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Martin Koolhoven

Martin Koolhoven
Martin Koolhoven door Joshua Rood.jpg
Martin Koolhoven in 2011
Born Martinus Wouter Koolhoven
(1969-04-25) 25 April 1969 (age 47)
The Hague, Netherlands
Occupation Film director, screenwriter
Years active 1993-present

Martinus Wouter "Martin" Koolhoven (born 25 April 1969) is a Dutch film director and screenwriter. He directed the Dutch-language films Schnitzel Paradise (2005), Knetter (2005), 'n Beetje Verliefd (2006), and Winter in Wartime (2008). His first English-languaged film Brimstone will be released in 2017

Martinus Wouter Koolhoven was born on 25 April 1969 in The Hague in the Netherlands

Koolhoven went to a Dutch film school and graduated in 1996.

Almost immediately, he made an impact on the Dutch film industry with his 53-minute television film Duister Licht ("Dark Light") in which the slaughtering of a pig was shown. The film was nominated twice at the Dutch Film Festival.

It was his next (and first feature length) film however that established his name, also outside of the Netherlands. Suzy Q (also made for television) became the most awarded Dutch film of 1999 and established both Koolhoven's career and that of actress Carice van Houten, who Koolhoven worked with several times in the films to come.

His first film for the cinema, AmnesiA (2001), got a small theatical release in New York City.

Koolhoven was one of the "New Faces In European Cinema" as presented at the AFI festival (Hollywood) in 2004.

Koolhoven started off with strongly stylized films that were all hailed by the critics, but never gained commercial success. In 2005 that changed when he went into the mainstream with Schnitzel Paradise, that not only got him rave reviews (both inside and outside the Netherlands), but was the highest grossing Dutch film of that year. The film was shown at many international film festivals (amongst them the Berlin Film Festival and the Karlovy Vary Film Festival where it was part of the Variety Critic's choice.) The film was sold to more than 20 countries, which is a remarkable amount for a Dutch film.


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