***NETHERLANDS OUT*** Netherlands’ film director Paul Verhoeven poses on the red carpet during the Netherlands’ premiere of his latest movie Elle in Amsterdam on May 31, 2016. / AFP / ANP / Remko de Waal / Netherlands OUT (Photo credit should read REMKO DE WAAL/AFP via Getty Images)
  • Industry

Hollywood in The Netherlands

In 2019, six of the top ten films at the Dutch box office were from Disney – The Lion King, Avengers: Endgame, Aladdin, Frozen II, Captain Marvel and Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker. The other four, as well as the next ten, are all Hollywood releases. The top five of 2020 so far are also US films led by 1917, whose Golden Globe win helped propel its box office around the world. It’s made $8.9 million so far, the fifth top market for the film.

The total box office in the Netherlands for 2019 was $Bohemian Rhapsody led the list. The trend has been upward over the past five years with Hollywood films leading the box office every year.

While the common theme in these reports of international territories is the domination of Hollywood and Netflix (more on Netflix later) over the local industry, the film industry in the Netherlands is relatively small and does not have much of an international market. So, expatriates like director Paul Verhoeven have gone to Hollywood to make careers there. In an interview with Screen Daily in 2016, Verhoeven said, “I really fled Holland in 1985 because the committees that give you money didn’t want to give it to me anymore because they thought I made ‘entertainment movies,’ low level, disgusting, perverted and portraying Dutch society in the wrong way.” (He was the director of Basic Instinct and Showgirls, winner of seven Razzies, fans will remember. In 2006 he did return to his homeland where he made the critically acclaimed Elle, another Golden Globe winner for Best Foreign Language Film in 2016.)

But in recent years, the country has tried to attract international co-productions with a variety of incentives. In 2014, a 30% cash rebate on spending was offered to both movie and TV production (now it’s 35%) with a minimum spend of €1 million and 75% of production costs incurred in the country. The annual rebate budget is about €31 million. Stunning locations encompassing canals, windmills and tulip fields, cosmopolitan cities like Amsterdam, Rotterdam and The Hague, and easy proximity to the UK and rest of Europe led tens of productions to flock to the Netherlands. Over 200 co-productions have availed of the rebate.

Christopher Nolan was one filmmaker to take advantage of the incentives offered. He shot Dunkirk there in 2016 for over a month in the fishing village of Urk, and received the full million-euro rebate as well as permission to use the air space for his aerial shots. It helped that his cinematographer, Hoyte van Hoytema, was Dutch.

The Lionsgate film The Hitman’s Bodyguard with Ryan Reynolds and Salma Hayek, was shot in Amsterdam and took advantage of the rebate, regaining €857,000. (It was reported the locals were not pleased with the diverted traffic and closed-off roads for three weeks.) According to Variety, the Western Brimstone starring Dakota Fanning, also received a rebate though it wasn’t shot in the Netherlands because its writer-director and most of its crew were Dutch.

Other well-known films shot in the Netherlands include 2003’s Girl with a Pearl Earring.  Featuring the life of Dutch master Vermeer, it starred Colin Firth and Scarlett Johansson and was filmed in Delft. 2004’s Ocean’s Twelve used Amsterdam as a location and so did 2014’s The Fault in Our Stars, which did good business in the country.

Several Dutch actors have been featured in Hollywood productions, most recently Famke Janssen in two X-Men movies; Carice van Houten, best known as Melisandre in Game of ThronesLotte Verbeek in The Fault in Our Stars; Silvia Hoeks in Blade Runner 2049; and Michiel Huisman in The Age of Adaline and Game of Thrones. Best known of course are old-timers like Rutger Hauer (dubbed the Dutch Paul Newman) for the original Blade Runner and Jeroen Krabbé for The Fugitive and The Living Daylights. Director Jan de Bont is another Dutchman who made action movies like Speed and Twister in Hollywood.

Netflix launched in the Netherlands in 2013, its seventh European launch and had 3.2 million subscribers by the end of 2019. Its European headquarters are in Amsterdam. As well as US content, it features several Dutch-language titles, including children’s programming, in which it is a production partner. And as in other countries, it has rescued local production and expanded that industry.

With the Netherlands’ excellent digital connectivity and 98% broadband penetration, Disney chose it to be the first country to soft-launch its new streaming service Disney+ with no fanfare and a free trial in September 2019. There were more than 200,000 downloads in the first week. Chances are, the company chose this territory after Disney took a look at Netflix’s revenues, which grew from €120 million in 2015 to €220 million in 2018 in a country whose population is 17.2 million.

Several American companies have chosen to move their headquarters to the Netherlands from the UK in advance of Brexit, according to Deadline. This is to circumvent a no-deal Brexit’s complications. Discovery is one such company which applied for broadcast licenses for all its European TV channels. TV channels broadcast to the EU from London require a license in an EU country to continue after Brexit, reported Deadline. Sony Pictures is another that has moved its European headquarters to Amsterdam even though they will still retain their London base. Sony cited customs issues post-Brexit for the reason. These exoduses follow on the heels of several other companies not entertainment-related, like Panasonic.