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Dood Water is a 1934 Dutch drama film directed by Gerard Rutten.
Dood Water | |
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Directed by | Gerard Rutten |
Written by | Simon Koster, Gerard Rutten |
Distributed by | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release date |
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Running time | 106 minutes |
Country | Netherlands |
Language | Dutch |
Cast
edit- Jan Musch ... Willem de Geus
- Theo de Maal ... Jaap de Meeuw (as Teo de Maal)
- Betsy Ranucci-Beckman ... Aaf de Meeuw
- Arnold Marlé... Dirk Brak
- Max Croiset ... Jan Brak
- Helga Gogh ... Maartje Brak
- Johan Schilthuyzen
- Jules Verstraete
Reception
editThe film won the Coppa Istituto Luce at Venice Film Festival (1934), for best cinematography, by Andor von Barsy.
Writing for The Spectator, Graham Greene praised the film's documentary prologue as "an exciting piece of pure cinema", and commented that the story which follows "has some of the magnificent drive one felt behind the classic Russian films, behind Earth and The General Line: no tiresome 'message', but a belief in the importance of a human activity truthfully reported". Greene also noted, however, that "the photography is uneven: at moments it is painfully 'arty', deliberately out of focus".[1]
References
edit- ^ Greene, Graham (6 September 1935). "Dood Wasser/Me and Marlborough". The Spectator. (reprinted in: Taylor, John Russell, ed. (1980). The Pleasure Dome. pp. 18–19. ISBN 0192812866.)
External links
edit- Dood Water at IMDb