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With Every Heartbeat (Swedish: Kyss mig), also released as Kiss Me, is a 2011 Swedish drama film directed by Alexandra-Therese Keining. The film won the "Breakthrough Award" at the 2011 AFI Festival. [2]
Kiki is an American-Swedish co-produced documentary film, released in 2016. [1] It takes place in New York City, and focuses on the "drag and voguing scene [and] surveys the lives of LGBT youth of color at a time when Black Lives Matter and trans rights are making front-page headlines". [2]
Swedish title Director Cast Genre Notes 2020: Another Round: Druk: Thomas Vinterberg: Mads Mikkelsen, Thomas Bo Larsen, Magnus Millang, Lars Ranthe: Comedy-drama Denmark-Sweden-Netherlands coproduction Sweat: Magnus von Horn: Drama 2021: Costa Brava, Lebanon: Costa Brava, Libanon: Mounia Akl Nadine Labaki, Saleh Bakri, Nadia Charbel Drama ...
Sweden; Lists of Swedish films; 1910s; 1920s; 1930s; 1940s; 1950s; 1960s; 1970s; ... Swedish film at the Internet Movie Database This page was last edited on 7 ...
Swedish cinema is known for including many acclaimed films; during the 20th century the industry was the most prominent of Scandinavia.This is largely due to the popularity and prominence of directors Victor Sjöström and especially Ingmar Bergman; and more recently Roy Andersson, Lasse Hallström, Lukas Moodysson and Ruben Östlund.
SF Studios (“A Man Called Otto”) is set to produce and distribute “The Abyss,” a female-driven Swedish disaster film directed by Richard Holm (“Johan Falk”) and chronicling the tragic ...
The Unthinkable (Swedish: Den blomstertid nu kommer) is a 2018 Swedish thriller disaster war movie produced by Crazy Pictures, starring Christoffer Nordenrot, Lisa Henni, Jesper Barkselius and Pia Halvorsen. The film imagines a scenario in which Sweden is invaded during a rainy summer.
Play is a 2011 Swedish drama film directed by Ruben Östlund, and written by Östlund and Erik Hemmendorff. [1] Inspired by actual court cases, it portrays a group of black boys who rob a smaller group of white boys by means of a psychological game. The film was heavily debated in the Swedish press. It won the Nordic Council Film Prize in 2012. [2]