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Personal Details

Other Works: He directed Henrik Ibsen's play, "Hedda Gabler," in a National Theatre production at the Cambridge Theatre in London, England with Maggie Smith, Jeremy Brett, Robert Stephens, John Moffatt, Jeanne Watts, and Sheila Reid in the cast. اینگمار برگمن See more »
Publicity Listings: 8 Biographical Movies | 42 Print Biographies | 4 Interviews | 46 Articles | 1 Pictorial | 3 Magazine Cover Photos | See more »

Alternate Names: Ernst Ingmar Bergman | Mr. اینگمار برگمن Ingmar Bergman | Buntel Ericsson

Height: 5' 10½" (1.79 m)

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Did You Know?

Personal Quote: In a quarrel with one of my sons, I said, "I know I've been a lousy father". He said, "A father? You haven't been a father at all!" See more »
Trivia: Born to Erik Bergman, a Lutheran minister who later became the chaplain to the King of Sweden, and his wife Karen Åkerblom. See more »
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Ingmar Bergman - Wikipedia

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Not to be confused with Ingrid Bergman.

Ingmar Bergman
Bergman during production
of Wild Strawberries (1957)
Born Ernst Ingmar Bergman
14 July 1918
Uppsala, SwedenDied 30 July 2007 (aged 89)
Fårö, SwedenOther names Buntel ErikssonOccupation Film director, producer, screenwriterYears active 1944–2005Spouse(s)
  • Else Fisher
    (m. 1943; div. 1945)
  • Ellen Lundström
    (m. 1945; div. 1950)
  • Gun Grut
    (m. 1951; div. 1959)
  • Käbi Laretei
    (m. 1959; div. 1969)
  • Ingrid von Rosen
    (m. 1971; d. 1995)
Children 9; including:
  • Linn Ullmann
  • Lena Bergman
  • Eva Bergman
  • Mats Bergman
  • Anna Bergman
  • Daniel Bergman
Awards
  • Goethe Prize
  • Praemium Imperiale
  • Academy Award
Signature

Ernst Ingmar Bergman (Swedish pronunciation: [ˈɪŋmar ˈbærjman] ( listen); 14 July 1918 – 30 July 2007) was a Swedish director, writer, and producer who worked in film, television, theatre and radio. اینگمار برگمن Considered to be among the most accomplished and influential filmmakers of all time,[1][2][3][4] Bergman's renowned works include Smiles of a Summer Night (1955), The Seventh Seal (1957), Wild Strawberries (1957), The Silence (1963), Persona (1966), Cries and Whispers (1972), Scenes from a Marriage (1973), and Fanny and Alexander (1982).

Bergman directed over sixty films and documentaries for cinematic release and for television, most of which he also wrote. اینگمار برگمن He also directed over 170 plays. From 1953, he forged a powerful creative partnership with his full-time cinematographer Sven Nykvist. Among his company of actors were Harriet and Bibi Andersson, Liv Ullmann, Gunnar Björnstrand, Erland Josephson, Ingrid Thulin and Max von Sydow. Most of his films were set in Sweden, and numerous films from Through a Glass Darkly (1961) onward were filmed on the island of Fårö. His work often deals with death, illness, faith, betrayal, bleakness and insanity.

Philip French referred to Bergman as "one of the greatest artists of the 20th century [...] he found in literature and the performing arts a way of both recreating and questioning the human condition."[5]Mick LaSalle argued, "Like Virginia Woolf and James Joyce in literature, Ingmar Bergman strove to capture and illuminate the mystery, ecstasy and fullness of life, by concentrating on individual consciousness and essential moments."[6]

Biography

Early life

A young Bergman

Ingmar Bergman was born in Uppsala, Sweden, the son of Erik Bergman, a Lutheran minister and later chaplain to the King of Sweden, and Karin (née Åkerblom), a nurse who also had Walloon[7] ancestors.[8] He grew up with his older brother Dag and sister Margareta surrounded by religious imagery and discussion. His father was a conservative parish minister with strict ideas of parenting. Ingmar was locked up in dark closets for "infractions", such as wetting the bed. "While father preached away in the pulpit and the congregation prayed, sang, or listened", Ingmar wrote in his autobiography Laterna Magica,

I devoted my interest to the church's mysterious world of low arches, thick walls, the smell of eternity, the coloured sunlight quivering above the strangest vegetation of medieval paintings and carved figures on ceilings and walls. There was everything that one's imagination could desire—angels, saints, dragons, prophets, devils, humans ... .

Although raised in a devout Lutheran household, Bergman later stated that he lost his faith when aged eight, and only came to terms with this fact while making Winter Light in 1962.[9] His interest in theatre and film began early: اینگمار برگمن "At the age of nine, he traded a set of tin soldiers for a magic lantern, a possession that altered the course of his life. Within a year, he had created, by playing with this toy, a private world in which he felt completely at home, he recalled. He fashioned his own scenery, marionettes, and lighting effects and gave puppet productions of Strindberg plays in which he spoke all the parts."[10][11]

Bergman attended Palmgren's School as a teenager. His school years were unhappy,[12] and he remembered them unfavourably in later years. In a 1944 letter concerning the film Torment (sometimes known as Frenzy), which sparked debate on the condition of Swedish high schools (and which Bergman had written),[13] the school's principal Henning Håkanson wrote, among other things, that Bergman had been a "problem child".[14] Bergman wrote in a response that he had strongly disliked the emphasis on homework and testing in his formal schooling.

In 1934, aged 16, he was sent to Germany to spend the summer holidays with family friends. He attended a Nazi rally in Weimar at which he saw Adolf Hitler.[15] He later wrote in Laterna Magica (The Magic Lantern) about the visit to Germany, describing how the German family had put a portrait of Hitler on the wall by his bed, and that "for many years, I was on Hitler's side, delighted by his success and saddened by his defeats".[16] Bergman commented that "Hitler was unbelievably charismatic. He electrified the crowd. ... The Nazism I had seen seemed fun and youthful".[17] Bergman did two five-month stretches in Sweden of mandatory military service.[18]

He entered Stockholm University College (later renamed Stockholm University) in 1937, to study art and literature. He spent most of his time involved in student theatre and became a "genuine movie addict".[19] At the same time, a romantic involvement led to a pugilistic confrontation with his father which resulted in a break which lasted for years. Although he did not graduate, he wrote a number of plays and an opera, and became an assistant director at a theatre. In 1942, he was given the opportunity to direct one of his own scripts, Caspar’s Death. The play was seen by members of Svensk Filmindustri, which then offered Bergman a position working on scripts. He married Else Fisher in 1943.

Early film career

Bergman’s film career began in 1941 with his work rewriting scripts, but his first major accomplishment was in 1944 when he wrote the screenplay for Torment (a.k.a. Frenzy) (Hets), a film directed by Alf Sjöberg. Along with writing the screenplay, he was also appointed assistant director of the film. In his second autobiographical book, Images: My Life in Film, Bergman describes the filming of the exteriors as his actual film directorial debut.[20] The film sparked debate on Swedish formal education. When Henning Håkanson (the principal of the high school Bergman had attended) wrote a letter following the film's release, Bergman, according to scholar Frank Gado, disparaged in a response what he viewed as Håkanson's implication that students "who did not fit some arbitrary prescription of worthiness deserved the system's cruel neglect".[13] Bergman also stated in the letter that he "hated school as a principle, as a system and as an institution. And as such I have definitely not wanted to criticize my own school, but all schools."[21][22] The international success of this film led to Bergman’s first opportunity to direct a year later. During the next ten years he wrote and directed more than a dozen films, including Prison (Fängelse) in 1949, as well as Sawdust and Tinsel (Gycklarnas afton) and Summer with Monika (Sommaren med Monika), both from 1953.

Ingmar Bergman and Victor Sjöström on the set of Wild Strawberries (1957)

Bergman first achieved worldwide success with Smiles of a Summer Night (Sommarnattens leende) (1955), which won for "Best poetic humour" and was nominated for the Palme d’Or at Cannes the following year. This was followed by The Seventh Seal (Det sjunde inseglet) and Wild Strawberries (Smultronstället), released in Sweden ten months apart in 1957. The Seventh Seal won a special jury prize and was nominated for the Palme d'Or at Cannes, and Wild Strawberries won numerous awards for Bergman and its star, Victor Sjöström. Bergman continued to be productive for the next two decades. From the early 1960s, he spent much of his life on the island of Fårö, where he made several films.

In the early 1960s he directed three films that explored the theme of faith and doubt in God, Through a Glass Darkly (Såsom i en Spegel, 1961), Winter Light (Nattvardsgästerna, 1962), and The Silence (Tystnaden, 1963). Critics created the notion that the common themes in these three films made them a trilogy or cinematic triptych. Bergman initially responded that he did not plan these three films as a trilogy and that he could not see any common motifs in them, but he later seemed to adopt the notion, with some equivocation.[23][24] He made a parody of Fellini in 1964, All These Women (För att inte tala om alla dessa kvinnor).[25]

In 1966, he directed Persona, a film that he himself considered one of his most important works. While the highly experimental film won few awards, many consider it his masterpiece. Other notable films of the period include The Virgin Spring (Jungfrukällan, 1960), Hour of the Wolf (Vargtimmen, 1968), Shame (Skammen, 1968) and The Passion of Anna (En Passion, 1969). He and his cinematographer Sven Nykvist made oft-noted use of a crimson color scheme for Cries and Whispers (1972), which is among Bergman's most acclaimed films. He also produced extensively for Swedish television at this time. Two works of note were Scenes from a Marriage (Scener ur ett äktenskap, 1973) and The Magic Flute (Trollflöjten, 1975).

Tax evasion charges in 1976

On 30 January 1976, while rehearsing August Strindberg’s The Dance of Death at the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm, he was arrested by two plainclothes police officers and charged with income tax evasion. The impact of the event on Bergman was devastating. He suffered a nervous breakdown as a result of the humiliation, and was hospitalised in a state of deep depression.

