Elfar Aðalsteins
Elfar Aðalsteins (born 1 June 1971, also known as Elfar Adalsteins) is an Icelandic film director, screenwriter, and producer. He studied filmmaking at the Met Film School at Ealing Studios and has an MA (honours) in screenwriting from Goldsmiths University, London.[1][2] CareerHis short film, Sailcloth (2011), starring the late John Hurt (Elephant Man, Midnight Express) was shortlisted for the 2012 Academy Awards and the British Film & Television Awards as well as receiving numerous international festival accolades. Hurt spoke fondly of the film saying “I often say, with something like 'The Elephant Man,' had it been an American series for television, where you have to sign your life away for seven years...well, maybe I would never have made ‘Sailcloth. I thought it was a terrific script and the whole thing was really enjoyable.” Aðalsteins’ directorial feature debut, End of Sentence (2019), a father-and-son road movie, starring Oscar nominee John Hawkes (Winter's Bones, The Sessions) and Logan Lerman (The Perks of Being a Wallflower) had its worldwide release in 2019. The film received positive reviews, with Guy Lodge from Variety describing it as a “A deliberate, gentle, genuinely caring debut feature from Icelandic director Elfar Adalsteins... [with] John Hawkes and Logan Lerman, both on very fine form” while Stephen Dalton from The Hollywood Reporter said “End of Sentence is a familiar story at heart, but beautifully observed, sensitively played and smart enough to wrong-foot audience expectations whenever the plot gets too comfortable.”[3][4] The film currently has a score of 91 on Rotten Tomatoes.[5] In Summerlight... and Then Comes the Night (2022), Aðalsteins directed an all Icelandic ensemble cast including Ólafur Darri Ólafsson (Trapped, The Secret Life of Walter Mitty), Heida Reed (Poldark) and Sara Dögg Ásgeirsdóttir (True Detective, A White, White Day), from his own screenplay adaptation of Jón Kalman Stefánsson’s celebrated novel, which received the Icelandic Literary Awards in 2006. The film premiered in the Best of Festival selection at Tallinn Black Nights IFF in 2022, was awarded Best Nordic Film Award at the Santa Barbara IFF and was nominated for five Icelandic Film and Television Awards, including Best Picture. As a producer, Aðalsteins has worked on a wide range of independent films, including Mamma Gógó (2010), What Maisie Knew (2012) and the award winning Icelandic documentary The Home Game (2023). Personal lifeAðalsteins is married to Anna Maria Pitt, a jewellery artist who has made appearances in his films.[6] Filmography
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