Humour and Irony in Dutch Post-war Fiction Film

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Amsterdam University Press, 2016 - Comedy films - 410 pages
If Dutch cinema is examined in academic studies, the focus is usually on pre-war films or on documentaries, but the post-war fiction film has been sporadically addressed. Many popular box-office successes have been steeped in jokes on parochial conflicts, vulgar behavior and/or on sexual display, towards which Dutch people have often felt ambivalent. At the same time, something like a 'Hollandse school', a term first coined in the 1980s, has manifested itself more firmly, with the work of Alex van Warmerdam, pervaded in deadpan irony as its biggest eye-catcher. Using seminal theories of humor and irony as an angle, this study scrutinizes a great number of Dutch films on the basis of categories such as low-class comedies; neurotic romances; deliberate camp; cosmic irony, or grotesque satire. Hence, Humour and Irony in Dutch Post-war Fiction Film makes surprising connections between films from various decades: Flodder and New Kids Turbo; Spetters and Simon; Rent a Friend and Ober; De verloedering van de Swieps and Borgman; Black Out and Plan C.

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About the author (2016)

Dr. Peter Verstraten is Assistant Professor Film and Literary Studies at Leiden University. He has published among others Film Narratology (Toronto, 2009) - a Chinese translation is forthcoming - and Humour and Irony in Dutch Post-war Fiction Film (Amsterdam, 2016). He is a regular contributor to Senses of Cinema

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