The investigation was focused on an alleged 1970 transaction of 500,000 Swedish kronor (SEK) between Bergman’s Swedish company Cinematograf and its Swiss subsidiary Persona, an entity that was mainly used for the paying of salaries to foreign actors. Bergman dissolved Persona in 1974 after having been notified by the Swedish Central Bank and subsequently reported the income. On 23 March 1976, the special prosecutor Anders Nordenadler dropped the charges against Bergman, saying that the alleged crime had no legal basis, saying it would be like bringing "charges against a person who has stolen his own car, thinking it was someone else’s".[26] Director General Gösta Ekman, chief of the Swedish Internal Revenue Service, defended the failed investigation, saying that the investigation was dealing with important legal material and that Bergman was treated just like any other suspect. He expressed regret that Bergman had left the country, hoping that Bergman was a "stronger" person now when the investigation had shown that he had not done any wrong.[27]

Even though the charges were dropped, Bergman became disconsolate, fearing he would never again return to directing. Despite pleas by the Swedish prime minister Olof Palme, high public figures, and leaders of the film industry, he vowed never to work in Sweden again. He closed down his studio on the island of Fårö, suspended two announced film projects, and went into self-imposed exile in Munich, Germany. Harry Schein, director of the Swedish Film Institute, estimated the immediate damage as ten million SEK (kronor) and hundreds of jobs lost.[28]

Aftermath following arrest

Bergman then briefly considered the possibility of working in America; his next film, The Serpent’s Egg (1977) was a German-U.S. production and his second English-language film (the first being 1971’s The Touch). This was followed by a British-Norwegian co-production, Autumn Sonata (Höstsonaten, 1978) starring Ingrid Bergman, and From the Life of the Marionettes (Aus dem Leben der Marionetten, 1980) which was a British-German co-production.

He temporarily returned to his homeland in 1982, to direct Fanny and Alexander (Fanny och Alexander). Bergman stated that the film would be his last, and that afterwards he would focus on directing theatre. After that he wrote several film scripts and directed a number of television specials. As with previous work for TV, some of these productions were later released in theatres. The last such work was Saraband (2003), a sequel to Scenes from a Marriage and directed by Bergman when he was 84 years old.

Although he continued to operate from Munich, by mid-1978 Bergman had overcome some of his bitterness toward the government of Sweden. In July of that year he visited Sweden, celebrating his sixtieth birthday on the island of Fårö, and partly resumed his work as a director at Royal Dramatic Theatre. To honour his return, the Swedish Film Institute launched a new Ingmar Bergman Prize to be awarded annually for excellence in filmmaking.[29] Still, he remained in Munich until 1984. In one of the last major interviews with Bergman, conducted in 2005 on the island of Fårö, Bergman said that despite being active during the exile, he had effectively lost eight years of his professional life.[30]

Retirement and death

Bergman retired from filmmaking in December 2003. He had a hip surgery in October 2006 and was making a difficult recovery. He died in his sleep[31] at age 89; his body was found at his home on the island of Fårö, on 30 July 2007.[32] (It was the same day another renowned existentialist film director, Michelangelo Antonioni, also died.) The interment was private, at the Fårö Church on 18 August 2007. A place in the Fårö churchyard was prepared for him under heavy secrecy. Although he was buried on the island of Fårö, his name and date of birth were inscribed under his wife’s name on a tomb at Roslagsbro churchyard, Norrtälje Municipality, several years before his death.

Ingmar Bergman with his long-time cinematographer Sven Nykvist during the production of Through a Glass Darkly (1960)

Style of working

Repertory company

A great number of Bergman’s interior scenes were filmed at the Filmstaden studios north of Stockholm

Bergman developed a personal "repertory company" of Swedish actors whom he repeatedly cast in his films, including Max von Sydow, Bibi Andersson, Harriet Andersson, Erland Josephson, Ingrid Thulin, Gunnel Lindblom, Bengt Ekerot, Anders Ek, and Gunnar Björnstrand, each of whom appeared in at least five Bergman features. Norwegian actress Liv Ullmann, who appeared in nine of Bergman’s films and one televisual film (Saraband), was the last to join this group (in the film Persona), and ultimately became the most closely associated with Bergman, both artistically and personally. They had a daughter together, Linn Ullmann (born 1966).

Bergman began working with Sven Nykvist, his cinematographer, in 1953. The two developed and maintained a working relationship of sufficient rapport to allow Bergman not to worry about the composition of a shot until the day before it was filmed. On the morning of the shoot, he would briefly speak to Nykvist about the mood and composition he hoped for, and then leave Nykvist to work, lacking interruption or comment until post-production discussion of the next day’s work.

Financing

By Bergman’s own account, he never had a problem with funding. He cited two reasons for this: one, that he did not live in the United States, which he viewed as obsessed with box-office earnings; and two, that his films tended to be low-budget affairs. (Cries and Whispers, for instance, was finished for about $450,000, while Scenes from a Marriage, a six-episode television feature, cost only $200,000.)[33]

Technique

Bergman usually wrote his films' screenplays, thinking about them for months or years before starting the actual process of writing, which he viewed as somewhat tedious. His earlier films are carefully constructed and are either based on his plays or written in collaboration with other authors. Bergman stated that in his later works, when on occasion his actors would want to do things differently from his own intention, he would let them, noting that the results were often "disastrous" when he did not do so. As his career progressed, Bergman increasingly let his actors improvise their dialogue. In his latest films, he wrote just the ideas informing the scene and allowed his actors to determine the exact dialogue. When viewing daily rushes, Bergman stressed the importance of being critical but unemotive, claiming that he asked himself not if the work was great or terrible, but rather if it was sufficient or needed to be reshot.[33]

Bergman and actress Ingrid Thulin during the production of The Silence (1963)

Subjects

Bergman’s films usually deal with existential questions of mortality, loneliness, and religious faith. In addition to these cerebral topics, however, ual desire features in the foreground of most of his films, whether the central event is a medieval plague (The Seventh Seal), upper-class family activity in early twentieth century Uppsala (Fanny and Alexander), or contemporary alienation (The Silence). His female characters are usually more in touch with their uality than the men, and unafraid to proclaim it, sometimes with breathtaking overtness (e.g., Cries and Whispers) as would define the work of "the conjurer," as Bergman called himself in a 1960 TIME cover story.[34] In an interview with Playboy in 1964, he said: "The manifestation of is very important, and particularly to me, for above all, I don’t want to make merely intellectual films. I want audiences to feel, to sense my films. This to me is much more important than their understanding them." Film, Bergman said, was his demanding mistress.[35] While he was a social democrat, Bergman stated that "as an artist I'm not politically involved […] I don't make propaganda for either one attitude or the other."[36]

Bergman’s views on his career

When asked in the series of interviews later titled "Ingmar Bergman - 3 dokumentärer om film, teater, Fårö och livet" conducted by Marie Nyreröd for Swedish TV and released in 2004, Bergman said that of his works, he held Winter Light,[37]Persona, and Cries and Whispers[38] in the highest regard. There he also states that he managed to push the envelope of film making in the films "Persona" and "Cries and Whispers." Bergman stated on numerous occasions (for example in the interview book Bergman on Bergman) that The Silence meant the end of the era in which religious questions were a major concern of his films. Bergman said that he would get "depressed" by his own films and could not watch them anymore.[39] In the same interview he also states: "If there is one thing I miss about working with films, it is working with Sven" (Nykvist), the third camera man he had worked together with.

Theatrical work

Although Bergman was universally famous for his contribution to cinema, he was also an active and productive stage director all his life. During his studies at Stockholm University, he became active in its student theatre, where he made a name for himself early on. His first work after graduation was as a trainee-director at a Stockholm theatre. At twenty-six years, he became the youngest theatrical manager in Europe at the Helsingborg City Theatre. He stayed at Helsingborg for three years and then became the director at Gothenburg city theatre from 1946 to 1949.

He became director of the Malmö city theatre in 1953, and remained for seven years. Many of his star actors were people with whom he began working on stage, and a number of people in the "Bergman troupe" of his 1960s films came from Malmö’s city theatre (Max von Sydow, for example). He was the director of the Royal Dramatic Theatre in Stockholm from 1960 to 1966, and manager from 1963 to 1966, where he began a long-time collaboration with choreographer Donya Feuer.

After Bergman left Sweden because of the tax evasion incident, he became director of the Residenz Theatre of Munich, Germany (1977–84). He remained active in theatre throughout the 1990s and made his final production on stage with Henrik Ibsen’s The Wild Duck at the Royal Dramatic Theatre in 2002. A complete list of Bergman’s work in theatre can be found under "Stage Productions and Radio Theatre Credits" at Ingmar Bergman filmography.

Ancestry and family tree

The grave of Ingmar Bergman and his last wife, Ingrid von Rosen
Swedish newsposters 31 July 2007.

Bergman was married five times:

  • 25 March 1943 – 1945, to Else Fisher (1 March 1918 – 3 March 2006), choreographer and dancer (divorced). Children:
    • Lena Bergman, actress, born 1943.
  • 22 July 1945 – 1950, to Ellen Lundström (23 April 1919 – 6 March 2007), choreographer and film director (divorced). Children:
    • Eva Bergman, film director, born 1945
    • Jan Bergman, film director (1946–2000)
    • the twins Mats and Anna Bergman, both actors and film directors, born in 1948.
  • 1951 – 1959, to Gun Grut, journalist (divorced). Children:
    • Ingmar Bergman Jr., airline captain, born 1951.
  • 1959 – 1969, to Käbi Laretei (14 July 1922 – 31 October 2014), concert pianist (divorced). Children:
    • Daniel Bergman, film director, born 1962.
  • 11 November 1971 – 20 May 1995, to Ingrid von Rosen (maiden name Karlebo). Children:
    • Maria von Rosen, author, born 1959.

The first four marriages ended in divorce, while the last ended when his wife Ingrid died of stomach cancer in 1995, aged 65. Aside from his marriages, Bergman had romantic relationships with actresses Harriet Andersson (1952–55), Bibi Andersson (1955–59), and Liv Ullmann (1965–70). He was the father of writer Linn Ullmann with Liv Ullmann. In all, Bergman had nine children, one of whom predeceased him. Bergman was eventually married to all of the mothers except Liv Ullmann, but his daughter with his last wife, Ingrid von Rosen, was born twelve years before their marriage.

