Klaus Härö Explained

Klaus Härö
Birth Date:1971 3, df=yes
Occupation:Film director

Klaus Härö (born 31 March 1971 in Porvoo, Finland) is a Finnish film director. In 2004, he won Finland's State Prize for Art.[1]

Härö grew up in a Swedish-speaking Finnish family.[2] He studied directing and attended screen writing seminars at the University of Industrial Arts in Helsinki. He has directed several feature films, including (2003), Mother of Mine (2005) and The New Man (2007), as well as documentaries and short films. He works in both Sweden and Finland.

In 2003 Klaus Härö received the Ingmar Bergman Award, the winner of which was chosen by Ingmar Bergman himself. Four of Härö's features were chosen as Finland's submission for the best foreign-language film category at the Oscars.[3]

Films

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Composite News Bulletin – November 2004. Finnish Ministry of Education. 2009-10-20. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110727225929/http://www.minedu.fi/OPM/Tiedotteet/composite_news_bulletins/2004/november2004.html?lang=en. 2011-07-27.
  2. Web site: Juntto. Anssi. 2004. Elämänkatsomus näkyy elokuvista. 2021-11-16. Kaleva. fi.
  3. News: Popular on the festival circuit, the movie was Finland's Oscar submission last year, and the third of Härö's films to represent the country. . Movie review: 'Letters to Father Jacob' . Betsy Sharkey . 2010-10-15 . 2015-01-09 . Los Angeles Times.