Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Kåre Bergstrøm

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
Norwegian

Born
  
3 February 1911 (
1911-02-03
)
Värmland, Sweden

Occupation
  
Film photographer and director

Died
  
24 June 1976, Oslo, Norway

Movies
  
Lake of the Dead, Blodveien, Death is a Caress, Andrine og Kjell, Bjurra

Similar
  
Henny Moan, Henki Kolstad, Tancred Ibsen, Per Lillo‑Stenberg, Rasmus Breistein

Kåre Bergstrøm (3 February 1911 – 24 June 1976) was a Swedish-born photographer and film director who settled in Norway.

Bergstrøm was born in Värmland. He was assigned with the film production company Norsk Film from 1933, and eventually became a photographer. He photographed Toralf Sandø's film Den forsvundne pølsemaker from 1941, Tancred Ibsen's film Den farlige leken from 1942, Rasmus Breistein's Trysil-Knut from 1942, and Alfred Maurstad's comedy En herre med bart from 1942. After World War II he photographed Edith Carlmar's film debut Døden er et kjærtegn, and Ibsen's To mistenkelige personer, which eventually was forbidden to be shown in public after a judgement by the Supreme Court of Norway. His first film as director was the love story Andrine og Kjell from 1952. He further directed the comedy Det kunne vært deg (1952), the war documentary Blodveien (1955), about Yugoslavian slave workers in Norway during World War II, the thriller Lake of the Dead (1958), based on a crime novel by André Bjerke, a biographical film about Hans Nielsen Hauge (1961), Klokker i måneskinn (1964), and the children's film Bjurra (1970).

References

Kåre Bergstrøm Wikipedia