Sweden's Oscar History
Tuesday, November 3, 2020 at 11:31AM
NATHANIEL R in Bo Widerberg, Ingmar Bergman, Jan Troell, Oscar Trivia, Scandinavia, Sweden

by Nathaniel R

Charter, a child custody and abduction drama, will represent Sweden this season at the Oscars. It previously played at the Göteborg, Sundance, and Zurich film festivals. It's the second feature from Amanda Kernell who won several festival awards with her debut Sami Blood (2016). Familiar face and acclaimed Norwegian star Ane Dahl Torp (1001 Grams, Pioneer, Dead Snow, The Wave) headlines. 

Though Denmark is currently more popular with Oscar voters than Sweden, Sweden is the all-time leader among Scandinavian countries. That's due in large part to three auteurs: Ingmar Bergman, Jan Troell, and Bo Widerberg who were contemporaries in mid 20th century cinema. An investigation of Sweden's Oscar history after the jump...

SWEDEN'S OSCAR STATS
Submitting since 1956 (the first year of the competition)
58 Total Submissions 
16 Nominations (and 3 Additional Finalists)
3 Wins (all the wins are Ingmar Bergman films)

The Virgin Spring (later remade with an explotation horror slant as Last House on the Left)was the first of Ingmar Bergman's three winning films in this category

KEY SUBMISSIONS 

Most Frequently Submitted Directors for Best International Feature Film

  1. Ingmar Bergman (8 submissions, 3 nominated films, all of which won)
  2. Jan Troell (5 submissions, 3 nominated films)
  3. Bo Widerberg (4 submissions, 3 nominated films)
  4. Roy Andersson (4 submissions, none nominated)
  5. Ruben Östlund (3 submissions, 1 nominated film, 1 finalist)
  6. Colin Nutley (3 submissions, 1 nominated film)
  7. Kay Pollak (2 submissions, 1 nominated film)
  8. [TIE] 2 submissions, neither nominated: Lukas Moodyson, Josef Fares, and Kjell Grede

Most Oscar Honored Swedish Artists

Ingmar Bergman with his Norwegian collaborator/muse/partner Liv Ullmann

 

  1. Ingmar Bergman (9 nominations via Directing, Writing, Producing) plus 3 nominations/wins in Best International Film* plus an Honorary Oscar
  2. Ingrid Bergman (6 nominations and 3 wins for acting)
  3. Jan Troell (2 nominations 1 each for directing/writing) plus 3 nominations in Best International Film*
  4. Per Hallberg (4 nominations and 3 wins for sound editing)
  5. Paul N.J. Otteson (3 nominations and 3 wins for sound categories)
  6. Sven Nykvist (3 nominations and 2 wins for cinematography)
  7. Greta Garbo (3 nominations for acting plus an Honorary Oscar)
  8. Marik Vos-Lundh (3 nominations and 1 win for costume design)
  9. Lasse Hallstrom (3 nominations via directing/writing)
  10. Bo Widerberg (3 nominations in Best International Film*)
  11. [TIE] 2 nominations each: Max von Sydow and Ann-Margret (acting), Love Larson and Eva Von Bahr (makeup), Bent Forgslund (writing/producing)

 

*We're aware that this isn't "officially" a stat since Directors don't win but countries, but since the director actually receives it and gives the speech (and had more to do with making the movie than the country did) we consider it their honor, too.

Article originally appeared on The Film Experience (http://thefilmexperience.net/).
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