Nicolas Winding Refn
Nicolas Winding Refn (born 29 September 1970) is a Danish film director, screenwriter, and producer known for his visually arresting and often hyper-violent films that explore themes of masculinity, crime, and existential dread, including the Pusher trilogy (1996–2005), Bronson (2008), Drive (2011), Only God Forgives (2013), and The Neon Demon (2016).[1][2] Born in Copenhagen to filmmaker parents Anders Refn, a director and editor, and Vibeke Winding, a cinematographer, Refn moved to the United States with his family in 1978 and was raised partly in New York City, where he developed an early fascination with horror cinema, particularly The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974).[1][3] After being expelled from the American Academy of Dramatic Arts, he returned to Denmark and self-financed his raw debut feature Pusher (1996) at age 25, a gritty crime drama that launched his career and earned acclaim for its unflinching realism.[1][2] Refn expanded the Pusher story into a trilogy with Pusher II: With Blood on My Hands (2004) and Pusher 3: I'm the Angel of Death (2005), while experimenting with genres in films like the psychological thriller Fear X (2003), the biographical crime drama Bronson (2008) starring Tom Hardy, and the medieval adventure Valhalla Rising (2009).[1] His international breakthrough came with Drive (2011), a neon-soaked neo-noir starring Ryan Gosling that premiered in competition at the Cannes Film Festival, where Refn won the Best Director Award.[4][1] Subsequent works like Only God Forgives (2013), continuing his collaboration with Gosling, and The Neon Demon (2016) emphasized stylized violence and atmospheric tension, though they polarized critics.[2] Beyond features, Refn ventured into television with the Amazon Prime series Too Old to Die Young (2019) and the Netflix series Copenhagen Cowboy (2022), both sprawling crime sagas.[5] As of 2025, he is in production on his next feature film, Her Private Hell.[6] His films have garnered nominations and wins at prestigious awards, including Bodil Awards for the Pusher series and international recognition at festivals like Venice and Cannes, cementing his reputation as a provocative auteur in contemporary cinema.[1][7]Biography
Early life
Nicolas Winding Refn was born on September 29, 1970, in Copenhagen, Denmark, to parents deeply embedded in the film industry. His father, Anders Refn, is a Danish film director and editor known for works such as Breaking the Waves (1996) and Antichrist (2009), while his mother, Vibeke Winding (née Tuxen), is a master cutter and cinematographer who has contributed to numerous Danish productions.[8] He has a half-brother, the musician Kasper Winding. Growing up in a household surrounded by filmmaking discussions and equipment, Refn was exposed early to the mechanics of cinema, which sparked his initial interest in the medium despite his later claims of rebelling against his parents' more artistic inclinations.[9] In 1978, at the age of eight, Refn's family relocated to New York City, where they remained until 1987. This move immersed the young Refn in the vibrant, gritty cultural landscape of late-1970s and 1980s Manhattan, including exposure to American cinema through films like Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver (1976), which profoundly impacted him despite causing nightmares.[8] The city's dynamic subcultures, including punk scenes and underground arts, shaped his worldview, contrasting with the more restrained Danish environment he knew from infancy and fostering an early fascination with genre films, violence, and raw urban energy.[10] This period also highlighted the influence of his parents' professions, as family discussions often revolved around editing techniques and narrative structures drawn from Hollywood and European cinema.[11] Refn returned to Denmark in 1987 at age 17 to complete his high school education, marking a transitional phase before pursuing formal training in the arts. In the mid-1990s, Refn was accepted into the directing program at the Danish National Film School but declined to attend, opting instead to self-finance his debut feature after producing a short film titled Pusher in 1993, which aired on Danish television and helped secure funding for the full-length version released in 1996.[8] This decision was influenced by his growing obsession with visceral storytelling and genre conventions, honed by his childhood experiences and familial legacy.[12]Personal life
