The best film of 2022 can finally be streamed in the Netherlands

__ The best film of 2022 can finally be streamed in the Netherlands

The best film of 2022 can finally be streamed in the Netherlands

(Image: A24)

The best film of 2022 can finally be streamed in the Netherlands. Then we’retalking about Everything Everywhere All At Once the big surprise of thisyear.

Yes, I would almost forget it due to all the marketing violence, but there ismore than Marvel film number one thousand and the umpteenth Star Wars trilogy.For true diversity and creativity, keep an eye on your local movie house.

Everything Everywhere All At Once

Films by independent film makers, experimental thrillers from Japan, Frenchcomedies that manage to surprise: the offer ranges in all directions.

Everything Everywhere All At Once has proved this year that those two worldscan be brought together. Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert delivered a hugeblockbuster with a budget of ‘only’ 25 million. A roller coaster ride full_special effects._

An impressive achievement. Everything Everywhere All at Once had a specialeffects team that consisted of five people, including the directorsthemselves.

Everything Everywhere all at once best movie PrimeVideo(Image: A24)

Multiverse roller coaster

Despite these limitations, they have created a masterpiece. The film is abouta Chinese immigrant who runs a launderette, but when she tries to do hertaxes, she ends up in a multiverse adventure that you say to you. The worldturns out to be in danger, and she is the only one who can save it.

That sounds absurd, and it is Everything Everywhere All At Once also. Thefilm itself is also all too aware of that: the jokes fly around your ears, andthe humor drips from it. It provides a roller coaster ride through themultiverse that you will have to pay attention to, because the pace is high.But then you also get something: humor, an original story, impressive stuntsand a striking amount of emotion.

Biggest movie of A24

First the box office figures: the indie film is by far the biggest film everreleased by acclaimed studio A24. Globally, at the time of writing, thecounter stands at $100 million.

For comparison: moonlight the A24 film that won the Oscar for Best Picture,was also seen as an incredible success with 65 million.

Everything Everywhere All at Once however, it does not have to rely only onthe brand new dollars.

Top Rated on Rotten Tomatoes

Critics also walk away with the film. On Rotten Tomatoes, the indie hit scoresa very solid 95 percent after 339 reviews from journalists.

“The Daniels and their ‘wow’ from star Michelle Yeoh turn this visionaryabsurdist comedy into a volcano of creative ideas in full bursts. You’ve neverseen anything like it before,” concluded ABC News reviewer Peter Travers.

In any case, they agree on one thing: Everything Everywhere All at Once doesthe multiverse concept better than the new one Doctor Strange. In fact, somecritics are already predicting a hefty score at the next Oscars.

The audience score of 89 percent is a bit lower, but still excellent. Theconsensus reads: “Incredible acting, stunning visuals and a very deep,powerful story — Everything Everywhere All at Once has it all.”

Best movie of 2022?

The film has an 8.1 rating on IMDb. Or _Everything Everywhere All At Once_really the best film of 2022 also depends mainly on your taste and whatHollywood has to offer this fall.

On Rotten Tomatoes, only The Batman and Top Gun: Maverick even higher, andso the indie film is in third place of a editorial list of the best moviesof the year. As far as we’re concerned it deserves Everything Everywhere AllAt Once actually that first place, if only for the breath of fresh air thatthe film blows through Hollywood.

Judge for yourself on Prime Video

Fortunately, you can now judge for yourself. Do you have EverythingEverywhere All At Once missed at the cinema? Then Amazon has a nice surprisewaiting for you. The acclaimed film can now be streamed on Prime Video! Astreaming service that still costs only 2.99 euros per month. Or try it forfree for 30 days.

And hey, does it matter which film is number one, two or three? The mainconclusion is that 2022 has produced several top cinema films for the timebeing, and that is only good news.

Grab the popcorn, sit back and enjoy one of the most surprising rollercoasterrides you’ve experienced in recent years.

A homoerotic inspired orchestral work will soon be heard in Abu Dhabi

If you’re a young composer and the Concertgebouw Orchestra knocks on your doorfor a piece, that’s a reason to jump for joy. If it is also recorded: evenmore fun. But when your work is resumed a year later and is even played seventimes on an international tour, that is very special.

