Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Levan Akin
Swedish filmmaker (born 1979) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Levan Akin (born 14 December 1979) is a Swedish film director and screenwriter, best known for his film And Then We Danced,[1][2] that received critical acclaim and won the 2019 Guldbagge Award for Best Film.[3]
Remove ads
Biography
Summarize
Perspective
Levan Akin was born and raised in Tumba, Sweden.[4][5] His family is among the Georgians who emigrated to the Ottoman Empire after the Russo-Turkish War of 1877. His parents emigrated from Turkey to Sweden in 1965.[6] Akin returns to Georgia every year with his sister for the summer holidays.[4] There he consolidates his knowledge of Georgian culture and the practice of the Georgian language.[7] He is openly gay.[8]
Career
Akin started out as an assistant director in film productions, mainly at Sveriges Television. He worked at Studio 24 for the production of You, the Living (Du Levande) by Roy Andersson (2007).
In 2008, he won two awards at the Hamburg Film Festival alongside film designer and producer Erika Stark for the short film De sista sakerna (2008).[9] Levan Akin then directed series such as Second Avenue (Andra Avenyn, 2008–2010), Livet i Fagervik (2009), Anno 1790 (2011) and Real Humans (Äkta människor, 2012) for the television channel Sveriges Television.
In autumn 2011, his first feature film Katinkas kalas, premiered at the Stockholm International Film Festival. The plot focuses on the inner tensions of a group of young people celebrating a birthday on a summer night. Three of the cast, mostly not known to the wider public, received nominations for the L'Oréal Paris Rising Star award,[10] and Yohanna Idha was nominated for 2013 Guldbagge Award as Best Supporting Actress.[11]
In 2019, Akin's second film And Then We Danced was released to critical acclaim.[12][13] It was premiered in the Directors' Fortnight section at the 2019 Cannes Film Festival[14][15] where it received a fifteen-minute standing ovation.[16] Set in Georgia, the film follows Merab, a student from a Georgian traditional dance school who falls in love with his male rival. The Georgian Orthodox Church officially expressed its disapproval of the promotion and screening of the film, and the release of the film in November 2019 caused riots in Tbilisi and Batumi.[17][18][19][20][21]
In June 2020, Akin was selected as a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.[22]
In 2024, Akin's third film Crossing had its world premiere at the 74th Berlin International Film Festival.[23][24]
Remove ads
Filmography
TV series
- 2007: Labyrint mobisodes
- 2008–2010: Second Avenue (Andra Avenyn) (10 episodes)
- 2009: Livet i Fagervik (3 episodes)
- 2011: Anno 1790 (3 episodes)
- 2012: Real Humans (Äkta människor) (20 episodes)
- 2022-2024: Interview with the Vampire (6 episodes)
Short film
- 2008: De sista sakerna
Feature film
- 2011: Katinkas kalas
- 2015: The Circle
- 2019: And Then We Danced
- 2024: Crossing
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads
