Daniel Bergman
Daniel Bergman | |
---|---|
Born | Daniel Sebastian Bergman 7 September 1962 |
Parent(s) | Ingmar Bergman Käbi Laretei |
Relatives | Lena Bergman (paternal half-sister) Eva Bergman (paternal half-sister) Mats Bergman (paternal half-brother) Anna Bergman (paternal half-sister) Linn Ullmann (paternal half-sister) |
Daniel Sebastian Bergman (Swedish: [ˈdɑ̂ːnɪɛl ˈbæ̌rjman]; born 7 September 1962) is a Swedish film director. He is the son of Ingmar Bergman and Käbi Laretei.
As a child, Bergman appeared in a 1967 Swedish program called Stimulantia, which consisted of eight episodes, one of which was directed by his father Ingmar. The short, 10-minute film focuses on the first two years of Daniel's life. His mother Käbi is also seen.[1]
He was the assistant director of Andrei Tarkovsky on Offret (The Sacrifice, 1986).
Bergman directed an episode of the Swedish horror series Chock, with Ernst-Hugo Järegård.
Bergman's independent ability as a director was seen as compromised following the 1992 film Sunday's Children, which he directed with his father providing the screenplay. The film was seen in Swedish reviews as an attempt by Ingmar to boost the career of his son.[2]
Selected filmography[]
- 1987 - Ägget
- 1988 - Go'natt Herr Luffare
- 1989 - Brenda Brave
- 1992 - Söndagsbarn (Sunday's Children)
- 1997 - Svenska hjältar (Swedish Heroes)
External links[]
References[]
- Swedish film directors
- Swedish people of Estonian descent
- Swedish people of Belgian descent
- 1962 births
- Living people
- European film director stubs
- Swedish film biography stubs