It happens to Rick van Veldhuizen (28), whose _Mais le corps taché d ‘ombres_will be performed from Thursday 22 September in the Concertgebouw in Amsterdamunder the direction of Daniel Harding. Later it can be heard in Heerlen,Alicante, London and Abu Dhabi. A salient detail, given that last concertlocation: the piece is based on a homoerotic poem. Homosexuality is a crime inAbu Dhabi.

Should we see a statement from the orchestra in it? ‘That would be nice, but Idoubt it’, says Van Veldhuizen. The piece dates from 2019 and was intended forthe Mahler Festival of 2020, to precede Mahlers Ninth Symphony to sound.

To keep an eye on

How did the orchestra end up with Van Veldhuizen? ‘When I was still a studentat the Conservatorium van Amsterdam, my teacher Joël Bons passed on lists ofyoung composers to the orchestra to keep an eye on. I stood there. In 2015 Imade a piece for the Spiegelzaal, for three instruments and a narrator. Thatwas really small beer, but that’s how they knew me. In 2018 I was called byJoel Fried, the then artistic director, if I wanted to make a piece for stringorchestra.

‘I asked: can we also have a harp? A string orchestra alone sounds different_lush_ , it needs a skeleton. The harp is very suitable for marking therhythmic points.’ He worked on it full-time for six months, ‘because I wantedeverything about this assignment to be right’. Due to corona, the premiere didnot follow until 2021. Nice: led by Fabio Luisi, a big name. Not fun: withoutan audience, because in a live stream that wasn’t even really live. ‘Luckilymy parents and boyfriend were allowed to join us, we were tucked away underthe balcony.

‘The feedback from the orchestra said that I had made it difficult for them byworking with a clean tuning, but that they thought it was cool. They wouldmake every effort to do it with an audience again, but I really didn’t counton a whole tour. I didn’t read it until the brochure came out.’

Björk and Aphex Twin

Van Veldhuizen, who until February was also a music critic for de Volkskrant– his increasingly busy composing practice turned out to be incompatible withthe newspaper – describes himself as a composer who works associatively and isjust as interested in contemporary classical music as in Björk and Aphex Twin.”I want all those influences to coalesce into something that can become almostuncomfortably emotional.”

Nevertheless, his nine-minute piece (eleven minutes on the recording that wasreleased in a CD box in May) seems to be firmly anchored in the orchestraltradition at first hearing. What shows that it was composed in 2019 after all?’There is some disco in the middle part, there is a constant pulse that ispassed through the double basses and harp. Surrounded by those Gloria Gaynor-esque strings. I like disco very much. And the beeps and creaks, I’ve alsoincorporated a drum and bass rhythm into it.’

He found inspiration in an epic poem by Jean Genet from 1942, The death rowinmate. “I love how he could write about filthy, amoral sexuality in suchflowery, beautiful sentences. The passage I have used is addressed to a deathrow inmate: let us dream that we meet a shaggy lover, with thighs of gold anda smoking belly, such language.

‘It’s about someone you’re with only half seeing, a figure too dark torecognize. That’s an image I know well from my own life. From darkrooms. Yes,you can write that down. I also want to explore that frayed shadow side oflife in my pieces. With the piece we first slide into the shadows, then weshoot up, into the ecstasy. And then… there’s post-coital bliss.”

Tuesday is the first rehearsal. As a composer, Van Veldhuizen wants to hearhis pieces live as often as possible. But will he also listen in Abu Dhabi?’Not really. Not a hair on my head that thinks about it.’

fan trips are more successful and diverse than ever

Lovers of schlager singer Willy Sommers can dance the polonaise in the UnitedArab Emirates next year. Like many other well-known Flemish people, the artistorganizes his own fan trip. There is great interest in the travel formula,although it comes with a hefty price tag. “You get something exclusive.”