Legacy and accolades

See also: List of accolades and awards received by Ingmar Bergman and The Dove (1968 film)
Bust of Ingmar Bergman in Celebrity Alley in Kielce, Poland

After Bergman died, a large archive of notes was donated to the Swedish Film Institute. Among the notes are several unpublished and unfinished scripts both for stage and films, and many more ideas for works in different stages of development. A never performed play has the title Kärlek utan älskare ("Love without lovers"), and has the note "Complete disaster!" written on the envelope; the play is about a director who disappears and an editor who tries to complete a work he has left unfinished. Other canceled projects include the script for a ographic film which Bergman abandoned since he did not think it was alive enough, a play about a cannibal, some loose scenes set inside a womb, a film about the life of Jesus, a film about The Merry Widow, and a play with the title Från sperm till spöke ("From sperm to spook").[40] The Swedish director Marcus Lindeen went through the material, and inspired by Kärlek utan älskare he took samples from many of the works and turned them into a play, titled Arkivet för orealiserbara drömmar och visioner ("The archive for unrealisable dreams and visions"). Lindeen’s play premiered on 28 May 2012 at the Stockholm City Theatre.[40]

Terrence Rafferty of The New York Times wrote that throughout the 1960s, when Bergman "was considered pretty much the last word in cinematic profundity, his every tic was scrupulously pored over, analyzed, elaborated in ingenious arguments about identity, the nature of film, the fate of the artist in the modern world and so on."[41] Many filmmakers have praised Bergman and some have also cited his work as an influence on their own.

Awards

Main article: List of accolades and awards received by Ingmar Bergman

In 1971, Bergman received the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award at the Academy Awards ceremony. Three of his films won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film.

Exhibitions

Year Exhibition Nime Work 2012 The Image Maker Ingmar Bergman 2012 The Man Who Asked Hard Questions Ingmar Bergman

Filmography

Main article: Ingmar Bergman filmography

See also

  • Cinema of Sweden
  • List of film collaborations

References

  • ^ Rothstein, Mervyn (30 July 2007). "Ingmar Bergman, Famed Director, Dies at 89". New York Times. Retrieved 31 July 2007. Ingmar Bergman, the ‘poet with the camera’ who is considered one of the greatest directors in motion picture history, died today on the small island of Faro where he lived on the Baltic coast of Sweden, Astrid Soderbergh Widding, president of The Ingmar Bergman Foundation, said. Bergman was 89.
  • ^ Rothstein, Mervyn (2007-07-30). "Ingmar Bergman, Master Filmmaker, Dies at 89". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2016-02-04.
  • ^ Tuohy, Andy (2015-09-03). A-Z Great Film Directors. Octopus. ISBN 9781844038558.
  • ^ Gallagher, John (1989-01-01). Film Directors on Directing. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9780275932725.
  • ^ French, Philip (August 5, 2007). "Twin visionaries of a darker art". The Observer. Retrieved May 15, 2017.
  • ^ LaSalle, Mick (July 30, 2007). "Ingmar Bergman, director who captured life's emotion, dead at 89". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved May 15, 2017.
  • ^ Gado 1986, p. 374.
  • ^ In a book published in 2011, Bergman's niece Veronica Ralston suggested that the director was not identical to the child born to Erik and Karin Bergman in July 1918. Ralston's claim was that this child would have died and been substituted for another child allegedly born to Erik Bergman in an extramarital relationship. (See Who was the mother of Ingmar Bergman? Dagens Nyheter, 26 May 2011, accessed 28 May 2011.) The DNA evidence was weakened after the laboratory consulted by Ralston clarified that it had only been possible to extract DNA from one out of two stamps submitted for testing, and the child supposedly substituted for the newborn child of Karin Bergman was later identified as having emigrated to the US in 1923 with his adopted parents and lived there until his death in 1982 (Clas Barkman, "Nya turer i mysteriet kring Bergman", Dagens Nyheter, 4 June 2011, accessed 8 June 2011).
  • ^ Kalin, Jesse (2003). The Films of Ingmar Bergman. p. 193.
  • ^ Rothstein, Mervyn (31 July 2007). "Ingmar Bergman, Master Filmmaker, Dies at 89". The New York Times.
  • ^ For an extended discussion of the profound influence that August Strindberg’s work played in Bergman’s life and career, see: Ottiliana Rolandsson, Pure Artistry: Ingmar Bergman, the Face as Portal and the Performance of the Soul, Ph.D. dissertation, University of California, Santa Barbara, 2010, especially chapter 3, "Bergman, Strindberg and the Territories of Imagination".
  • ^ Steene 2005, p. 33.
  • ^ a b Gado 1986, p. 59.
  • ^ Macnab, Geoffrey (2009). Ingmar Bergman: The Life and Films of the Last Great European Director. I.B. Tauris. ISBN 0857713574.
  • ^ Vermilye, Jerry (2001). Ingmar Bergman: His Life and Films. p. 6.; see also Bergman's autobiography, Laterna Magica.
  • ^ Ingmar Bergman, The Magic Lantern (transl. from Swedish: Laterna Magica), Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007; ISBN 978-0-226-04382-1.
  • ^ "Bergman admits Nazi past". BBC News. 7 September 1999.
  • ^ Peter Ohlin. (2009.) "Bergman's Nazi Past", Scandinavian Studies, 81(4):437-74.
  • ^ Vermilye, Jerry (2001). Ingmar Bergman: His Life and Films. p. 6.
  • ^ Ingmar Bergman, Images : my life in film (translated from the Swedish by Marianne Ruuth), London: Bloomsbury, 1994. ISBN 0-7475-1670-7.
  • ^ Bergman, Ingmar. in the Aftonbladet (9 October 1944) (translated from Swedish)
  • ^ Fristoe, Roger. "Torment (1944)". Turner Classic Movies, Inc. Retrieved March 28, 2017.
  • ^ Stated in Marie Nyreröd’s interview series (the first part named Bergman och filmen) aired on Sveriges Television Easter 2004.
  • ^ In contrast, in 1964 Bergman had the three scripts published in a single volume: "These three films deal with reduction. Through a Glass Darkly – conquered certainty. Winter Light – penetrated certainty. The Silence – God’s silence — the negative imprint. Therefore, they constitute a trilogy." The Criterion Collection groups the films as a trilogy in a boxed set. In the 1963 documentary Ingmar Bergman Makes a Movie, about the making of Winter Light, supports the idea that Bergman did not plan a trilogy. In the interview with Bergman about writing the script of Winter Light, and the interviews made during the shooting of it, he hardly mentions Through a Glass Darkly. Instead, he discusses the themes of Winter Light, in particular the religious issues, in relation to The Virgin Spring.
  • ^ Theall, Donald F. (1995). Beyond the Word: reconstructing sense in the Joyce era of technology, culture, and communication. p. 35.
  • ^ Åtal mot Bergman läggs ned [Charges against Bergman dropped]. Rapport (in Swedish). Sveriges Television. 23 March 1976. Archived from the original (News report) on 21 November 2011.
  • ^ Generaldirektör om Bergmans flykt [The Director General about Bergman's escape]. Rapport (in Swedish). Sveriges Television. 22 April 1976. Archived from the original (News report) on 4 September 2011.
  • ^ Harry Schein om Bergmans flykt [Harry Schein about Bergman's escape]. Rapport (in Swedish). Sveriges Television. 22 April 1976. Archived from the original (News report) on 20 November 2011.
  • ^ Ephraim Katz, The Film Encyclopedia, New York: HarperCollins, 5th ed., 1998.
  • ^ Ingmar Bergman: Samtal på Fårö [Ingmar Bergman: Talks on Fårö] (in Swedish), Sveriges Radio, 28 March 2005
  • ^ "Bergman buried in quiet ceremony". BBC News. London. 18 August 2007. Retrieved 5 January 2010.
  • ^ "Film Great Ingmar Bergman Dies at 89". 30 July 2007.
  • ^ a b American Film Institute seminar, 1975, on The Criterion Collection’s 2006 DVD of The Virgin Spring.
  • ^ "THE SCREEN: I Am A Conjurer". Time Magazine. 14 March 1960. Retrieved 16 November 2009.
  • ^ Koskinen, Maaret (2010-04-01). Ingmar Bergman's The Silence: Pictures in the Typewriter, Writings on the Screen. University of Washington Press. ISBN 9780295801957.
  • ^ Bergman on Bergman: Interviews with Ingmar Bergman. By Stig Björkman, Torsten Manns, and Jonas Sima; translated by Paul Britten Austin. Simon & Schuster, New York. p. 176-178. Swedish edition copyright 1970; English translation 1973.
  • ^ "Winter Light". 2005.
  • ^ Steene 2005.
  • ^ "Bergman 'depressed' by own films". BBC News. London. 10 April 2004. Retrieved 5 January 2010.
  • ^ a b Jacobsson, Cecilia (28 May 2012). "Ingmar Bergmans ratade texter blev ny pjäs" [Ingmar Bergman's rejected texts became new play]. Dagens Nyheter (in Swedish). Retrieved 28 May 2012.
  • ^ Rafferty, Terrence (February 8, 2004). "FILM; On the Essential Strangeness of Bergman". The New York Times. Retrieved February 19, 2017.
  • Bibliography

    • Bergman on Bergman: Interviews with Ingmar Bergman. By Stig Björkman, Torsten Manns, and Jonas Sima; translated by Paul Britten Austin. Simon & Schuster, New York. Swedish edition copyright 1970; English translation 1973.
    • Filmmakers on filmmaking: the American Film Institute seminars on motion pictures and television (edited by Joseph McBride). Boston, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1983.
    • Images: my life in film, Ingmar Bergman. Translated by Marianne Ruuth. New York, Arcade Pub., 1994, ISBN 1-55970-186-2
    • Steene, Birgitta (2005-01-01). Ingmar Bergman: A Reference Guide. Amsterdam University Press. ISBN 9789053564066.
    • The Magic Lantern, Ingmar Bergman. Translated by Joan Tate New York, Viking Press, 1988, ISBN 0-670-81911-5
    • The Demons of Modernity: Ingmar Bergman and European Cinema, John Orr, Berghahn Books, 2014.
    • Gado, Frank (1986). The Passion of Ingmar Bergman. Duke University Press. ISBN 0822305860.

