Аватар персоны Jaap van Hoewijk

Jaap van Hoewijk

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Born in 1963 and died in 2020, documentary maker Jaap van Hoewijk was known for documentaries such as Killing Time, Kleine Delicten and Piet is Weg. Van Hoewijk not only became known as a director, but also worked as a researcher, producer and screenwriter. Many of Jaap van Hoewijk's documentaries have been about unsolved cases and mortality from the start of his career. For his debut film Procedure 769 (1995), he spoke to witnesses to the execution of murderer Robert Alton Harris. In the documentary Family Secret (2001) he investigated the cause of death of his own father, whom he had thought for twenty-three years had died in an accident. Killing Time (2013) works towards an execution in Texas. And his latest film, Piet is gone (2017), is about the unsolved disappearance of Piet Beentjes, who was last seen on April 26, 1987 when he boarded the ferry to Texel.

12-02-1963

Birthday

Aquarius

Zodiac Sign

-

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Total Films

Also known as (male)

Rotterdam, Netherlands

Place of Birth

Popular works

Creative career

actor

0 Works

producer

2 Works

director

8 Works

writer

2 Works

other

0 Works

A Lapse of Memory

A Lapse of Memory

A confused old man, Henry, lives on his own in an old empty building that is reminiscent of a deserted palace. Henry hasn't been outside for years. The camera follows a day in his life - his simple daily chores and his eccentric rituals. Henry looks like a European from a good family, but has many Asian habits. The second protagonist is the building in which Henry is staying: the Royal Pavilion in Brighton. It is one of the best preserved examples of chinoise architecture and furnishing in the world. Neither the client nor the architect had ever set foot in Asia. In a monologue, a parallel narrative unfolds in a game with reality and fiction. Word and image, fiction and documentary become intertwined with each other and point across the frontiers of ‘East’ versus ‘West’.
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Year:

2007

Foreland

Foreland

The landscape in which we live has been around longer than we have. And it will still be there after our death. Not that the landscape always remains the same: every generation wipes out the traces of previous generations, and itself leaves new traces behind. This process has been followed for seven years with great detail, craftsmanship and without misplaced nostalgia on Super16 by Eugenie Jansen and Albert Elings. On the banks of the Netherrhine River, between the dike and the river itself, is a stretch of water meadow, Loowaard. In the derelict farmstead lives the last farmer who had cows here, there are remains of a brick factory that no longer has a function, and in the ground, remains have been found of an old Roman encampment. Until recently, the march of progress apparently had left this piece of land untouched. But now the meadows have to make way for the development of new nature.
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Year:

2005