Refn has been in a long-term relationship with actress and filmmaker Liv Corfixen since the mid-1990s, and the couple married in 2007.[11] Corfixen appeared in Refn's early films, including a role in Bleeder (1999), and later directed and produced the documentary My Life Directed by Nicolas Winding Refn (2014), which chronicles the family's experiences during the production of Only God Forgives.[13][14] The couple has two daughters, Lola (born 2003) and Lizzielou (born 2011).[13] Refn and Corfixen prioritize family privacy, emphasizing quality time together away from his professional demands.[15] Fatherhood has influenced Refn's thematic explorations, notably in Pusher II (2004), where it prompted a focus on moral transformation and family dynamics, contributing to a nuanced approach in his later works that tempers overt violence with personal introspection.[16] In adulthood, Refn was diagnosed with red-green color blindness, a condition that impairs his perception of mid-tones and requires him to depend on cinematographers and colorists for grading decisions in post-production.[17][18] He primarily resides in Copenhagen with his family but spends significant time in Los Angeles for film projects.[11][19] Refn's interests include motorcycles and collecting pulp fiction novels, alongside a personal history of tattoos. During his youth in New York in the 1980s, he struggled with substance abuse but overcame these issues upon returning to Denmark around age 17, well before the early 2000s.[20]Career
Early career and Pusher trilogy (1996–2003)
Nicolas Winding Refn made his directorial debut at the age of 25 with the crime thriller Pusher (1996), a self-financed project shot guerrilla-style on the streets of Copenhagen using handheld cameras to capture the raw underbelly of the city's drug trade.[21] The film, with a modest budget of six million Danish kroner (approximately $1 million USD at the time), follows the desperate week in the life of small-time dealer Frank, exploring themes of masculinity, addiction, and the brutal hierarchies of the criminal world.[21] Refn, who had turned down an acceptance to the prestigious National Film School of Denmark to pursue the project independently, drew from his own experiences and a short film prototype to craft the story, emphasizing naturalistic dialogue and verité aesthetics that echoed the emerging Dogme 95 movement without formally aligning with it.[22][23] Despite initial rejections from major festivals and lukewarm critical reception in Denmark—where it was seen as overly gritty and commercial—Pusher premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in 1996, gaining a distributor through word-of-mouth at the Berlin market and slowly building a cult following for its unflinching portrayal of urban despair.[22][24] Refn faced significant financial hurdles early on, including limited support from the Danish Film Institute, which forced him to rely on personal savings and private backers; the film's modest box office performance exacerbated these strains, nearly leading to bankruptcy by the early 2000s.[22] Following Pusher, Refn directed Bleeder (1999), another low-budget Copenhagen-set drama delving into themes of obsession and male friendship, but it too struggled commercially, further compounding his economic woes.[12] The turning point came with the development of the Pusher sequels amid escalating debts, particularly after the 2003 release of Fear X, a psychological thriller co-written with Hubert Selby Jr. that bombed financially despite starring John Turturro and leaving Refn over a million dollars in the red.[22][12] To recover, Refn committed to completing the trilogy, beginning production on Pusher II: With Blood on My Hands in 2003 (released 2004), which shifted focus to Tonny, a side character from the original played by emerging actor Mads Mikkelsen in a breakout lead role.[25] This collaboration marked the start of a decades-long partnership between Refn and Mikkelsen, with the sequel's raw, handheld cinematography amplifying the trilogy's influence on the Nordic noir genre through its tense, documentary-like immersion in criminal subcultures.[12][26]International breakthrough (2003–2011)
Refn ventured into English-language cinema with Fear X (2003), his first international co-production.[27] The psychological thriller, co-written by Refn and Hubert Selby Jr. and starring John Turturro as a security guard haunted by his wife's murder, was filmed in Canada with backing from Danish, British, and American producers, including Refn's own Jang Go Star company.[28] Despite atmospheric cinematography and a moody score, the film earned mixed reviews for its deliberate pacing and unresolved narrative, with critics noting its art-house influences over genre conventions.[29] Commercially, it underperformed, grossing minimally and plunging Refn and his production company into approximately $1 million in personal debt, prompting a temporary return to Danish projects to stabilize his career.[30] To recover, Refn leveraged the trilogy's growing international reputation by completing Pusher II: With Blood on My Hands (2004) and Pusher III: I'm the Angel of Death (2005), both shot in Denmark but distributed more widely abroad, which helped alleviate his financial strain without fully resolving it.[22] By 2007, seeking broader production opportunities, Refn relocated to London, where he developed and directed Bronson (2008), a surreal biopic of Britain's most notorious prisoner, Charles Bronson (born Michael Peterson), starring Tom Hardy in his breakthrough leading role.[12] Produced by the UK-based Vertigo Films, the film blended operatic violence, vaudeville-style sequences, and stylized visuals inspired by Refn's admiration for directors like Stanley Kubrick, premiering at the BFI London Film Festival to strong festival buzz.[31] Bronson received acclaim for Hardy's transformative performance and Refn's bold direction, earning Hardy the Best Actor award at the 2009 British Independent Film Awards and the film the Best Film prize at both the Sydney Film Festival and the Sochi International Film Festival.[32] It also won Best Film at the 2009 Sitges Film Festival, marking Refn's first major genre festival recognition outside Denmark.[1] Building on Bronson's success, Refn continued his English-language pivot with Valhalla Rising (2009), a stark, dialogue-sparse Viking odyssey starring frequent collaborator Mads Mikkelsen as a mute warrior navigating 11th-century Scotland and hallucinatory landscapes. Co-produced by UK, Danish, and Swedish entities and shot in the Scottish Highlands, the film emphasized Refn's emerging visual poetry—long takes, desaturated colors, and mythic themes—premiering at the Toronto International Film Festival to praise for its hypnotic intensity, though some critiqued its minimalism as austere. This period also saw Refn experimenting with shorter formats, including festival-screened works that honed his stylistic experiments in violence and masculinity, while festival circuits amplified his profile beyond Scandinavia.[33] Amid these projects, Refn established key actor relationships that would define his later work, notably deepening his bond with Hardy from Bronson and meeting Ryan Gosling in late 2009 over dinner in Los Angeles, sparking a creative partnership initially for an adaptation of James Sallis's novel Drive.[34] Concurrently, roots of Only God Forgives took shape around 2011, with Refn developing the Bangkok-set revenge thriller as an extension of his neon-infused, operatic violence, further cementing his transition to global arthouse cinema.[35]Hollywood period (2011–2016)
Refn's Hollywood period began with the 2011 release of Drive, a neo-noir action thriller starring Ryan Gosling as a stoic Hollywood stuntman moonlighting as a getaway driver who becomes entangled in a heist gone wrong.[36] The film premiered in competition at the 64th Cannes Film Festival, where Refn won the Best Director award for his stylized direction blending hyper-violence, existential tension, and retro aesthetics.[2] Produced on a $15 million budget, Drive achieved significant commercial success, grossing over $81 million worldwide, propelled by strong international performance and critical acclaim for its atmospheric tension.[37] The film's defining visual style featured vibrant neon lighting and a synth-wave score composed by Cliff Martinez, incorporating tracks like Kavinsky's "Nightcall," which evoked 1980s influences and contributed to its cult status.[38] Building on the success of Drive, Refn continued his collaboration with Gosling in Only God Forgives (2013), a Bangkok-set revenge thriller where Gosling plays Julian, an American expatriate running a Muay Thai boxing club as a front for drug trafficking, confronting a ruthless police lieutenant after his brother's murder.[39] The production marked a scale-up in ambition, filmed on location in Thailand with an expanded international crew to capture the city's seedy underbelly, though Refn described it as a relatively low-budget endeavor starting around $4 million before adjustments.[40] Premiering in competition at the 66th Cannes Film Festival, the film received a divisive reception, met with boos from audiences but praised by some critics for its hypnotic visuals, operatic violence, and Larry Smith's cinematography evoking a feverish dream state.[39] Despite the polarizing response, it reinforced Refn's reputation for bold, auteur-driven genre filmmaking in the American mainstream. Refn's exploration of Hollywood's glamour and peril culminated in The Neon Demon (2016), a psychological horror film starring Elle Fanning as Jesse, a 16-year-old aspiring model whose beauty incites jealousy and obsession among industry insiders in Los Angeles.[41] Co-written by Refn with Mary Laws and Polly Stenham, the film delves into themes of vanity, predation, and the destructive allure of beauty, drawing satirical parallels to the fashion world's superficiality and cannibalistic dynamics.[42] It reunited Refn with composer Cliff Martinez, whose electronic score amplified the film's eerie, seductive tone through pulsating synths and ambient dread.[43] Premiering in competition at the 69th Cannes Film Festival, The Neon Demon elicited mixed reactions, including walkouts and applause, with praise for its sumptuous visuals by cinematographer Natasha Braier but criticism for its narrative sparsity.[44] During this period, Refn garnered additional accolades, including the Best Director award at the Sitges Film Festival for Drive, highlighting his impact on genre cinema.[45] His brash persona and unapologetic approach to violence drew significant media attention, often portraying him as Hollywood's "Danish bad boy" in profiles that emphasized his provocative style and festival controversies.[46] This era solidified Refn's transition to high-profile U.S. productions while maintaining his signature visual experimentation.Television and collaborations (2016–2023)