Paul NotelteirsSeptember 19, 202219:01

‘Dubai with a Flemish touch’, is how Willy Sommers describes his seven-dayluxurious fan trip that will take place in February of next year. His travelcompanions tour important sights in the United Arab Emirates, sleep in a five-star hotel and are – the icing on the cake – treated to a concert by theiridol. On the Facebook page, many complain about the participation price of1,899 euros per person, but Caroline Van Holderbeke (52) sees no problem withit. She has closely followed Sommers’ career for nearly four decades and hasaccompanied him on multiple fan tours in the past.

“We went to Turkey, Florida and South Africa, among other places. Those tripsare very nice because, for example, you can talk to Willy longer than after ashow. That way you can also tell him something about your private life.” Dueto the singer’s busy schedule, he can sometimes only be present for a few daysof a trip. This may seem bizarre to outsiders, but participants are briefed inadvance about when to expect him. “As fans, we don’t follow him like ducks,”says Van Holderbeke.

Pioneer

Sommers’ fan trip gets attention in the first place because of the high costprice and the exotic location, but the man absolutely does not invent the hotwater. Artists have been offering their fans the opportunity to get to knoweach other in a more intimate setting for several decades. Charm singer SalimSeghers is considered a pioneer in our country. He likes to call himself ‘theking of the fan trip’ and will soon be traveling with hundreds of fans to thesame hotel in Lloret de Mar for the thirty-fifth time. The man was not yetactive full-time as an artist when a Lommel travel agency asked him in theeighties to perform during one of their group tours. That was a great successand in the years that followed, both the number of participants and Seghers’involvement grew. During the trip, he is the first point of contact for fans.“Although I don’t go on an excursion, I focus on the daily shows in thehotel.”

While Seghers is finding success in Spain, similar travel concepts aresprouting like mushrooms during the same period. Charm singers in particularachieve great results thanks to their slightly older and often more wealthyfan base. Although a look at the most recent travel brochures shows that theformula is no longer reserved for people who already like to dance thepolonaise. On Friday 500 soap fans leave together with some Home actors toCorfu for a week, presenter Evy Gruyaert will soon go to Crete for cooking andyoga workshops and Karl Vannieuwkerke welcomes cycling enthusiasts in theSpanish fishing village of Calpe.

Feeling at home abroad

The range of travel formulas around media brands and artists is as diverse asit is popular, confirms Lies Bruneel of East Flemish tour operator ProjectReizen. After the pandemic, she says, people are more open to paying quite abit of money for their holidays, the impact of inflation is not verynoticeable for the time being. During one of the exotic trips with famousFlemish people, people also step out of their comfort zone more easily andexperience adventures that they might miss during a solo trip. That may be anadditional reason why fans opt for a trip with Sommers or Gruyaert. “You arein another country, but it also feels familiar because there is a familiarface with it. Moreover, only Flemish people come along, which creates afeeling of home abroad,” says Bruneel.

According to tourism professor Jan van der Borg (KU Leuven), the popularity offan trips should also be seen within a declining importance of mass culture.In the past, the Flemings may have traveled to the south by car en masse,today relaxation is more tailored to the individual. “Niche markets arenibbling at the share of classic sun, sea and beach holidays.”

Revival Tour Operators

This has the advantage that the largest tourist attractions experience lesscrowds and that tour operators suddenly become busier again. They saw blacksnow during the pandemic and felt the hot breath of digital platforms such asbooking.com on their necks, but are now experiencing an unexpected revival.According to Van der Borg, they can charge a surcharge for these totalexperiences. The people who cough up 1,900 euros for their outing with Sommersare therefore aware that the trip would be cheaper if they made it alone. “Buteverything is fully arranged with us and if something goes wrong, it issolved,” says Bruneel.

It is unclear exactly how much money the artists earn from their travels.Bruneel says that there are different agreements with every celebrity, Seghersalso keeps it vague. He announces that guest artists **** if Celien Hermansand Andrei Lugovski are not compensated for their performance during the trip.However, they are allowed to stay in the hotel for a week with their partnerand receive a refund of their travel costs. “It is an offer that eight artistswill take up again this year. Then it’s a party in the hotel until half pasteleven at night.”

documentary film about Belgian fauna and flora is a feat

Belgian nature as you’ve never seen it before. That’s the baseline of themovie Our nature , __ which hits theaters this week. But how do you keepthat promise?