    External links

    Wikiquote has quotations related to: Ingmar Bergman Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ingmar Bergman.
    • Ingmar Bergman at Encyclopædia Britannica
    • Ingmar Bergman on IMDb
    • Ingmar Bergman at the Swedish Film Database
    • Ingmar Bergman at the TCM Movie Database
    • Ingmar Bergman Face to Face
    • The Ingmar Bergman Foundation
    • Ingmar Bergman all posters
    • Bergmanorama: The magic works of Ingmar Bergman
    • The Guardian/NFT interview with Liv Ullmann by Shane Danielson, 23 January 2001
    • Xan Brooks reports on Bergman’s interview for Reuters, The Guardian, 12 December 2001
    • Bergman Week
    • Regilexikon
    • DVD Beaver’s Director’s Chair on Bergman, with links to DVD and Blu-ray comparisons of his major films
    Bibliographies
    • Ingmar Bergman Bibliography (via UC Berkeley)
    • Ingmar Bergman Site
    • Collection of interviews with Bergman
    Awards and achievements Preceded by
    Henri-Georges Clouzot
    for The Mystery of Picasso
    Prix du Jury
    1957
    for The Seventh Seal Succeeded by
    Jacques Tati
    for Mon Oncle
    Preceded by
    Robert Bresson
    for A Man Escaped
    Prix de la mise en scène
    1958
    for Brink of Life Succeeded by
    François Truffaut
    for The 400 Blows
    Preceded by
    Sidney Lumet
    for 12 Angry Men
    Golden Bear
    1958
    for Wild Strawberries Succeeded by
    Claude Chabrol
    for Les Cousins
    Preceded by
    Alfred Hitchcock Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award
    1971 Succeeded by
    Lawrence Weingarten Preceded by
    Orson Welles Career Golden Lion
    1971 Succeeded by
    Charles Chaplin, Anatali Golovnia, Billy Wilder Preceded by
    Stanley Kubrick
    for A Clockwork Orange
    New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Director
    1972
    for Cries and Whispers Succeeded by
    François Truffaut
    for Day for Night
    Preceded by
    Peter Bogdanovitch
    for The Last Picture Show
    New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Screenplay
    1972
    for Cries and Whispers Succeeded by
    George Lucas, Gloria Katz, Willard Huyck
    for American Graffiti
    Preceded by
    George Lucas, Gloria Katz, Willard Huyck
    for American Graffiti
    New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Screenplay
    1974
    for Scenes from a Marriage Succeeded by
    François Truffaut, Suzanne Schiffman, Jean Gruault
    for The Story of Adele H.
    Preceded by
    Sydney Pollack
    for Tootsie
    New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best Director
    1983
    for Fanny and Alexander Succeeded by
    David Lean
    for A Passage to India
    • v
    • t
    • e
    Ingmar Bergman
    Filmography
    Films directed
    • Crisis (1946)
    • It Rains on Our Love (1946)
    • A Ship Bound for India (1947)
    • Music in Darkness (1948)
    • Port of Call (1948)
    • Prison (1949)
    • Thirst (1949)
    • To Joy (1950)
    • This Can't Happen Here (1950)
    • Summer Interlude (1951)
    • Secrets of Women (1952)
    • Summer with Monika (1953)
    • Sawdust and Tinsel (1953)
    • A Lesson in Love (1954)
    • Dreams (1955)
    • Smiles of a Summer Night (1955)
    • The Seventh Seal (1957)
    • Wild Strawberries (1957)
    • Brink of Life (1958)
    • The Magician (1958)
    • The Virgin Spring (1960)
    • The Devil's Eye (1960)
    • Through a Glass Darkly (1961)
    • Winter Light (1963)
    • The Silence (1963)
    • All These Women (1964)
    • Persona (1966)
    • Hour of the Wolf (1968)
    • Shame (1968)
    • The Rite (1969)
    • The Passion of Anna (1969)
    • The Touch (1971)
    • Cries and Whispers (1972)
    • Scenes from a Marriage (1973)
    • The Magic Flute (1975)
    • Face to Face (1976)
    • The Serpent's Egg (1977)
    • Autumn Sonata (1978)
    • From the Life of the Marionettes (1980)
    • Fanny and Alexander (1982)
    • After the Rehearsal (1984)
    • The Blessed Ones (1986)
    • In the Presence of a Clown (1997)
    • Saraband (2003)
    Films written
    • Torment (1944)
    • Woman Without a Face (1947)
    • Eva (1948)
    • While the City Sleeps (1950)
    • Divorced (1951)
    • Last Pair Out (1956)
    • The Pleasure Garden (1961)
    • The Lie (1970)
    • The Best Intentions (1992)
    • Sunday's Children (1992)
    • Private Confessions (1996)
    • Faithless (2000)
    Documentaries
    • The Making of Fanny and Alexander (1986)
    Short films
    • "Daniel" in Stimulantia (1967)
    • Karin's Face (1986)
    Television theatre
    • Mr. Sleeman Is Coming (1957)
    • The Venetian (1958)
    • Rabies (1958)
    • The Image Makers (2000)
    Related topics
    • Bergman Week
    • Ingmar Bergman Makes a Movie
    • The Dove
    • The Seduction of Ingmar Bergman
    • Ingmar Bergman Award
    • Bibliography
    Family
    • Erik Bergman (father)
    • Dag Bergman (brother)
    • Margareta Bergman (sister)
    • Lena Bergman (daughter)
    • Eva Bergman (daughter)
    • Mats Bergman (son)
    • Anna Bergman (daughter)
    • Daniel Bergman (son)
    • Linn Ullmann (daughter)
    Awards for Ingmar Bergman
    • v
    • t
    • e
    Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award
    • Darryl F. Zanuck (1938)
    • Hal B. Wallis (1939)
    • David O. Selznick (1940)
    • Walt Disney (1942)
    • Sidney Franklin (1943)
    • Hal B. Wallis (1944)
    • Darryl F. Zanuck (1945)
    • Samuel Goldwyn (1947)
    • Jerry Wald (1949)
    • Darryl F. Zanuck (1951)
    • Arthur Freed (1952)
    • Cecil B. DeMille (1953)
    • George Stevens (1954)
    • Buddy Adler (1957)
    • Jack L. Warner (1959)
    • Stanley Kramer (1962)
    • Sam Spiegel (1964)
    • William Wyler (1966)
    • Robert Wise (1967)
    • Alfred Hitchcock (1968)
    • Ingmar Bergman (1971)
    • Lawrence Weingarten (1974)
    • Mervyn LeRoy (1976)
    • Pandro S. Berman (1977)
    • Walter Mirisch (1978)
    • Ray Stark (1980)
    • Albert R. Broccoli (1982)
    • Steven Spielberg (1986)
    • Billy Wilder (1988)
    • David Brown and Richard D. Zanuck (1991)
    • George Lucas (1992)
    • Clint Eastwood (1995)
    • Saul Zaentz (1997)
    • Norman Jewison (1999)
    • Warren Beatty (2000)
    • Dino De Laurentiis (2001)
    • John Calley (2009)
    • Francis Ford Coppola (2010)
    • v
    • t
    • e
    Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film
    1947–1955
    (Honorary)
    • 1947: Shoeshine – Vittorio De Sica
    • 1948: Monsieur Vincent – Maurice Cloche
    • 1949: Bicycle Thieves – Vittorio De Sica
    • 1950: The Walls of Malapaga – René Clément
    • 1951: Rashomon – Aa Kurosawa
    • 1952: Forbidden Games – René Clément
    • 1953: No Award
    • 1954: Gate of Hell – Teinosuke Kinugasa
    • 1955: Samurai, The Legend of Musashi – Hiroshi Inagaki
    1956–1975
    • 1956: La Strada – Federico Fellini
    • 1957: Nights of Cabiria – Federico Fellini
    • 1958: My Uncle – Jacques Tati
    • 1959: Black Orpheus – Marcel Camus
    • 1960: The Virgin Spring – Ingmar Bergman
    • 1961: Through a Glass Darkly – Ingmar Bergman
    • 1962: Sundays and Cybele – Serge Bourguignon
    • 1963: – Federico Fellini
    • 1964: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow – Vittorio De Sica
    • 1965: The Shop on Main Street – Ján Kadár & Elmar Klos
    • 1966: A Man and a Woman – Claude Lelouch
    • 1967: Closely Watched Trains – Jiří Menzel
    • 1968: War and Peace – Sergei Bondarchuk
    • 1969: Z – Costa-Gavras
    • 1970: Investigation of a Citizen Above Suspicion – Elio Petri
    • 1971: The Garden of the Finzi Continis – Vittorio De Sica
    • 1972: The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie – Luis Buñuel
    • 1973: Day for Night – François Truffaut
