skinny Sister
2015
(51st)
Drifters
2016
(52nd)
'My Aunt in Sarajevo
2016
(52nd)

The 101-Year Old Man Who Skipped Out on the Bill and Disappeared
2016
(52nd)
Granny´s Dancing on the Table
2016
(52nd)
Girls Lost
2017
(53rd)
'The Square
2017
(53rd)
Sami Blood
2017
(53rd)
Borg McEnroe
2017
(53rd)
The Nile Hilton Incident
2018
(54th)
Carl JavérReconstructing Utøya
2018
(54th)
Ali AbbasiBorder
2018
(54th)
Måns Månsson and Axel PetersénThe Real Estate
2018
(54th)
Gabriela PichlerAmateurs
2019
(55th)
Hugo Lilja and Pella Kågerman Aniara
2019
(55th)
Levan AkinAnd Then We Danced
2019
(55th)
Roy AnderssonAbout Endlessness
2019
(55th)
Jon Holmberg'
2020
(56th)
Amanda Kernell Charter
2020
(56th)
Nathan GrossmanGreta
2020
(56th)
Maria BäckPsychosis in Stockholm
2020
(56th)
Henrik SchyffertSpring Uje spring
2021
(57th)
Nathalie Álvarez Mesén Clara Sola
2021
(57th)
Gorki Glaser-MüllerChildren of the Enemy
2021
(57th)
Ninja ThybergPleasure
2021'
(57th)
Ronnie SandahlTigers''

International presence

As the Guldbagge Awards are based in Sweden and are centered on the Swedish film industry, the majority of Guldbagge Award winners have been Swedish. Nonetheless, there is significant international presence at the awards, as evidenced by the following list of winners of the Guldbagge Award for Best Director.
However, no director has won for a film that is entirely in a foreign language.
Several international nominees include: