<p>Comedy-drama <em>Another Round</em>, about four friends who test alcohol's ability to improve their lives, won the Oscar for best international film on Monday, becoming the fourth Danish film to take home an Oscar.</p>.<p>The film, starring Mads Mikkelsen, portrays high school teachers in various stages of midlife crisis who try to reinvent themselves by drinking.</p>.<p>Mikkelsen, known for playing Hollywood villains and antiheroes, is a trained dancer and performs an extended drunken dance in the film, much of it wearing just one shoe.</p>.<p>The film, directed by Thomas Vinterberg, was considered a front-runner in the category. Vinterberg, a co-founder of the Danish<em> Dogme 95 </em>movement of low-budget naturalistic filmmaking, was a prior Oscar nominee for 2012's "The Hunt," also with Mikkelsen.</p>.<p>Vinterberg said the idea for the film sprang from looking at the many accomplishments in world history of people who were drunk.</p>.<p>"We very quickly realized that this socially accepted liquor that elevates people, makes people merry and makes people make great decisions, also kills people and destroys families," he said.</p>.<p>"We wanted to make a movie that explores the whole spectrum of alcohol, but more importantly... wanted to make a life-affirming film about living instead of just existing," Vinterberg added</p>.<p>Previous Danish Oscar winners were the 1987 film <em>Babette's Feast</em>, 1989 winner <em>Pelle the Conqueror</em>, and 2011 winner <em>In a Better World</em>.</p>.<p>Other nominees in the best international film category this year were Hong Kong's <em>Better Days</em>, Romania's <em>Collective</em>, <em>The Man Who Sold His Skin </em>from Tunisia, and Bosnian war drama <em>Quo Vadis, Aida?</em></p>.<p>The five nominees were picked from among 93 contenders.</p>
<p>Comedy-drama <em>Another Round</em>, about four friends who test alcohol's ability to improve their lives, won the Oscar for best international film on Monday, becoming the fourth Danish film to take home an Oscar.</p>.<p>The film, starring Mads Mikkelsen, portrays high school teachers in various stages of midlife crisis who try to reinvent themselves by drinking.</p>.<p>Mikkelsen, known for playing Hollywood villains and antiheroes, is a trained dancer and performs an extended drunken dance in the film, much of it wearing just one shoe.</p>.<p>The film, directed by Thomas Vinterberg, was considered a front-runner in the category. Vinterberg, a co-founder of the Danish<em> Dogme 95 </em>movement of low-budget naturalistic filmmaking, was a prior Oscar nominee for 2012's "The Hunt," also with Mikkelsen.</p>.<p>Vinterberg said the idea for the film sprang from looking at the many accomplishments in world history of people who were drunk.</p>.<p>"We very quickly realized that this socially accepted liquor that elevates people, makes people merry and makes people make great decisions, also kills people and destroys families," he said.</p>.<p>"We wanted to make a movie that explores the whole spectrum of alcohol, but more importantly... wanted to make a life-affirming film about living instead of just existing," Vinterberg added</p>.<p>Previous Danish Oscar winners were the 1987 film <em>Babette's Feast</em>, 1989 winner <em>Pelle the Conqueror</em>, and 2011 winner <em>In a Better World</em>.</p>.<p>Other nominees in the best international film category this year were Hong Kong's <em>Better Days</em>, Romania's <em>Collective</em>, <em>The Man Who Sold His Skin </em>from Tunisia, and Bosnian war drama <em>Quo Vadis, Aida?</em></p>.<p>The five nominees were picked from among 93 contenders.</p>