    • 1974: Amarcord – Federico Fellini
    • 1975: Dersu Uzala – Aa Kurosawa
    1976–2000
    • 1976: Black and White in Color – Jean-Jacques Annaud
    • 1977: Madame Rosa – Moshé Mizrahi
    • 1978: Get Out Your Handkerchiefs – Bertrand Blier
    • 1979: The Tin Drum – Volker Schlöndorff
    • 1980: Moscow Does Not Believe in Tears – Vladimir Menshov
    • 1981: Mephisto – István Szabó
    • 1982: Volver a Empezar ('To Begin Again') – José Luis Garci
    • 1983: Fanny and Alexander – Ingmar Bergman
    • 1984: Dangerous Moves – Richard Dembo
    • 1985: The Official Story – Luis Puenzo
    • 1986: The Assault – Fons Rademakers
    • 1987: Babette's Feast – Gabriel Axel
    • 1988: Pelle the Conqueror – Bille August
    • 1989: Cinema Paradiso – Giuseppe Tornatore
    • 1990: Journey of Hope – Xavier Koller
    • 1991: Mediterraneo – Gabriele Salvatores
    • 1992: Indochine – Régis Wargnier
    • 1993: Belle Epoque – Fernando Trueba
    • 1994: Burnt by the Sun – Nikita Mikhalkov
    • 1995: Antonia's Line – Marleen Gorris
    • 1996: Kolya – Jan Svěrák
    • 1997: Character – Mike van Diem
    • 1998: Life Is Beautiful – Roberto Benigni
    • 1999: All About My Mother – Pedro Almodóvar
    • 2000: Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon – Ang Lee
    2001–present
    • 2001: No Man's Land – Danis Tanović
    • 2002: Nowhere in Africa – Caroline Link
    • 2003: The Barbarian Invasions – Denys Arcand
    • 2004: The Sea Inside – Alejandro Amenábar
    • 2005: Tsotsi – Gavin Hood
    • 2006: The Lives of Others – Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck
    • 2007: The Counterfeiters – Stefan Ruzowitzky
    • 2008: Departures – Yōjirō Takita
    • 2009: The Secret in Their Eyes – Juan José Campanella
    • 2010: In a Better World – Susanne Bier
    • 2011: A Separation – Asghar Farhadi
    • 2012: Amour – Michael Haneke
    • 2013: The Great Beauty – Paolo Sorrentino
    • 2014: Ida – Paweł Pawlikowski
    • 2015: Son of Saul – László Nemes
    • 2016: The Salesman – Asghar Farhadi
    • 2017: A Fantastic Woman – Sebastián Lelio
    • v
    • t
    • e
    BAFTA Fellowship recipients
    1971–2000
    • Alfred Hitchcock (1971)
    • Freddie Young (1972)
    • Grace Wyndham Goldie (1973)
    • David Lean (1974)
    • Jacques Cousteau (1975)
    • Charlie Chaplin (1976)
    • Laurence Olivier (1976)
    • Denis Forman (1977)
    • Fred Zinnemann (1978)
    • Lew Grade (1979)
    • Huw Wheldon (1979)
    • David Attenborough (1980)
    • John Huston (1980)
    • Abel Gance (1981)
    • Michael Powell & Emeric Pressburger (1981)
    • Andrzej Wajda (1982)
    • Richard Attenborough (1983)
    • Hugh Greene (1984)
    • Sam Spiegel (1984)
    • Jeremy Isaacs (1985)
    • Steven Spielberg (1986)
    • Federico Fellini (1987)
    • Ingmar Bergman (1988)
    • Alec Guinness (1989)
    • Paul Fox (1990)
    • Louis Malle (1991)
    • John Gielgud (1992)
    • David Plowright (1992)
    • Sydney Samuelson (1993)
    • Colin Young (1993)
    • Michael Grade (1994)
    • Billy Wilder (1995)
    • Jeanne Moreau (1996)
    • Ronald Neame (1996)
    • John Schlesinger (1996)
    • Maggie Smith (1996)
    • Woody Allen (1997)
    • Steven Bochco (1997)
    • Julie Christie (1997)
    • Oswald Morris (1997)
    • Harold Pinter (1997)
    • David Rose (1997)
    • Sean Connery (1998)
    • Bill Cotton (1998)
    • Eric Morecambe & Ernie Wise (1999)
    • Elizabeth Taylor (1999)
    • Michael Caine (2000)
    • Stanley Kubrick (2000)
    • Peter Bazalgette (2000)
    2001–present
    • Albert Finney (2001)
    • John Thaw (2001)
    • Judi Dench (2001)
    • Warren Beatty (2002)
    • Merchant Ivory Productions (2002)
    • Andrew Davies (2002)
    • John Mills (2002)
    • Saul Zaentz (2003)
    • David Jason (2003)
    • John Boorman (2004)
    • Roger Graef (2004)
    • John Barry (2005)
    • David Frost (2005)
    • David Puttnam (2006)
    • Ken Loach (2006)
    • Anne V. Coates (2007)
    • Richard Curtis (2007)
    • Will Wright (2007)
    • Anthony Hopkins (2008)
    • Bruce Forsyth (2008)
    • Dawn French & Jennifer Saunders (2009)
    • Terry Gilliam (2009)
    • Nolan Bushnell (2009)
    • Vanessa Redgrave (2010)
    • Shigeru Miyamoto (2010)
    • Melvyn Bragg (2010)
    • Christopher Lee (2011)
    • Peter Molyneux (2011)
    • Trevor McDonald (2011)
    • Martin Scorsese (2012)
    • Rolf Harris (2012)
    • Alan Parker (2013)
    • Gabe Newell (2013)
    • Michael Palin (2013)
    • Helen Mirren (2014)
    • Rockstar Games (2014)
    • Julie Walters (2014)
    • Mike Leigh (2015)
    • David Braben (2015)
    • Jon Snow (2015)
    • Sidney Poitier (2016)
    • John Carmack (2016)
    • Ray Galton & Alan Simpson (2016)
    • Mel Brooks (2017)
    • Joanna Lumley (2017)
    • Ridley Scott (2018)
    • Tim Schafer (2018)
    • Kate Adie (2018)
    • v
    • t
    • e
    European Film Academy Lifetime Achievement Award
    •  Ingmar Bergman (1988)
    •  Marcello Mastroianni (1988)
    •  Federico Fellini (1989)
    •  Andrzej Wajda (1990)
    •  Alexandre Trauner (1991)
    •  Billy Wilder (1992)
    •  Michelangelo Antonioni (1993)
    •  Robert Bresson (1994)
    •  Marcel Carné (1995)
    •  Alec Guinness (1996)
    •  Jeanne Moreau (1997)
    •  Ennio Morricone (1999)
    •  Richard Harris (2000)
    •  Monty Python (2001)
    •  Tonino Guerra (2002)
    •  Claude Chabrol (2003)
    •  Carlos Saura (2004)
    •  Sean Connery (2005)
    •  Roman Polanski (2006)
    •  Jean-Luc Godard (2007)
    •  Judi Dench (2008)
    •  Ken Loach (2009)
    •  Bruno Ganz (2010)
    •  Stephen Frears (2011)
    •  Bernardo Bertolucci (2012)
    •  Catherine Deneuve (2013)
    •  Agnès Varda (2014)
    •  Charlotte Rampling (2015)
    •  Jean-Claude Carrière (2016)
    • Alexander Sokurov (2017)
    • v
    • t
    • e
    Cannes Film Festival Best Director Award
    • René Clément (1946)
    • René Clément (1949)
    • Luis Buñuel (1951)
    • Christian-Jaque (1952)
    • Jules Dassin / Sergei Vasilyev (1955)
    • Sergei Yutkevich (1956)
    • Robert Bresson (1957)
    • Ingmar Bergman (1958)
    • François Truffaut (1959)
    • Yuliya Solntseva (1961)
    • Liviu Ciulei (1965)
    • Sergei Yutkevich (1966)
    • Ferenc Kósa (1967)
    • Glauber Rocha / Vojtěch Jasný (1969)
    • John Boorman (1970)
    • Miklós Jancsó (1972)
    • Michel Brault / Costa-Gavras (1975)
    • Ettore Scola (1976)
    • Nagisa Oshima (1978)
    • Terrence Malick (1979)
    • Werner Herzog (1982)
    • Robert Bresson / Andrei Tarkovsky (1983)
    • Bertrand Tavernier (1984)
    • André Téchiné (1985)
    • Martin Scorsese (1986)
    • Wim Wenders (1987)
    • Fernando Solanas (1988)
    • Emir Kusturica (1989)
    • Pavel Lungin (1990)
    • Joel Coen (1991)
    • Robert Altman (1992)
    • Mike Leigh (1993)
    • Nanni Moretti (1994)
    • Mathieu Kassovitz (1995)
    • Joel Coen (1996)
    • Wong Kar-wai (1997)
    • John Boorman (1998)
    • Pedro Almodóvar (1999)
    • Edward Yang (2000)
    • Joel Coen / David Lynch (2001)
    • Im Kwon-taek / Paul Thomas Anderson (2002)
    • Gus Van Sant (2003)
    • Tony Gatlif (2004)
    • Michael Haneke (2005)
    • Alejandro González Iñárritu (2006)
    • Julian Schnabel (2007)
    • Nuri Bilge Ceylan (2008)
    • Brillante Mendoza (2009)
    • Mathieu Amalric (2010)
    • Nicolas Winding Refn (2011)
    • Carlos Reygadas (2012)
    • Amat Escalante (2013)
    • Bennett Miller (2014)
    • Hou Hsiao-hsien (2015)
    • Olivier Assayas / Cristian Mungiu (2016)
    • Sofia Coppola (2017)
    • Paweł Pawlikowski (2018)
    • v
    • t
    • e
    Guldbagge Award for Best Director
    1963–1990
    • Ingmar Bergman (1963/64)
    • Arne Sucksdorff (1964/65)
    • Alf Sjöberg (1965/66)
    • Jan Troell (1966/67)
    • Kjell Grede (1967/68)
