In his early days in Los Angeles, Berg worked such jobs as a prop assistant and a driver. Berg acted in
21 Jump Street He acted in
Genuine Risk in 1990 In 1998, Berg made his feature directorial debut with
Very Bad Things, a
black comedy starring
Jon Favreau,
Christian Slater,
Jeremy Piven,
Daniel Stern, and
Leland Orser. The film, which was shown at the Toronto and San Sebastian Film Festivals, received mixed critical reception. In 2000, he created
Wonderland, an edgy dramatic television series set in a
psychiatric emergency room. While the
ABC show received rave reviews and garnered a cult following, it failed to deliver ratings and was canceled after the second episode had aired. In 2004, Berg began work on his third directorial effort,
Friday Night Lights, a football film based on
The New York Times bestseller written by
Buzz Bissinger. In 2006, Berg developed and became executive producer of
NBC's
Peabody and
Emmy Award-winning drama
Friday Night Lights, which takes inspiration from the book and Berg's film of the same name, but features an original storyline and new characters. Berg appeared alongside
Tom Cruise in the
Robert Redford directed war film
Lions for Lambs (2007) as Lt. Colonel Falco. Berg followed up in 2007 with directing
The Kingdom, a
Michael Mann-produced action-political thriller set in Saudi Arabia, starring
Academy Award winners
Jamie Foxx and
Chris Cooper, also with
Jennifer Garner whom Berg met when he appeared on the television series
Alias. Berg directed the 2008 film
Hancock, starring
Will Smith,
Charlize Theron and
Jason Bateman, that grossed over $600,000,000 million worldwide. Berg directed a
Hulu commercial featuring
Alec Baldwin, which both
The New York Times and
Time named best spot of
Super Bowl XLIII. In 2009, Berg directed a two-hour pilot movie for the
Fox television series
Virtuality. Even though the show was not picked up for a full season, the pilot was released on DVD exclusively through
Best Buy. Berg also directed the
ESPN documentary
30 for 30: Kings Ransom in 2009. Berg also co-wrote the film
The Losers (2010). Berg also directed the science-fiction action film
Battleship (2012), a live-action adaptation of the board game, and the war film
Lone Survivor (2013), an adaptation of Marcus Lutrell's
book of the same name.
Variety writer Justin Chang said Berg delivered "his most serious-minded work to date with
Lone Survivor." The following year, Berg acted as producer on the 2014 film
Hercules, which he was originally slated to direct before being replaced by
Brett Ratner. In 2013, Berg created the opening animation sequence for
ESPN's
Monday Night Football, the 80-second graphic featured
Darth Vader,
Pac-Man, President
Ronald Reagan and football highlights of 44 years. In 2014, he directed the first two episodes of
HBO's
The Leftovers. In 2015, Berg launched the nonfiction studio Film 45 to complement his fiction studio Film 44. In 2016, Berg directed the film
Deepwater Horizon, based on the
Deepwater Horizon explosion. Berg replaced director
J. C. Chandor, who had exited the film due to creative differences. That same year, he directed
CBS Films'
Patriots Day, about the
Boston Marathon bombing, and the following year directed the action thriller
Mile 22. All three films starred
Mark Wahlberg. In 2017, Berg directed an ambitious commercial for
Hyundai, which was recorded after the kickoff of
Super Bowl LI and aired right after the game. His Film 44 company was recently signed to a first look deal with
Netflix, which saw the release of his most recent film
Spenser Confidential, the director's fifth collaboration with Wahlberg. In 2019, Berg directed a historic commercial for the
National Football League, "...football fans witnessed another milestone moment with the premiere of the NFL's
Super Bowl commercial entitled
The 100-Year Game. The two minute ad, which kicked off the celebration of the NFL's 100th season garnered the No. 1 spot in
USA Todays Ad Meter with the publication describing it as "a tour de force starring an assemblage of many of the greats of NFL history." In 2024, Berg announced he was working on a film based on the book
The Mosquito Bowl: A Game of Life and Death in World War II.
The Mosquito Bowl is set to release on
Netflix in 2026. ==Personal life==