De stem van het water

Dec 22 1966 N/A 1h 30m
Documentary

The Netherlands and water, they are inseparable from one another. Water in its soothing form, as a place of work and pleasure and as a source of threat and misery. Bert Haanstra thought it a great subject for a big cinema documentary and made The Voice of the Water. At the start, while the credits are still running, it is already apparent how remarkable and original he portrays the beauty of the landscape of the Dutch coastline. In the following ninety minutes we see numerous people that live, work and recreate on, by and in the water. Often they are being observed in a gentle humorous way that reminds us of The Human Dutch. Some people prefer to stay far away from all the wetness: the little boy having a swimming lesson, but who doesn’t dare to put his head under water, is forever imprinted on the memory of many of the viewers.

Plot

The Voice of the Water shows us a world not so long gone. In contrast to what one could expect, we see a real Dutchman. This here is a documentary without re-enactments, no 'fakeness', just the bareness of living surrounded by water. Innocent children, fishermen, happy folk, sad folk, acting out of free will and forced to do what others than themselves want them too. This picture Haanstra sketches, made me realize how insignificant and estranged we must seem to the people of past times. Raw and unrelenting as the water is, shaping the daily life of thousands. At the same time we get to see the contrast between the changing and the unchangeable. Forces of nature doing their thing, and the power of men, failing and succeeding (often in that order). The Voice of the Water is not so much a film that's fun to watch - though it most certainly is - but more than that it's a feeling that you get. This is humanity, this is living, this is life, this is what it means to be living. And the water is our teacher, our guardian, our foe, our companion, it's own master.Watch it and enjoy the way Haanstra captures this ancient world, unaware of the ways in which it would change (in only a couple decades too). And that's what makes this movie work.

Written by

Simon Carmiggelt, Bert Haanstra, Anton Koolhaas

Directed by

Bert Haanstra

Production Countries

Netherlands

Languages

Deutsch, Français, Nederlands, English

Awards

N/A

Scores
# of Votes
156
Average Rating
7.3 out of 10
Metascore
NA
Popularity
NA