    • Bo Widerberg (1968/69)
    • Lars Lennart Forsberg (1969/70)
    • Tage Danielsson (1971/72)
    • Johan Bergenstråhle (1972/73)
    • Vilgot Sjöman (1973/74)
    • Hasse Alfredson (1974/75)
    • Jan Halldoff (1975/76)
    • Marianne Ahrne (1976/77)
    • Olle Hellbom (1977/78)
    • Stefan Jarl (1978/79)
    • Kay Pollak (1980/81)
    • Hasse Alfredson (1981/82)
    • Ingmar Bergman (1982/83)
    • Hrafn Gunnlaugsson (1984)
    • Hasse Alfredson (1985)
    • Suzanne Osten (1986)
    • Kjell Grede (1987)
    • Max von Sydow (1988)
    • Åke Sandgren (1989)
    • Kjell Grede (1990)
    1991–present
    • Anders Grönros (1991)
    • Colin Nutley (1992)
    • Clas Lindberg (1993)
    • Ulf Hultberg & Åsa Faringer (1994)
    • Bo Widerberg (1995)
    • Kjell Sundvall (1996)
    • Daniel Alfredson (1997)
    • Lukas Moodysson (1998)
    • Ella Lemhagen (1999)
    • Roy Andersson (2000)
    • Jan Troell (2001)
    • Lukas Moodysson (2002)
    • Björn Runge (2003)
    • Tomas Alfredson (2004)
    • Ulf Malmros (2005)
    • Ylva Gustavsson & Catti Edfeldt (2006)
    • Roy Andersson (2007)
    • Tomas Alfredson (2008)
    • Lisa Siwe (2009)
    • Pernilla August (2010)
    • Ruben Östlund (2011)
    • Gabriela Pichler (2012)
    • Per Fly (2013)
    • Ruben Östlund (2014)
    • Magnus von Horn (2015)
    • Goran Kapetanović (2016)
    • Ruben Östlund (2017)
    • v
    • t
    • e
    Guldbagge Award for Best Screenplay
    • Bengt Danneborn & Lennart Persson (1988)
    • Stig Larsson & Åke Sandgren (1989)
    • Kjell Grede (1990)
    • Clas Lindberg (1991)
    • Ingmar Bergman (1992)
    • Daniel Alfredson & Jonas Cornell (1993)
    • Peter Dalle & Rolf Börjlind (1994)
    • Jonas Gardell (1995)
    • Per Olov Enquist (1996)
    • Annika Thor (1997)
    • Lukas Moodysson (1998)
    • Ulf Stark (1999)
    • Roy Andersson (2000)
    • Hans Gunnarsson & Mikael Håfström (2001)
    • Lukas Moodysson (2002)
    • Björn Runge (2003)
    • Maria Blom (2004)
    • Lena Einhorn (2005)
    • Hans Renhäll & Ylva Gustavsson (2006)
    • Roy Andersson (2007)
    • John Ajvide Lindqvist (2008)
    • Ulf Malmros (2009)
    • Lisa Langseth (2010)
    • Josefine Adolfsson & Lisa Aschan (2011)
    • Gabriela Pichler (2012)
    • Anna Odell (2013)
    • Ruben Östlund (2014)
    • Peter Grönlund (2015)
    • Johannes Nyholm (2016)
    • Amanda Kernell (2017)
    • v
    • t
    • e
    National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Director
    • Michelangelo Antonioni (1966)
    • Ingmar Bergman (1967)
    • Ingmar Bergman (1968)
    • François Truffaut (1969)
    • Ingmar Bergman (1970)
    • Bernardo Bertolucci (1971)
    • Luis Buñuel (1972)
    • François Truffaut (1973)
    • Francis Ford Coppola (1974)
    • Robert Altman (1975)
    • Martin Scorsese (1976)
    • Luis Buñuel (1977)
    • Terrence Malick (1978)
    • Woody Allen / Robert Benton (1979)
    • Martin Scorsese (1980)
    • Louis Malle (1981)
    • Steven Spielberg (1982)
    • Paolo Taviani and Vittorio Taviani (1983)
    • Robert Bresson (1984)
    • John Huston (1985)
    • David Lynch (1986)
    • John Boorman (1987)
    • Philip Kaufman (1988)
    • Gus Van Sant (1989)
    • Martin Scorsese (1990)
    • David Cronenberg (1991)
    • Clint Eastwood (1992)
    • Steven Spielberg (1993)
    • Quentin Tarantino (1994)
    • Mike Figgis (1995)
    • Lars von Trier (1996)
    • Curtis Hanson (1997)
    • Steven Soderbergh (1998)
    • Mike Leigh (1999)
    • Steven Soderbergh (2000)
    • Robert Altman (2001)
    • Roman Polanski (2002)
    • Clint Eastwood (2003)
    • Zhang Yimou (2004)
    • David Cronenberg (2005)
    • Paul Greengrass (2006)
    • Paul Thomas Anderson (2007)
    • Mike Leigh (2008)
    • Kathryn Bigelow (2009)
    • David Fincher (2010)
    • Terrence Malick (2011)
    • Michael Haneke (2012)
    • Joel Coen and Ethan Coen (2013)
    • Richard Linklater (2014)
    • Todd Haynes (2015)
    • Barry Jenkins (2016)
    • Greta Gerwig (2017)
    • v
    • t
    • e
    National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Screenplay
    1967–2000
    • David Newman and Robert Benton (1967)
    • John Cassavetes (1968)
    • Paul Mazursky and Larry Tucker (1969)
    • Éric Rohmer (1970)
    • Penelope Gilliatt (1971)
    • Ingmar Bergman (1972)
    • George Lucas, Gloria Katz and Willard Huyck (1973)
    • Ingmar Bergman (1974)
    • Robert Towne and Warren Beatty (1975)
    • Alain Tanner and John Berger (1976)
    • Woody Allen and Marshall Brickman (1977)
    • Paul Mazursky (1978)
    • Steve Tesich (1979)
    • Bo Goldman (1980)
    • John Guare (1981)
    • Murray Schisgal and Larry Gelbart (1982)
    • Bill Forsyth (1983)
    • Lowell Ganz, Babaloo Mandel and Bruce Jay Friedman (1984)
    • Albert Brooks and Monica Johnson (1985)
    • Hanif Kureishi (1986)
    • John Boorman (1987)
    • Ron Shelton (1988)
    • Gus Van Sant and Daniel Yost (1989)
    • Charles Burnett (1990)
    • David Cronenberg (1991)
    • David Webb Peoples (1992)
    • Jane Campion (1993)
    • Quentin Tarantino and Roger Avary (1994)
    • Amy Heckerling (1995)
    • Albert Brooks and Monica Johnson (1996)
    • Curtis Hanson and Brian Helgeland (1997)
    • Scott Frank (1998)
    • Charlie Kaufman (1999)
    • Kenneth Lonergan (2000)
    2001–present
    • Julian Fellowes (2001)
    • Ronald Harwood (2002)
    • Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini (2003)
    • Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor (2004)
    • Noah Baumbach (2005)
    • Peter Morgan (2006)
    • Tamara Jenkins (2007)
    • Mike Leigh (2008)
    • Joel Coen and Ethan Coen (2009)
    • Aaron Sorkin (2010)
    • Asghar Farhadi (2011)
    • Tony Kushner (2012)
    • Richard Linklater, Ethan Hawke, and Julie Delpy (2013)
    • Wes Anderson (2014)
    • Tom McCarthy and Josh Singer (2015)
    • Kenneth Lonergan (2016)
    • Greta Gerwig (2017)
    • v
    • t
    • e
    Recipients of the Sonning Prize
    • Winston Churchill (1950)
    • Albert Schweitzer (1959)
    • Bertrand Russell (1960)
    • Niels Bohr (1961)
    • Alvar Aalto (1962)
    • Karl Barth (1963)
    • Dominique Pire (1964)
    • Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi (1965)
    • Laurence Olivier (1966)
    • Willem Visser 't Hooft (1967)
    • Arthur Koestler (1968)
    • Halldór Laxness (1969)
    • Max Tau (1970)
    • Danilo Dolci (1971)
    • Karl Popper (1973)
    • Hannah Arendt (1975)
    • Arne Næss (1977)
    • Hermann Gmeiner (1979)
    • Dario Fo (1981)
    • Simone de Beauvoir (1983)
    • William Heinesen (1985)
    • Jürgen Habermas (1987)
    • Ingmar Bergman (1989)
    • Václav Havel (1991)
    • Krzysztof Kieślowski (1994)
    • Günter Grass (1996)
    • Jørn Utzon (1998)
    • Eugenio Barba (2000)
    • Mary Robinson (2002)
    • Mona Hatoum (2004)
    • Ágnes Heller (2006)
    • Renzo Piano (2008)
    • Hans Magnus Enzensberger (2010)
    • Orhan Pamuk (2012)
    • Michael Haneke (2014)
    • Lars von Trier (2018)
    • v
    • t
    • e
    Ingmar Bergman's Smiles of a Summer Night
    Adaptations
    • A Little Night Music (1973 musical)
    • A Little Night Music (1977 film)
    • A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy (1982 film)
    Songs
    • "Send In the Clowns"
    Authority control
    • WorldCat Identities
    • BIBSYS: 90059956
    • BNE: XX4579283
    • BNF: cb118914257 (data)
    • GND: 118509519
    • ISNI: 0000 0003 6864 6943
    • LCCN: n79054388
    • NDL: 00433021
    • NKC: jn19990000712
    • NLA: 35017717
    • RKD: 408066
    • ICCU: IT\ICCU\CFIV\072947
    • SELIBR: 177819
    • SNAC: w6v125fk
    • SUDOC: 026720884
    • ULAN: 500069382
    • VIAF: 110097018
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ingmar_Bergman&oldid=854457097"
    ، اینگمار برگمن