Pieter DumonSeptember 20, 202203:00

The idea

Actually we have Our nature thanks to our northern neighbors. Six years agoat Hotel Hungaria, the production house behind the film, they are busy with_Greenland_ , a garden program with and around Bartel Van Riet. Because theprogram can go a little wider than just our own backyard, Van Riet will talkto the makers of one of the items. The new wilderness. That naturedocumentary, shot in the Oostvaardersplassen, enticed the Dutch to the cinemaen masse. The project impresses the Belgians of Hotel Hungaria. There and thenthe dreaming begins. Because why should something that is possible in theNetherlands not work in Belgium?

Our NatureImage Our Nature

The money

Unfortunately, there are usually practical obstacles between dream and deed.That was also at Our nature the case. Starting with the huge budget you needfor such a project. A nature documentary like Our nature turning is a long-term job. The plan was to film almost continuously for two years. A matter ofoptimally portraying all seasons. In addition, two teams would be sent intothe field. One with Pim Niesten behind the camera, the other with hiscolleague Dick Harrewijn as director of photography. Add to that thespecialized teams for drone shots and underwater images and you get a total ofabout 960 shooting days. A huge number.

“We also didn’t want to make any concessions in terms of image quality,” saysproducer Line Leeters. “Everything was filmed with the best material.” Aninvestment that is now paying off. Because the cinema film that is now in thecinemas was initially not on the schedule. Our nature would be a seven-partdocuseries, for television. “But when we saw the footage and noticed howrazor-sharp it was, we thought it was a bit of a shame not to show it on a bigscreen. That is why there is now the film. The documentary series can be seenon Canvas and RTL next spring.”

Our Nature Image OurNature

Our NatureImage Our Nature

The final invoice will ultimately amount to around 4.5 million euros. Too muchfor a production house like Hotel Hungaria to carry alone. And so they aregoing to present their ambitious plans to the Flemish Audiovisual Fund (VAF)in the hope of support. The first file comes up against a njet. Only when apilot is run showing how a tree falcon hunts for dragonflies does the VAF givein. The VRT is now also part of the story.

“But even with those two partners, the budgetary picture was far fromcomplete,” says Leeters. “In the end we decided to start running anyway,despite the gap in our financial plan. We were convinced that other partnerswould step in once we had some more footage. Whatever happened.”

Our Nature Image OurNature

Our NatureImage Our Nature

The patience

On March 4, 2019, Pim Niesten, the man who made the majority of the images,will go into the field for the first time. In the weeks and months beforethat, an extensive script was made in which it is written which animals he hasto record during which activities. “That scenario was huge,” Leeters recalls.“The planning took over the entire wall of our office.” But the strictplanning is completely obsolete after a few shooting days. Nature is not soeasily pushed into a script. Now take the moor frog. A rare animal whose malespecimens turn bright blue for a few days during mating season. A spectaclethat had been planned from the very first shooting days. “But in the end Iwaited almost three years for those animals,” says Niesten. “The first twosprings it was too dry and too hot. A fatal combination for those frogs. Therewas hardly any mating season. I really wanted large groups of those blue frogsto be photographed, but there was not much more than reports of the occasionalstray specimen.”

Fortunately, we experienced a more or less normal spring last year. And so thefrogs were suddenly there. But even then it was still exciting. “When I gotthe phone that mating was about to start, I immediately dropped everything Iwas doing,” says Niesten. “After all, those frogs only turn blue for a veryshort period of time. So I had to shoot all the images I needed in theshortest possible time. In the end, with some luck, I managed to capture theentire scene from the film in one shooting day. Fortunately, because when Iinstalled myself at the same pool the next day, there was hardly a frog to beseen.