Following the success of The Neon Demon, Nicolas Winding Refn shifted toward television, embracing longer-form storytelling that allowed for expanded visual experimentation and narrative depth. His first major foray into the medium was the 2019 Amazon Prime Video miniseries Too Old to Die Young, a 10-episode neo-noir thriller co-written with Ed Brubaker and Halley Gross.[47] The series stars Miles Teller as Martin Jones, a Los Angeles police officer who descends into the city's criminal underbelly as a contract killer, blending graphic violence, existential themes, and Refn's signature neon-drenched aesthetics.[48] Critics lauded its hypnotic visuals and atmospheric tension but often critiqued its deliberate pacing and sprawling 13-hour runtime, which Refn described as a single, unbroken film.[47] In 2022, Refn returned to his Danish roots with Copenhagen Cowboy, a six-episode Netflix series co-created with Sara Isabella Jønsson Vedde, starring Angela Bundalovic as the enigmatic Miu, a young woman with mysterious supernatural abilities navigating Copenhagen's seedy underworld on a quest for revenge and self-discovery.[49][5] The production faced delays due to COVID-19 restrictions, which influenced its constrained, intimate shooting style amid Denmark's lockdowns, resulting in a surreal, fairy-tale-like tone infused with crime thriller elements and Refn's stylized violence.[50][51] While praised for its bold visuals and atmospheric immersion, the series drew mixed responses for its fragmented plotting and sparse dialogue, marking Refn's exploration of serialized formats beyond Hollywood features.[52][49] Parallel to his television work, Refn pursued diverse collaborations that blurred lines between commercial, artistic, and curatorial endeavors. In 2016, he directed Hennessy X.O: Odyssey, a hypnotic promotional short for the cognac brand, structured as seven sensory "chapters" evoking taste and ritual through abstract, dreamlike imagery reminiscent of his filmic style.[53][54] This project, like his earlier Gucci fragrance campaigns featuring Blake Lively, highlighted Refn's ability to infuse advertising with high-art sensibilities, sustaining his career amid feature-film uncertainties.[11] In 2023, Refn contributed to the multi-director music video for Travis Scott's "Circus Maximus," channeling his neon-noir aesthetic into a segment of the track's ambitious visual narrative.[55] Refn also engaged in experimental exhibitions and educational initiatives during this period. In collaboration with Fondazione Prada, he curated Soggettiva: Expressway Milano (2023), a cinematic program screening rare and obscure films to explore urban undercurrents and personal curation, reflecting his byNWR platform launched in 2019 as a hub for film and culture discourse.[56] Additionally, Refn delivered masterclasses at major festivals, including Cannes in 2019—focusing on balancing features, series, and commercials—and Venice in 2023, where he critiqued streaming platforms' excesses while sharing insights on his auteur-driven process.[57][19] These efforts underscored his role as a mentor and cultural provocateur, extending his influence beyond traditional directing.Recent projects (2023–present)
In 2024, Refn oversaw the 4K restoration of his Pusher trilogy, marking a significant revival of his early work.[58] The restored films premiered in the Venice Classics section of the 81st Venice International Film Festival, with the debut installment Pusher screening on August 31 to critical acclaim for its renewed visual clarity and enduring raw energy.[59] Supervised directly by Refn, the project involved meticulous conform edits and graphic updates to preserve the trilogy's gritty aesthetic while enhancing its accessibility for contemporary audiences.[24] Refn's interest in interdisciplinary collaborations extended to a high-profile partnership with video game designer Hideo Kojima in 2025.[60] The duo co-created the "Satellites" exhibition at Prada Aoyama in Tokyo, running from April 18 to August 25, which fused cinematic storytelling, interactive gaming elements, and avant-garde design.[61] Featured on the store's fifth floor—designed by Herzog & de Meuron—the installation included six retro-futuristic televisions displaying suspended, looping images of Refn and Kojima in philosophical dialogue, exploring themes of human connection in a digital age.