    [اینگمار برگمن]

    نویسنده و منبع | تاریخ انتشار: Sat, 04 Aug 2018 15:44:00 +0000



    اینگمار برگمن

    کتابهای طلایی | بوکیـها

    درباره کتاب : اینگمار برگمن کتاب های «طلایی» مجموعه ای از کتابچه هایی کوچک بود با زبانی بسیـار ساده شده داستان های مشـهور ادبیـات کلاسیک غرب را به منظور کودکان بازگو مـی کرد. اینگمار برگمن این کتاب ها توسط انتشارات امـیر کبیر درون طول سال های دهه ی ۱۳۴۰ و ۱۳۵۰ منتشر مـی شد. اینگمار برگمن قیمت ارزان کتاب های «طلایی» و شـهرت آثاری کـه معرفی مـی ... متن کامل »

    ، اینگمار برگمن




    [اینگمار برگمن]

    نویسنده و منبع | تاریخ انتشار: Thu, 09 Aug 2018 09:11:00 +0000



    اینگمار برگمن

    دانلود رمان سالار مگس ها نوشته ویلیـام گلدینگ برنده نوبل ...

    درباره کتاب : سالار مگس ها از جمله آثار برجسته کلاسیک جهان هست که ویلیـام گلدینگ درون آن شور و هیجان یک قصه تمثیلی را با قدرت و صداقت توصیف کرده هست .داستان ماجرای شگفت آور گروهی پسر بچه هست مدرسه ای انگلیسی هست که درون طی جنگ هسته ای و خانمان سوز عازم منطقه ای امن مـیشوند ولی سقوط ناگهانی هواپیما آنان را ملزم بـه اقامت درون جزیره ای استوایی مـیسازد .در آغاز همـه چیز بـه خوبی پیش مـیرود و آنان بی دغدغه و سبک بال جزیره خوش آب و رنگ و سرسبز را درون مـینوردند .اما اندک زمانی بعد از آن روحیـه شرارت بار تندخوی بعضی از پسرها بهشت زمـینی را بـه دوزخی از آتش و خون مبدل مـیکند و تمامـی مظاهر خرد و پاک اندیشی از وجودشان رخت بر مـیبندد.
    کشمکش درونی نیروهای متضاد خیر و شر درون مایـه داستان را شکل مـیدهد .

    [note color=”#ffe0a8″]درباره نویسنده:
    سر ویلیـام جرالد گلدینگ (به انگلیسی: اینگمار برگمن Sir William Gerald Golding) (زادهٔ ۱۹ سپتامبر ۱۹۱۱، اینگمار برگمن درگذشتهٔ ۱۹ ژوئن ۱۹۹۳)، شاعر و رمان‌نویس بریتانیـایی برندهٔ جایزهٔ نوبل ادبیـات درون ۱۹۸۳ بود.
    او درون سال ۱۹۱۱ درون کورنوال واقع درون جنوب غربی انگلیس بدنیـا آمد و تحصیلات خود را درون \”مارلبرو گرامر اسکول\” و \”کالج بریس نوز آکسفورد\” انجام داد. اینگمار برگمن بجز نویسندگی، سوابق شغلی او عبارتند از: استادی دانشگاه، بازیگری تئاتر، دریـانوردی و نوازندگی.

    پدرش مدیر مدرسه و مادرش فعال سیـاسی-اجتماعی طرفدار حقوق زنان بود. اینگمار برگمن خانواده اش مـی خواستند او یک دانشمند شود اما او زیر بار نرفت. بعد از دوسال تحصیل درون آکسفورد، تغییر رشته داد و به ادبیـات انگلیسی روی آورد او پنج سال درون آکسفورد ماند و در سال ۱۹۳۵ مجموعه ای از اشعارش منتشر کرد. مدتی درون مدرسه ی \”وردورث بی شاپ\” بـه تدریس مشغول شد. درون ۱۹۴۰ بـه نیروی دریـایی سلطنتی پیوست و شش سال از عمرش را بر روی آب سپری کرد. درون این مدت –که مقارن با جنگ دوم جهانی بود- نبرد ناوها و زیردریـایی های آلمانی از جمله انـهدام و غرق شدن ناو بیسمارک را از نزدیک شاهد بود. بعد از اتمام جنگ دوباره بـه تدریس روی آورد و نویسندگی را از سر گرفت. اولین رمان او \” سالار مگسها\” درون سال ۱۹۵۴ منتشر شد و در سال ۱۹۶۳ پیتر بروک فیلمـی بـه نام و بر اساس این رمان نوشت. [/note]

    بدلیل مشکل کپی رایت دانلود این کتاب مـیسر نمـی باشد

    [note color=”#a8c3ff”]
    • دانلود رمان سالار مگس ها نوشته ویلیـام گلدینگ برنده نوبل ادبیـات ۱۹۸۳
    • تعداد صفحات :۳۶۸
    • حجم فایل :۴.۶۷مگابایت
    • بازنشر:بوکیـها دات آی آر
    [/note]




    [اینگمار برگمن]

    نویسنده و منبع | تاریخ انتشار: Wed, 01 Aug 2018 11:37:00 +0000



    اینگمار برگمن

    خرس طلایی - ویکی‌پدیـا، دانشنامـهٔ آزاد

    پرش بـه ناوبری پرش بـه جستجو

    خرس طلایی مکان Berlinکشور Germanyبرگزارکننده جشنواره بین‌المللی فیلم برلیناولین مراسم ۱۹۵۱

    خرس زرین (به انگلیسی: اینگمار برگمن Golden Bear) جایزه بهترین فیلم درون جشنواره بین‌المللی فیلم برلین هست که از سال ۱۹۵۱ بـه بعد اعطا شده‌است.

    خرس نماد شـهر برلین مـی‌باشد و نشان ملی محسوب مـی‌شود همچنین شکل خرس بر روی پرچم برلین نیز وجود دارد.

    فهرست برندگان جایزه خرس طلایی برلین

    سال فیلم عنوان اصلی کارگردان کشور ۱۹۵۱ چهار نفر درون یک جیپ (Four in a Jeep)[۱]| Die Vier im Jeep لئوپولد لیندبرگ (Leopold Lindtberg) سوئیس [۲] ...Sans laisser d'adresse ژان پل لو شانوا (Jean-Paul Le Chanois) فرانسه درهٔ سگ آبی (In Beaver Valley)[۳] جیمز الگار (James Algar) ایـالات متحده آمریکا عدالت برقرار هست (Justice Is Done)[۴] Justice est faite آندره کایـات (André Cayatte) فرانسه سیندرلا (Cinderella)[۵] ویلفرید جکسون (Wilfred Jackson) ایـالات متحده آمریکا ۱۹۵۲ تابستان خوشبختی (One Summer of Happiness) Hon dansade en sommar آرنـه متسون (Arne Mattsson) سوئد ۱۹۵۳ مزد ترس (The Wages of Fear) Le salaire de la peur هانری-ژرژ کلوزو (Henri-Georges Clouzot) فرانسه/ایتالیـا ۱۹۵۴ انتخاب آقای هابسون (Hobson's Choice) دیوید لین (David Lean) بریتانیـا ۱۹۵۵ موشـها (The Rats) Die Ratten رابرت سیـادمک (Robert Siodmak) آلمان غربی ۱۹۵۶ دعوت بـه (Invitation to the Dance) جین کلی (Gene Kelly) ایـالات متحده آمریکا ۱۹۵۷ ۱۲ مرد خشمگین (12 Angry Men) سیدنی لومت (Sidney Lumet) ایـالات متحده آمریکا ۱۹۵۸ توت فرنگی‌های وحشی (Wild Strawberries) اینگمار برگمن (Ingmar Bergman) سوئد ۱۹۵۹ پسرعموها (The Cousins) Les cousins کلود شابرل (Claude Chabrol) فرانسه ۱۹۶۰ لازاریو دی تورمس (Lazarillo de Tormes) El Lazarillo de Tormes سزار فرناندز اردوین (César Fernández Ardavín) اسپانیـا ۱۹۶۱ شب (The Night) La notte مـیکل آنجلو آنتونیونی (Michelangelo Antonioni) ایتالیـا/فرانسه ۱۹۶۲ یک نوع عشق (A Kind of Loving) جان شلزینگر (John Schlesinger) بریتانیـا ۱۹۶۳ شیطان (The Devil)[۶] Il diavolo جیـان لوئیجی پولیدورو (Gian Luigi Polidoro) ایتالیـا بوشیدو، اینگمار برگمن حماسهٔ سامورایی (Bushido, Samurai Saga) Bushidô zankoku monogatari تاداشی ایمایی (Tadashi Imai) ژاپن ۱۹۶۴ تابستان خشک (Dry Summer)[۷] Susuz Yaz متین ارکسان (Metin Erksan) ترکیـه ۱۹۶۵ آلفاویل (Alphaville) ژان-لوک گدار (Jean-Luc Godard) فرانسه/ایتالیـا ۱۹۶۶ بن‌بست Cul-de-Sac رومن پولانسکی (Roman Polanski) بریتانیـا ۱۹۶۷ آغاز (The Departure) Le départ یرژی اسکولیمووسکی (Jerzy Skolimowski) بلژیک ۱۹۶۸ چهی مرگ او را دید؟ (?Who Saw Him Die) Ole dole doff یـان تروئل (Jan Troell) سوئد ۱۹۶۹ کارهای اولیـه (Early Works) Rani radovi ژلیمـیر ژیلنیک (Želimir Žilnik) یوگسلاوی ۱۹۷۰ بدون برنده - - ۱۹۷۱ باغ فینزی کوینتینی (The Garden of the Finzi-Continis) Il giardino dei Finzi-Contini ویتوریو د سیکا (Vittorio De Sica) ایتالیـا/آلمان غربی ۱۹۷۲ حکایت‌های کانتربوری (The Canterbury Tales) پیر پائولو پازولینی (Pier Paolo Pasolini) ایتالیـا ۱۹۷۳ رعد دوردست (Distant Thunder) Ashani Sanket ساتیـاجیت ری (Satyajit Ray) هند ۱۹۷۴ کارآموزی دادی کراویتز (The Apprenticeship of Duddy Kravitz) تد کاچف (Ted Kotcheff) کانادا ۱۹۷۵ فرزندخواندگی (Adoption) Örökbefogadás مارتا مشاورس (Márta Mészáros) مجارستان ۱۹۷۶ Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bull's History Lesson رابرت آلتمن (Robert Altman) ایـالات متحده آمریکا ۱۹۷۷ صعود (The Ascent) Voskhozhdeniye لاریسا شپیتکو (Larisa Shepitko) اتحاد شوروی ۱۹۷۸ ماهی قزل آلا (Trout) Las truchas خوزه لوئیس گارسیـا سانچز (José Luis García Sánchez) اسپانیـا آ (فیلم ۱۹۷۸) توماس مونز (Tomás Muñoz) اسپانیـا What Max Said Las palabras de Max امـیلیو مارتینز-لازارو اسپانیـا ۱۹۷۹ دیوید (David) پیتر لیلینتال (Peter Lilienthal) آلمان غربی ۱۹۸۰ منطقهٔ حیـاتی Heartland ریچارد پیرس (Richard Pearce) ایـالات متحده آمریکا پالرمو یـا وولفسبورگ (Palermo or Wolfsburg) Palermo oder Wolfsburg ورنر شرودر (Werner Schroeter) آلمان غربی ۱۹۸۱ (Hurry, Hurry!) Deprisa, deprisa کارلوس سائورا (Carlos Saura) اسپانیـا (همراه فرانسه) ۱۹۸۲ ورونیکا واس (Veronika Voss) Die Sehnsucht der Veronika Voss راینر ورنر فاسبیندر (Rainer Werner Fassbinder) آلمان غربی ۱۹۸۳ تسلط ادوارد بنت (Edward Bennett) بریتانیـا تجمع (The Beehive) La colmena ماریو کاموس (Mario Camus) اسپانیـا ۱۹۸۴ جویبارهای عشق (Love Streams) جان کاساوتس (John Cassavetes) ایـالات متحده آمریکا ۱۹۸۵ زن و غریبه (The Woman and the Stranger) Die Frau und der Fremde راینر سیمون (Rainer Simon) آلمان شرقی واتربی (Wetherby) دیوید هیر (David Hare) بریتانیـا ۱۹۸۶ زندان استام‌هایم Stammheim[۸]

