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'This now is where the film has its shortcomings', the renowned film critic LJ Jordaan wrote about Dick Laan's feature film Boy, in which he claims 'a tulip metaphor was not transplanted correctly into reality'. Consequently, the filmmaker decided to stick to documentary. Dick Laan (1894-1973) is primarily known as the spiritual father of Pinkeltje, but before writing this popular children's book series, he was an enthusiastic filmmaker, active from World War I until shortly after World War II. This documentary plunges into the legacy of filmmaker Laan, who earned a living in his father's candy factory in the Zaanstreek region. Some film experts analyse his work and put it into a historical perspective. Some sequences show how Laan freely pioneered and adopted ideas from his experimenting contemporaries. Laan practiced several genres and treated divergent subjects, from sanatorium life to scouting. Although he was passionate about the art of filmmaking, he did not care when part of his oeuvre went up in flames.

Credits

Production company
AV Research & Redactie
Stichting Amateurfilm
TV company
RTV Noord-Holland

Title: Dick Laan en de verdwenen films
Year: 2006
Duration : 40 minutes
Category: Short Documentary
Edition: NFF 2007

NFF Archive

You are now in the NFF Archive. The archive contains contains information on film, TV and interactive productions that were screened at past festival editions. The NFF does not dispose of this material. For this, please contact the producer, distributor or broadcaster. Sometimes, older films can also be found at the Eye Film Museum or the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision.