Willy Mullens

Willy Mullens.

Willy Mullens (4 October 1880, Weesp, North Holland - 21 April 1952, The Hague) was a Dutch producer, director, and promoter of movies. He is considered to be one of the early pioneers of Dutch cinema, and one of his movies was recently elected as one of only sixteen "Canonical Dutch movies." With his brother Bernardus Albertus (Albert) (20 June 1879, Harlingen - 1941) he started around the turn of the 20th century one of the earliest Dutch film production companies, Alberts Frères. By the second decade of that century he was making documentary films that premiered for royalty. His second company, Haghefilm, dominated the Dutch film market between the two World Wars.

Entrance into the movie industry

Early career

Willy and Albert's father, Albertus Abraham Mullens (30 July 1847 Hoorn - 1890), alias "A. Alber(t)", and a German by the name of Ahrens Basch had founded a theater company (Koninklijk Nederlandsch Cagliostro-Théâtre Alber & Basch"), specializing in "mysterious and pseudo-scientific spectacles".[1] After Albert Senior's death, their mother Christina Mullens-Verpoort continued to direct the company. Before getting started in the movies, Willy Mullens also worked at a fair in The Hague as a human cannonball.[2] He was fired in 1897 when his act failed; he had been knocked out by a kangaroo. Christina took her sons to Paris, where they saw Auguste and Louis Lumière's movies in the Salon Indien du Grand Café. With financial aid from their mother, they bought a number of those movies;[2] in 1899 they started showing them in the Netherlands in their traveling cinema.[3] They chose the French name "Alberts Frères" for their production company, since the movie business at the time was predominantly French.[2]

Alberts Frères

Main article: Alberts Frères

In 1914, the company started touring the halls and theaters of the country during the winter,[4] and soon became one of the main attractions at fairs throughout the country.[5]

Besides showing movies, Alberts Frères quickly started making them. Often focusing on comedy, the Mullens brothers pulled practical jokes and filmed them, and along the way generated headlines and built a reputation.[6] Their most successful production is also one of the oldest surviving Dutch fictional movies, The Misadventure of a French Gentleman Without Pants at the Zandvoort Beach, which in 2007 was "canonized" as one of sixteen canonical films by the Netherlands Film Festival.[7] The six-minute film, consisting of eight scenes, was filmed by Albert and directed by Willy, the latter also playing the lead after the intended actor was not allowed (by his fiancée) to appear pantless on-camera.

During World War I (the Netherlands were neutral), the company was hired by Kaiser Wilhelm's Dutch legate to film German children celebrating Queen Wilhelmina's birthday in 1919. The German Bild- und Filmamt (which aimed at the production of propaganda) was to procure copies for the German market, in hopes of maintaining good relations between Germany and the Netherlands; it is not known if that actually happened.[8]

Haghefilm

"Haghefilm" (named for "The Hague") was founded by Willy Mullens in 1914, and quickly established a reputation as the largest and best-known Dutch movie production company.[9] Willy Mullens later became a well-known producer of documentary films; his Holland Neutraal: Leger en Vlootfilm (1917) received a royal premiere, in the presence of Queen Wilhelmina and Prince Hendrik. The two and a half hour long movie was the first documentary which attracted a mass audience. It showcased the Dutch army and navy and was commissioned by the Dutch Minister of War Bosboom, who intended for the movie to rally popular support for Dutch neutrality during World War I; on the other hand, the movie, with its display of military might, also aimed to show that the Dutch, despite their neutrality, were not to be thought of lightly.[10] During World War II, Haghefilm delivered subtitles for the Dutch version of the Die Deutsche Wochenschau, the official German-supplied newsreel.[11]

Twice Mullens traveled to the Dutch East Indies, in 1924 to film for the oil industry, and in 1926 on assignment by the Dutch government, a nine-month trip; his were some of the first images shot in the Dutch colony.[12]

The company also produced cinema newsreels, and were an early competitor of Polygoon, the company that operated from 1919 to 1987 and dominated the Dutch market after World War II.[13]

Legacy

Besides being canonized by the Netherlands Film Institute and honored as a movie pioneer, Mullens also had a very practical impact on Dutch cinema as one of the founders of the Nederlandsch Centraal Filmarchief (1919), the first audio-visual archive in the Netherlands.[14]

The name Haghefilm still lives on in the modern film laboratory called Haghefilm, in Amsterdam. Their origins date back to 1926-27, to the lab founded by Willy Mullens in The Hague. Its name was changed to "Color Film Center" in 1977-78, then folded in 1984 due to mismanagement and competition. Four of the employees became directors of their own enterprise and acquired the rights to the Haghefilm name; their lab now devotes itself to working on archival films.[15]

