BERGMAN: I've always had a huge complex, great misgivings, about my own writing. There are people who have often said, perhaps justifiably, that I am no writer, which, in fact, I never claimed to be. In the past I was haunted by these misgivings as well as by the fear of not getting it right. It was an obstacle to my writing, which came down to an act of willpower with the accompanying tensions and inhibitions. There was so much I had to overcome. During the last few years, I've stopped worrying about what people might say about what I am doing, because - It's not that I don't care, but I can never please everybody anyway. I'll find no mercy among those who dislike what I'm doing anyway. I think I've calmed down a bit on that point. It will take the form it takes.
SJOMAN: Was there a period when you tried to please everyone?
BERGMAN: Working in this medium and being a man of the theatre, I'm like the common whore. I have an enormous need for people to like me and what I'm doing. That it be accepted and praised and so forth. It's always painful to be disapproved of.
Ingmar Bergman
from Ingmar Bermgan Makes a Movie (1963)
interview with Vilgot Sjöman