[62] Supported by Fondazione Prada, the project highlighted Refn's ongoing experimentation beyond traditional film formats.[63] Refn has voiced intentions to reunite with longtime collaborator Ryan Gosling on an untitled future project, building on their successful partnerships in Drive (2011) and Only God Forgives (2013).[46] This potential collaboration was discussed during Refn's 2024 Venice appearance, where he emphasized his desire to explore fresh narratives with the actor.[46] Refn's return to feature-length directing came with Her Private Hell, a neon-noir thriller set in Tokyo and backed by Neon.[64] Announced in April 2025, the film stars Charles Melton and Sophie Thatcher in lead roles, alongside Kristine Froseth and Havana Rose Liu, with additional casting including Dougray Scott, Diego Calva, Aoi Yamada, Shioli Kutsuna, and Hidetoshi Nishijima.[65][64] Production commenced in May 2025 on location in Tokyo, wrapping by July, and centers on an original story described by Refn as "edgy, hypnotic, and unhinged," infused with themes of glitter, sex, and violence.[66][67] This project evolved from Refn's longstanding fascination with Tokyo, initially explored in television work and earlier unrealized concepts like the spy thriller The Avenging Silence, adapting those influences into a contemporary narrative of intrigue and excess.[46][68]Other works and unrealized projects
Refn has directed several short films that served as preludes or experimental pieces for his larger projects. In 2009, he created a prelude short for Valhalla Rising, a minimalist piece exploring themes of violence and mysticism that foreshadowed the feature's atmospheric style. He also contributed segments to the anthology Tokyo (2008), offering glimpses into urban alienation through stylized, neon-lit vignettes. Beyond narrative shorts, Refn has directed music videos for various artists, showcasing his signature visual flair with vivid colors and rhythmic editing. Notable examples include videos for The Kills' tracks, emphasizing raw energy and tension, and RPG's electronic pieces, which blend electronic sounds with surreal imagery. Refn has also applied his cinematic approach to commercial advertisements, often infusing them with his distinctive aesthetic of slow-burn intensity and bold visuals. He directed a series of ads for Chrysler in the mid-2010s, featuring sleek automotive designs amid dramatic, high-contrast landscapes to evoke power and mystery. Similarly, his work for Diageo brands, such as spots for premium spirits, highlighted sensory immersion and narrative depth, tying into his broader directing style of thematic visual elements.[69][70] In addition to commercial endeavors, Refn has taken on educational roles to mentor emerging filmmakers. He has taught workshops at New York University (NYU), focusing on narrative development and visual storytelling, and at Danish institutions like the National Film School of Denmark, where he led sessions on idea generation and script refinement.[71] These roles allowed him to share insights from his career while exploring creative pedagogy. Several of Refn's projects have remained unrealized due to funding challenges, creative pivots, or scheduling conflicts. He also announced a sequel to Valhalla Rising in 2013, set in a futuristic Tokyo and reuniting with star Mads Mikkelsen to explore themes of exile and redemption, but it never progressed beyond the conceptual stage owing to budgetary issues and Refn's focus on new ventures.[72][73]Directing style
Influences
Nicolas Winding Refn's filmmaking has been profoundly shaped by the fatalistic crime dramas of Jean-Pierre Melville, whose stoic hitmen and moral ambiguity in films like Le Samouraï (1967) informed Refn's portrayal of isolated protagonists navigating underworlds. Refn has described Melville's influence as central to his aesthetic, emphasizing the French director's precise, minimalist style that blends tension with existential dread.[74] The choreographed, balletic violence of John Woo's Hong Kong action cinema, seen in works like Hard Boiled (1992), has similarly impacted Refn's approach to stylized gunplay and heroic standoffs, drawing from Woo's operatic fusion of emotion and kinetic energy.[75] Refn has highlighted Woo's influence in interviews, noting how it inspired his rhythmic depiction of conflict as a form of visual poetry.[75] Refn has stated that his largest cinematic influence is Alejandro Jodorowsky, to whom he dedicated Only God Forgives (2013). Genre inspirations further include gritty 1970s cinema and its unflinching looks at urban decay and personal torment, which echo in Refn's thematic concerns.[74] Japanese yakuza films and noir classics like John Boorman's Point Blank (1967) have contributed to Refn's fascination with ritualistic violence and vengeful antiheroes in shadowy, code-bound worlds.