Bergman's death in July 2007, and the re-release of his masterpiece "The Seventh Seal", established him as one of the most influential film-makers in the history of cinema. Already an international bestseller - with Bergman's fierce public denunciation of the book when it appeared in Sweden generated controversy and sales. A UK debut for a writer set to become a figure of European significance - he has already written successfully for screen, stage and bookshelf. He was a cinematic writer - films of 2 earlier novels are in production. This book provides a unique portrait of Bergman, taking facts from his own autobiographical writings and other family documents and passing them through the lens of Ahndoril's brilliant imagination. There is a media campaign to focus on film magazines and reaching out to cinephiles, as well as the usual broadsheet/ literary press.The Director is Ingmar Bergman; the time is 1961; and the setting is the shooting of "Winter Light", a film about how his life would have been, had he followed his father's wishes and become a priest.
As actors and crew gather to film this alternative destiny, Bergman tries to draw his father into the process, but quickly finds himself plunged back into the emotions of his childhood - both terrorised by his brutal and dominating father, and desperately longing for his approval - and reality gradually begins to crack and crumble, tipping him into a world of false memories and dangerous fantasies. Compelling and breathtakingly original, The Director mixes biographical fact with a wild kaleidoscopic imagination to reveal the boy and the man behind the great film-maker.
Genre: Literary Fiction
As actors and crew gather to film this alternative destiny, Bergman tries to draw his father into the process, but quickly finds himself plunged back into the emotions of his childhood - both terrorised by his brutal and dominating father, and desperately longing for his approval - and reality gradually begins to crack and crumble, tipping him into a world of false memories and dangerous fantasies. Compelling and breathtakingly original, The Director mixes biographical fact with a wild kaleidoscopic imagination to reveal the boy and the man behind the great film-maker.
Genre: Literary Fiction
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