    (Stammheim - The Baader-Meinhof Gang On Trial)

    راینـهارد هاف (Reinhard Hauff) آلمان غربی ۱۹۸۷ تم (The Theme) Tema گلب پانفیلوف (Gleb Panfilov) اتحاد شوروی ۱۹۸۸ ذرت سرخ (Red Sorghum) Hong gao liang ژانگ ایمو (Zhang Yimou) چین ۱۹۸۹ مرد بارانی (Rain Man) بری لوینسون (Barry Levinson) ایـالات متحده آمریکا ۱۹۹۰ جعبهٔ موسیقی (Music Box) کوستاراس (Costa-Gavras) ایـالات متحده آمریکا چکاوک‌ها روی بند (Larks on a String) Skrivánci na niti ییری منزل (Jiri Menzel) چکسلواکی ۱۹۹۱ سرای لبخندها (The House of Smiles) La casa del sorriso مارکو فرری (Marco Ferreri) ایتالیـا ۱۹۹۲ گراند کانیون (Grand Canyon) لارنس کاسادن (Lawrence Kasdan) ایـالات متحده آمریکا ۱۹۹۳ زن کنجد کار (Woman Sesame Oil Maker) Xiang hun nu ژی فی (Xie Fei) چین ضیـافت عروسی (The Wedding Banquet) Xi yan آنگ لی (Ang Lee) تایوان/ایـالات متحده آمریکا ۱۹۹۴ به نام پدر (In the Name of the Father) جیم شریدان (Jim Sheridan) ایرلند/بریتانیـا ۱۹۹۵ ط (The Bait) L'appât برتران تاورنیـه (Bertrand Tavernier) فرانسه ۱۹۹۶ عقل و احساس (Sense and Sensibility) آنگ لی (Ang Lee) ایـالات متحده آمریکا/بریتانیـا ۱۹۹۷ مردم علیـه لری فلینت (The People vs. اینگمار برگمن Larry Flynt) مـیلوش فورمن (Miloš Forman) ایـالات متحده آمریکا ۱۹۹۸ ایستگاه مرکزی (Central Station) والتر سالس (Walter Salles) برزیل ۱۹۹۹ خط باریک سرخ (The Thin Red Line) ترنس مالیک (Terrence Malick) ایـالات متحده آمریکا ۲۰۰۰ مگنولیـا (Magnolia) پل توماس آندرسن (Paul Thomas Anderson) ایـالات متحده آمریکا ۲۰۰۱ اُنس (Intimacy) پاتریس شرو (Patrice Chéreau) بریتانیـا (همراه
    فرانسه، آلمان، اسپانیـا) ۲۰۰۲ شـهر اشباح (Spirited Away) هایـائو مـیازاکی (Miyazaki Hayao) ژاپن یکشنبه خونین (Bloody Sunday) پل گرینگرس (Paul Greengrass) بریتانیـا/ایرلند ۲۰۰۳ در این جهان (In This World) مایکل وینترباتم (Michael Winterbottom) بریتانیـا ۲۰۰۴ درون مقابل دیوار (Head-On) Gegen die Wand فاتح آکین (Fatih Akin) آلمان/ترکیـه ۲۰۰۵ کارمن کایلیتشا U-Carmen eKhayelitsha مارک دارنفورد-مـی (Mark Dornford-May) آفریقای جنوبی ۲۰۰۶ گرباویتسا (راز اِسما) Grbavica یـاسمـیلا ژبانیچ (Jasmila Žbanić) بوسنی و هرزگوین (همراه
    اتریش، آلمان، کرواسی) ۲۰۰۷ ازدواج تویـا (Tuya's Marriage) Tuya de hun shi وانگ کوآنان (Wang Quan'an) چین ۲۰۰۸ یگان ویژه (The Elite Squad) Tropa de Elite خوزه پادیلیـا (José Padilha) برزیل ۲۰۰۹ شیر اندوه (The Milk of Sorrow) کلودیـا یوسا (Claudia Llosa) پرو ۲۰۱۰ عسل (Honey) سمـیح کاپلان‌اوغلو (Semih Kaplanoğlu) ترکیـه ۲۰۱۱ جدایی نادر از سیمـین (Nader and Simin, A Separation) اصغر فرهادی (Asghar Farhadi) ایران ۲۰۱۲ سزار حتما بمـیرد (Caesar Must Die) پائولو و ویتوریو تاویـانی (Paolo and Vittorio Taviani) ایتالیـا ۲۰۱۳ مسئله بچه (Child's Pose) کالین پتر نتسر (Călin Peter Netzer) رومانی ۲۰۱۴ زغال‌سنگ سیـاه، یخ نازک دیـائو یینان (Diao Yinan) چین ۲۰۱۵ تاکسی جعفر پناهی (Jafar Panahi) ایران ۲۰۱۶ آتش درون دریـا Fuocoammare جانفرانکو رزی (Gianfranco Rosi) ایتالیـا ۲۰۱۷ در جسم و روح Testről és lélekről ایلدیکو انیدی (Ildikó Enyedi) مجارستان ۲۰۱۸ به من دست نزن Touch Me Not آدینا پینتیلی رومانی

    جوایز چندگانـه

    • تایوان انگ لی (۱۹۹۳; ۱۹۹۶)

    حضور ایران

    فیلم ایرانی جدایی نادر از سیمـین درون سال ۱۳۸۹ و فیلم تاکسی ساخته جعفر پناهی درون سال ۱۳۹۳، درون این جشنواره برنده جایزه خرس زرین شده‌اند.

    پانویس

  • بهترین فیلم درام
  • بهترین فیلم کمدی
  • بهترین فیلم مستند
  • بهترین فیلم جنایی یـا حادثه‌ای
  • بهترین فیلم موزیکال
  • نام دیگر: خوابیدن یـا نخوابیدن
  • (نام دیگر: انعکاساتReflections)
  • محاکمـهٔ گروه بادر ماینـهوف
  • جستارهای وابسته

    • نخل طلا، بالاترین جایزه درون جشنواره فیلم کن
    • شیر طلایی، بالاترین جایزه درون جشنواره فیلم ونیز

    منابع

    • ویکی‌پدیـای آلمانی
    • ن
    • ب
    • و
    جشنواره بین‌المللی فیلم برلین
    جوایز
    • خرس طلایی
    • خرس نقره‌ای
      • جایزه بزرگ هیئت داوران
      • کارگردان
      • بازیگر مرد
      • بازیگر زن
      • فیلمنامـه
      • جایزه آلفرد باوئر
    • خرس طلایی افتخاری
    جوایز مستقل
    • جایزه تدی
    • جایزه شوتینگ استارز
    بر پایـه سال
    • ۱۹۵۱
    • ۱۹۵۲
    • ۱۹۵۳
    • ۱۹۵۴
    • ۱۹۵۵
    • ۱۹۵۶
    • ۱۹۵۷
    • ۱۹۵۸
    • ۱۹۵۹
    • ۱۹۶۰
    • ۱۹۶۱
    • ۱۹۶۲
    • ۱۹۶۳
    • ۱۹۶۴
    • ۱۹۶۵
    • ۱۹۶۶
    • ۱۹۶۷
    • ۱۹۶۸
    • ۱۹۶۹
    • ۱۹۷۰
    • ۱۹۷۱
    • ۱۹۷۲
    • ۱۹۷۳
    • ۱۹۷۴
    • ۱۹۷۵
    • ۱۹۷۶
    • ۱۹۷۷
    • ۱۹۷۸
    • ۱۹۷۹
    • ۱۹۸۰
    • ۱۹۸۱
    • ۱۹۸۲
    • ۱۹۸۳
    • ۱۹۸۴
    • ۱۹۸۵
    • ۱۹۸۶
    • ۱۹۸۷
    • ۱۹۸۸
    • ۱۹۸۹
    • ۱۹۹۰
    • ۱۹۹۱
    • ۱۹۹۲
    • ۱۹۹۳
    • ۱۹۹۴
    • ۱۹۹۵
    • ۱۹۹۶
    • ۱۹۹۷
    • ۱۹۹۸
    • ۱۹۹۹
    • ۲۰۰۰
    • ۲۰۰۱
    • ۲۰۰۲
    • ۲۰۰۳
    • ۲۰۰۴
    • ۲۰۰۵
    • ۲۰۰۶
    • ۲۰۰۷
    • ۲۰۰۸
    • ۲۰۰۹
    • ۲۰۱۰
    • ۲۰۱۱
    • ۲۰۱۲
    • ۲۰۱۳
    • ۲۰۱۴
    • ۲۰۱۵
    • ۲۰۱۶
    • ۲۰۱۷
    برگرفته از «https://fa.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=خرس_طلایی&oldid=22976779»
    . اینگمار برگمن




    [اینگمار برگمن]

    نویسنده و منبع | تاریخ انتشار: Sun, 29 Jul 2018 23:36:00 +0000



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