Filmography

Alfabetical

  1. Amsterdamsche pleinen en straten (1920) 10:51
  2. L'Archipel des Indes Orientales Neerlandaises filme par l'Institut Colonial - Amsterdam (1926)
  3. Arnhem en omstreken (1919) 24:48
  4. Bolsward (1920) 4:22
  5. De ambachtsheerlijkheid Rijswijk (1920) 8:20
  6. De bereiding van boter (1920) 27:01
  7. De bereiding van kaas (1920) 19:50
  8. De Vechtstreek (1920) 4:36
  9. Delft (1922) 21:37
  10. Door Walcheren (1921) 22:31
  11. Dordrecht, Holland's aelteste Stadt (1926, reel 1 of 3) 12:37
  12. Een oud keizerrijk (1920) 11:25
  13. Eindhoven (1920) 7:20
  14. Enkhuizen (1919) 8:54
  15. Franeker (1920) 7:25
  16. Glas-industrie in Leerdam (1918) 14:42
  17. Harlingen (1920) 5:44
  18. Heerlen (1922) 21:35
  19. Het leven der bijen (1917) 25:13
  20. Het 's-Gravenhaagsche vacantie-kinderfeest (1920) 5:23
  21. Holland in ijs (1917) 8:35
  22. Holland Neutraal: De Leger- en Vlootfilm (1917)
  23. Hoorn (1919) 9:09
  24. In een ver verleden in en om Arnhem (1919) 3:05
  25. Kampen (1920) 14:15
  26. Koninklijke Stearine Kaarsenfabriek Gouda (1918) (long version: 23:45)
  27. Koninklijke Stearine Kaarsenfabriek Gouda (1918) (short version: 13:56)
  28. Langs de Maas (1920) 8:16
  29. Langs Gouwe en Oude Rijn (1920) 5:04
  30. Leeuwarden (1920) 12:38
  31. Maastricht (1920) 12:50
  32. Medemblik (1920) 10:01
  33. Moderne wegenaanleg te Amsterdam (1927) 56:16
  34. Mooi Nederland Zeist (1922) 9:09
  35. Nederlandsche Basalt Maatschappij (1925) 50:13
  36. Petroleum Film (1924)
  37. Schoonhoven (1920) 8:33
  38. Sittard (1920) 9:20
  39. Sneek (1920) 9:15
  40. Stavoren (1920) 5:20
  41. Utrecht (1918) 22:16
  42. Valkenburg (1920) 4:34
  43. Visschersplaatsen aan de Zuiderzee (1920) 9:14
  44. Weesp (1920) 8:17
  45. Werkspoor (1918) 2:19
  46. Zaltbommel (1919) 10:38
  47. Zuiderzeewerken (1927-1932)

References

  1. Guideo Convents, Van kinetoscoop tot café-ciné: de eerste jaren van de film in België,1894-1908, Leuven University Press, 2000; page 186
  2. 1 2 3 Draijer, Cor (2009-04-13). "Een heertje zonder pantalon". Genootschap Oud-Zandvoort. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  3. "De gebroeders Lumière: de grondleggers van de film". Geschiedenis. VPRO. 2008-06-05. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  4. Joan Hemels, "Van Rarekiek tot Bioscoop," in Jacobs, Johanna (2002). Kennis, Kunstjes en Kunnen: Kermis, de Wondere Wereld van Glans en Glitter. Boom. pp. 187–204. ISBN 978-90-5875-052-5. P. 202.
  5. Puck Meijer and Cees Vanwesenbeeck, "De Jaarmarkt-Kermissen van Bergen op Zoom," in Jacobs, Johanna (2002). Kennis, Kunstjes en Kunnen: Kermis, de Wondere Wereld van Glans en Glitter. Boom. pp. 123–46. ISBN 978-90-5875-052-5. P. 139.
  6. "Maastricht. Een vreemdeling deed hedenochtend...". Limburger Koerier (in Dutch). Dagblad de Limburger-Limburgs Dagblad. 1907-09-13. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  7. "Zestien films in Canon van de Nederlandse Film". NRC Handelsblad (in Dutch). 2007-09-12. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  8. Ivo Blom, "Business As Usual? Filmhandel, Bioscoopwezen en Filmpropaganda in Nederland Tijdens de Eerste Wereldoorlog," in Binneveld, Hans; Johannes Martinus Wouter Binneveld (2001). Leven Naast de Catastrofe: Nederland Tijdens de Eerste Wereldoorlog. Verloren. pp. 129–44. ISBN 978-90-6550-437-1. Pp. 137-38.
  9. 1 2 3 "Selectie van vooroorlogse documentaires". Geschiedenis. VPRO. 2007-11-22. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  10. The entire movie is available online, accompanying the article "Holland Neutraal: De leger- en vlootfilm uit 1917". Geschiedenis. VPRO. 2007-12-14. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  11. Burg, Jos van der (July–August 2002). "Nederlandse film in de Tweede Wereldoorlog: Propaganda en collaboratie". Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  12. 1 2 3 Images plus a scene-by-scene description available at "Indisch filmarchief: De Nederlandsch Oost-Indische archipel". Geschiedenis. VPRO. 2008-05-12. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  13. Lammers, Fred (1995-11-27). "Erkenning voor Polygoon". Trouw (in Dutch). Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  14. Driessen, Kees (2007). Canon van de Nederlandse Film (PDF). Utrecht: Netherlands Film Festival. pp. 10–11.
  15. Paletz, Gabriel M. (Spring 2006). "The Finesse of the Film Lab: A Report from a Week at Haghefilm". The Moving Image. University of Minnesota Press. 6 (1): 1–32. doi:10.1353/mov.2006.0015. ISSN 1532-3978.
  16. Koolhaas, Marnix (2008-03-18). "De Afsluitdijk op de schop: Grootste monument van Nederland aan vernieuwing toe". Holland Doc. Retrieved 2009-05-05.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.