INGO TRENDELBERND =[ PRODUCER >
Ingo Trendelbernd AKA Ingo
Lee started shooting action-laden Super-8 movies
when he was still an adolescent. Back then he had chosen
the pseudonym 'Ingo Lee' out of admiration for legendary
martial artist and Kung Fu film hero Bruce Lee.
As time went by and Ingo's love to the movies and filmmaking
persisted his projects became more and more professional.
He started to work internationally and shot with Keanu Reeves
on Sweet
November.
The start of a producer career he'd been working on with
lots of energy and enthusiasm came in 2000 when he financed
the breathtaking battle sequences in the Middle Ages saga
Corona,
the last film of director Christoph Abresch who was tragically
shot to death at age 26 in 2000.
Meanwhile, Ingo Trendelbernd is handled as one of the biggest
new talents in independent filmmaking. Besides being the
owner and CEO of Lee/Leroc
Filmworkshop, the production company that financed 'Evil
Knights' and other movies such as the horror spoof Torsil
Ultra - The Attack of the One Foot Killersocks, the
action thriller Death:
Download - in both of which he starred in leading roles
- Blood Angel
2, the sequel to the legendary cult classic I
Spit On Your Grave and the mystery/horror thriller 'Right
Turn', he's also a brilliant actor and, in addition to that,
well trained in the martial arts.
So far, he's been doing all his daring stunt scenes himself.
In 2005, Ingo Trendelbernd starred as inspector Blacky Foxberger
in Dogma 2005 Productions' crime/comedy feature 'Das Geheimnis
der Stählernen Holztür' ('The Mystery of the Steely Wood
Door').
All dialogue in this movie was improvised onset! The actors
merely received a rough plot and a list of character names
before the shoot.
Also in 2005, Ingo directed part of Lee/Leroc's horror/comedy
feature 'The Unbelievable Terror'.
Ingo is popular for his own sense of humor and his unique
way of enthusing all around him to work on a common goal
and thereby achieve the utmost. And his goal is to make
movies that will entertain, amaze and surprise an audience
whose taste lies beyond the polished mainstream.