[74] Personal factors play a significant role in Refn's inspirations; his father, Anders Refn, an editor who worked on Lars von Trier's films including Breaking the Waves (1996) and Antichrist (2009), exposed him to the intricacies of post-production and European arthouse sensibilities from a young age.[27] During the family's stay in New York City starting in 1978, when Refn was 8, he encountered American cinema firsthand, including formative viewings of Taxi Driver and Raging Bull, which instilled a lasting admiration for Martin Scorsese's visceral storytelling.[76] In his later works, Refn nods to modern provocateurs like David Lynch's surreal dreamscapes in films such as Mulholland Drive (2001), incorporating elements of subconscious unease and atmospheric ambiguity.[74]Visual and thematic elements
Nicolas Winding Refn's visual style is marked by distinctive elements such as vibrant neon lighting, slow-motion depictions of violence, and symmetrical compositions that emphasize balance and tension. In films like Drive, neon is achieved through sodium-vapor streetlamps and LED sources to create a retro, high-saturation night aesthetic that evokes a sense of mythic isolation. Slow-motion sequences heighten the visceral impact of violent moments, as seen in elevator confrontations and motel brawls, where the technique stretches time to underscore emotional and physical rupture. Symmetrical framing, often employing wide-angle lenses and centered subjects, contributes to a geometric precision that borders on the hypnotic, reinforcing themes of inevitability. Refn frequently collaborates with cinematographers like Larry Smith on projects such as Only God Forgives, resulting in high-contrast palettes that amplify dramatic shadows and bold color blocks, drawing from Smith's background in intense lighting for films like Stanley Kubrick's Eyes Wide Shut. Thematically, Refn's work recurrently probes masculinity in crisis, portraying male protagonists as isolated figures grappling with vulnerability and aggression amid societal pressures. This motif evolves into explorations of fate versus free will, where characters confront predetermined paths in archetypal narratives of good versus evil, often rendered through sparse dialogue and contemplative pacing. Beauty intertwined with horror emerges as a core concern, particularly in tales of allure turning predatory, blending glamour with underlying dread. To build tension, Refn integrates extended silences punctuated by pulsating synth scores, a signature of his partnership with composer Cliff Martinez, whose electronic soundscapes in Drive and The Neon Demon evoke a retro-futuristic unease that mirrors the characters' internal turmoil. Refn's aesthetic has evolved from the gritty, handheld realism of the Pusher trilogy, which captured raw urban decay with minimal stylization, to the opulent, fashion-inflected glamour of The Neon Demon, where saturated colors and dreamlike sequences dominate. This shift reflects his red-green color blindness, which limits perception of mid-tones and fosters an intuitive directing process focused on extreme contrasts and emotional resonance rather than nuanced hues. Critics have praised this evolution for its bold visual language but also labeled it "fetishistic," with Refn himself describing filmmaking as an obsessive fetish that prioritizes sensory immersion. Others view his mannered approach—emphasizing style over substantive plotting—as polarizing, though it consistently elicits strong reactions by transforming violence and beauty into operatic spectacles.Filmography
Feature films
Nicolas Winding Refn's feature films are characterized by their intense visual style and exploration of violence and masculinity, spanning low-budget Danish productions to international Hollywood collaborations. The following table lists his directed feature-length theatrical releases chronologically, including key production details.| Year | Title | Runtime | Lead Actors | Roles | Notable Awards/Nominations | Budget/Box Office |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1996 | Pusher | 105 min | Kim Bodnia, Zlatko Burić | Director, Writer | Bodil Award for Best Supporting Actor (Zlatko Burić) | DKK 6 million (approx. $965,000) |
| 1999 | Bleeder | 98 min | Kim Bodnia, Mads Almbjerg | Director, Writer | FIPRESCI Prize at Sarajevo Film Festival | Low-budget independent film |
| 2003 | Fear X | 91 min | John Turturro, Deborah Kara Unger | Director, Writer | N/A | N/A |
| 2004 | Pusher II: With Blood on My Hands | 100 min | Mads Mikkelsen, Zlatko Burić | Director, Writer, Producer | N/A | N/A |
| 2005 | Pusher III: I'm the Angel of Death | 108 min | Zlatko Burić, Marinela Dekic | Director, Writer, Producer | N/A | N/A |
| 2008 | Bronson | 92 min | Tom Hardy, Matt King | Director, Writer | British Independent Film Award for Best Actor (Tom Hardy); Best Film at Sydney Film Festival | $230,000 / $2.7M worldwide |
