Leonardo DiCaprio might star in the English-language remake of Danish Oscar-winner Another Round

The Danish film Another Round took home best international feature film at last night’s Oscars.

And it looks like an English-language version of the drinking dramedy is already in the works, and with one big name attached according to Variety.

Leonardo DiCaprio, 46, is reportedly being eyed for the lead role, which was played Mads Mikkelsen, 55, in the original.

Bottom’s up! Leonardo DiCaprio is reportedly being considered to lead the English-language adaptation of the Danish dramedy Another Round, which won the Oscar for best international film at last night’s ceremony. Leo is seen in 2020 above

Connection: There is no official casting deal in place, but DiCaprio's production company Appian Way has the rights to the story

Connection: There is no official casting deal in place, but DiCaprio’s production company Appian Way has the rights to the story

There is no official casting deal in place, but DiCaprio’s production company Appian Way has the rights to the story.

Insiders report several big names bid for the title, with Jake Gyllenhaal’s Nine Stories and Elizabeth Banks’ production company also interested.

Writer/director Thomas Vinterberg will executive produce along with Sisse Graum Jørgensen and Kasper Dissing, but he will not be behind the remake.

Vinterberg co-wrote the original with Tobias Lindholm and was nominated for a best director Oscar for the film, which follows a gang of four friends who embark on a boozy-filled experiment to see if keeping up their blood alcohol content level could change their lives for the better.

Along with Mikkelsen the movie features the talents of Danish actors Thomas Bo Larsen, Magnus Millang and Lars Ranthe. 

Winning Sunday’s Oscar was an emotional experience for V interberg, who lost his daughter right before filming began. 

Cheers! The movie follows a gang of four friends who embark on a boozy-filled experiment to see if keeping up their blood alcohol content level would change their lives for the better. The original stars Mads Mikkelsen

Cheers! The movie follows a gang of four friends who embark on a boozy-filled experiment to see if keeping up their blood alcohol content level would change their lives for the better. The original stars Mads Mikkelsen

Moving: Winning Sunday's Oscar was an emotional experience for director Thomas Vinterberg, who lost his daughter Ida right before filming began

Moving: Winning Sunday’s Oscar was an emotional experience for director Thomas Vinterberg, who lost his daughter Ida right before filming began

The 51-year-old Danish director held back tears as he honored his late daughter Ida after winning the Best International Feature Film Oscar for Another Round.

Ida was only 19-years-old when she tragically died following a car collision in Belgium when a distracted driver slammed into the vehicle his ex-wife, Maria Walbom, was driving.

She was set to play the daughter of the character Martin (Mikkelsen) in the movie.

‘Mads, you gave us your finest. Not just for the film, but for my daughter as well,’ Vinterberg said about Mikkelsen. ‘And I’ll never forget it. So we wanted to make a film that celebrates life.’

‘And four days into shooting, the impossible happened. An accident on a highway took my daughter away. Someone looking into a cell phone. And we miss her, and I love her.’ 

Tragic: Ida was only 19-years-old when she died following a car collision in Belgium when a distracted driver slammed into the vehicle his ex-wife, Maria Walbom, was driving; from left to right in 2016, daughter Nana, Thomas, Ida and wife Helene Reingaard Neumann

Tragic: Ida was only 19-years-old when she died following a car collision in Belgium when a distracted driver slammed into the vehicle his ex-wife, Maria Walbom, was driving; from left to right in 2016, daughter Nana, Thomas, Ida and wife Helene Reingaard Neumann

Tribute: The 51-year-old Danish director held back tears as he honored his late daughter after winning the Best International Feature Film Oscar for Another Round

Tribute: The 51-year-old Danish director held back tears as he honored his late daughter after winning the Best International Feature Film Oscar for Another Round

'And four days into shooting, the impossible happened,' he said. 'An accident on a highway took my daughter away. Someone looking into a cell phone. And we miss her, and I love her'

‘And four days into shooting, the impossible happened,’ he said. ‘An accident on a highway took my daughter away. Someone looking into a cell phone. And we miss her, and I love her’ 

‘Two months before we shot this movie, two months before she died, she was in Africa,’ he continued. 

She sent me a letter, she had just read the script, and loved it. She felt seen by this. And she was supposed to be in this. 

‘And if anyone dares to believe that she’s here with us somehow, you’ll be able to see her clapping and cheering with us. We ended up making this movie for her, as her monument.’

‘So, Ida, this is a miracle that just happened, and you’re a part of this miracle,’ he said. ‘Maybe you’ve been pulling some strings somewhere, I don’t know. But this one is for you. Thank you so much.’ 

'Two months before we shot this movie, two months before she died, she was in Africa,' he continued. 'She sent me a letter, she had just read the script, and loved it. She felt seen by this. And she was supposed to be in this'

‘Two months before we shot this movie, two months before she died, she was in Africa,’ he continued. ‘She sent me a letter, she had just read the script, and loved it. She felt seen by this. And she was supposed to be in this’

'If anyone dares to believe that she's here with us somehow, you'll be able to see her clapping and cheering with us,' he said. 'We ended up making this movie for her, as her monument'

‘If anyone dares to believe that she’s here with us somehow, you’ll be able to see her clapping and cheering with us,’ he said. ‘We ended up making this movie for her, as her monument’

'So, Ida, this is a miracle that just happened, and you're a part of this miracle,' he said, seen with his family in 2010. 'Maybe you've been pulling some strings somewhere, I don't know. But this one is for you. Thank you so much'

‘So, Ida, this is a miracle that just happened, and you’re a part of this miracle,’ he said, seen with his family in 2010. ‘Maybe you’ve been pulling some strings somewhere, I don’t know. But this one is for you. Thank you so much’

He previously told CNN that working on the film helped him navigate through the grief of his daughter’s death.  

‘It gave a me purpose in life and kept me away from the freefall,’ he told CNN. ‘And I felt there was a higher purpose in making a movie for her. Before her death it was an ambition to make a life-affirming film; that became a necessity. I wanted to celebrate the life that we lose so easily.’

Vinterberg also credited the actors in his film for supporting him through the difficult time.

‘They granted their entire life to this, and so did the film crew, and hopefully it’s on the screen and the hopefully it’s there to honor her memory,’ he said.

Family: He was joined on the pink carpet by wife Helene Reingaard Neumann at the 93rd annual awards show at Union Station in Los Angeles

Family: He was joined on the pink carpet by wife Helene Reingaard Neumann at the 93rd annual awards show at Union Station in Los Angeles