| 2009 | Valhalla Rising | 93 min | Mads Mikkelsen, Maarten Stevenson | Director, Writer | N/A | $5.7M / $600K worldwide |
| 2011 | Drive | 100 min | Ryan Gosling, Carey Mulligan | Director | Best Director at Cannes Film Festival; BAFTA nomination for Best Director; Academy Award nomination for Best Sound Editing | $15M / $81M worldwide |
| 2013 | Only God Forgives | 90 min | Ryan Gosling, Kristin Scott Thomas | Director | Grand Prix at Sydney Film Festival | $4.8M / $14.3M worldwide |
| 2016 | The Neon Demon | 117 min | Elle Fanning, Karl Glusman | Director, Writer | N/A | $7.5M / $3.5M worldwide |
| 2026 (expected) | Her Private Hell | TBA | Charles Melton, Sophie Thatcher, Kristine Froseth, Havana Rose Liu | Director | N/A | N/A |
Television
Refn entered television directing with the 2019 Amazon Prime Video miniseries Too Old to Die Young, a 10-episode crime drama that he created, wrote (with Ed Brubaker), and directed in its entirety.[78] Starring Miles Teller as LAPD detective Martin Jones, who moonlights as a contract killer amid an existential crisis, the series unfolds over approximately 13 hours of runtime, with episodes averaging around 90 minutes each and featuring a neon-soaked, surreal aesthetic.[79] It received mixed critical reception, earning a 72% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 39 reviews, with praise for its bold visuals and thematic depth but criticism for its deliberate pacing and nonlinear structure.[80] In 2022, Refn released Copenhagen Cowboy, a six-episode Netflix series that he created and directed, marking his return to Danish-language storytelling.[81] The thriller follows enigmatic young woman Miu (Angela Bundalovic) as she navigates Copenhagen's criminal underworld, seeking vengeance against exploitative figures, with supporting roles by Zlatko Burić and Li II Zhang.[5] Episodes run about 50-56 minutes each, totaling roughly six hours, and emphasize Refn's signature stylistic elements like slow-burn tension and atmospheric lighting.[51] Critics gave it a 68% Rotten Tomatoes score from 31 reviews, lauding its hypnotic visuals while noting its challenging narrative opacity.[82] These projects extend Refn's exploration of violence and moral ambiguity from his films into serialized formats.Short films and music videos
Nicolas Winding Refn has directed a number of short films and commercials throughout his career, often blending his signature visual style—characterized by neon lighting, slow-motion sequences, and thematic explorations of desire and violence—with brand narratives. These works, typically commissioned by luxury brands, showcase his ability to create immersive, cinematic experiences in condensed formats. While Refn has directed fewer traditional music videos, his shorter-form output includes promotional shorts and advertisements that function similarly, incorporating original scores and experimental aesthetics.[83] The following table catalogs select examples of Refn's short films and advertisements, highlighting key projects with details on year, client, duration, and notable awards or recognition.| Year | Title | Client/Artist | Duration | Notes/Awards |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | Gucci Premiere | Gucci (featuring Blake Lively) | 30 seconds | Fragrance campaign ad shot in historic Los Angeles locations; emphasizes red carpet glamour. No major awards noted.[84] |
| 2013 | Fly Beyond | Grey Goose | 90 seconds | Vodka campaign depicting the brand's creator François Thibault defying expectations; part of integrated "Fly Beyond" effort with 3D elements. No major awards noted.[85] |
| 2014 | Lincoln MKC Series (e.g., "Bull," "Intro") | Lincoln (featuring Matthew McConaughey) | 30 seconds each | Multi-ad automotive campaign with surreal, moody visuals; McConaughey as spokesman in a multi-year deal. No major awards noted.[70] |
| 2014 | Made to Measure | Gucci (featuring James Franco) | 30 seconds | Fragrance ad featuring an iconic Lamborghini 350 GT; focuses on tailored luxury. No major awards noted.[86] |
| 2016 | Hennessy X.O: Odyssey | Hennessy | 1 minute 44 seconds | Cognac promotional short divided into seven chapters exploring sensory notes; scored by Cliff Martinez. No major awards noted.[53] |
| 2017 | Where Fashion Comes to Life | 24 Sèvres | 3 minutes | E-commerce fashion film with animated mannequins dancing through Paris; choreographed by Nicolas Huchard, featuring brands like Gucci and Fendi. Won Gold at World Luxury Awards 2017.[87][88] |
| 2022 | Touch of Crude | Prada | 30 minutes | Fashion show backdrop short exploring a mysterious entity in a new home; premiered at Lyon Special Fashion Film Festival. No major awards noted.[83] |
| 2024 | Beauty Is Not a Sin | MV Agusta | 7 minutes | Motorcycle ad short playing with religious iconography and desire; first commercial to premiere in Venice Film Festival's official program. No major awards noted as of 2025.[89] |