Our Nature Image OurNature

Our NatureImage Our Nature

The moor frogs aren’t the only animals to test Niesten’s patience. Even morevulgar species such as deer or hares turned out to be more difficult to snarethan you might think at first glance. Although that also has to do with theperfectionism of Niesten and co. to make. “I didn’t just want to film hares.They had to be boxing copies. During the mating season, both males and femalesclash with each other to determine the mutual ranking. A fantastic spectaclethat I absolutely wanted to capture.” But for that you need some luck. Notonly do the hares want to box, they also have to do it in a beautiful settingwhere the light is just right.

The red deer also deserve a special mention. They may be quite numerous in theArdennes forests, but if you want to record a fight between two bellowingmales like Niesten, the search suddenly becomes a lot more difficult. “Inaddition, I always want very close images of such a scene. But deer are veryshy. The slightest noise is enough to make them disappear into the woods.”

Our Nature Image OurNature

Our NatureImage Our Nature

The technique

With the images of those deer, hares or moor frogs, you as a spectator canmore or less imagine how they were made. That changes when you suddenly see aspring fire spider crawling across the screen. The film shows how the red-colored male, at the risk of his own life, sneaks into the female’sunderground burrow to mate with her. “By far the most difficult sequence inthe entire film,” says Niesten. “We’re talking about animals that are barely acentimeter in size that also do their thing in a pitch-dark undergroundburrow. In the field itself, that is almost impossible to visualize.”

Together with spider expert Koen Van Keer, Niesten devised a different plan ofapproach. “Koen had previously moved a colony of those spiders from anindustrial area to a safer area. They had done that at the time with the helpof tubes with which they could move the spiders, hollow and all. We appliedthe same technique and placed the spider, hollow and all, in a kind ofaquarium so that we could see what was happening underground.”

The result exceeded the wildest expectations. “The images are really unique.Mating of the spring fire spider has never been observed, let alone capturedon video. This was also completely new information for a specialist like Koen.The scene in question has meanwhile been sent as study material to a wholeseries of scientists at home and abroad.”

Our Nature Image OurNature

Our NatureImage Our Nature

The network

The stories Niesten tells show time and again how crucial time is. The moorfrogs only turn blue for a handful of days, the spring fire spider can befound above ground in that one week, young foxes only come above the groundonce for the first time and for the scene where lizards hatch, you better notto be late.

“The fact that we were able to film all these things despite the limited timeis largely due to our network,” says Niesten. “All over Belgium there wereforest rangers, scientists, people from Natuurpunt or just enthusiastic naturelovers who kept us informed about what they heard or saw. Without them, thisproject would never have become what it is today. When I go out into thefield, I’m mostly preoccupied with that one species that I hope to film. Thenyou get into a kind of tunnel vision and you are no longer concerned with whatis still happening. Fortunately, our network was there to keep me informed.”

Our Nature Image OurNature

Our NatureImage Our Nature

The Great Absence

If there is one animal that has made a lot of fuss over the past few years, itis the wolf. But of our country’s largest predator is in Our nature no traceto be found. “We wanted to tell a story around every animal in the film or inthe series,” explains Niesten. “Which means you have to be able to film itduring a certain action. This is difficult with an extremely shy animal likethe wolf. With a bit of luck we might have captured a passing copy on camera,but what story do you tell with that?”

Moreover, during the shooting period there was a lot to do about that wolf.“Wolvin Naja had just disappeared under suspicious circumstances, which madethe people of Nature and Forest very protective when it came to the wolves.Their location was shared with as few people as possible. The habitat of theseanimals is also largely on military domain. We didn’t just get permission tofilm there.”

Although Niesten continues to find the story about the wolf’s comeback veryfascinating. “Of course I would like to work on that. But because wolves areso shy, that’s a hugely complex project. The budget you need to tell thatstory well will roughly correspond to the total budget we now have for Ournature had. But if someone is willing to do that, I am happy to make time for

“The more exuberant, the better.” Bo shows her renovated farm in Liedekerke | Nina

If it were up to her, Bo’s interior would look even more colorful andexuberant. But it is already a great spectacle where original compositionshave been created (almost) only with second-hand furniture and decoration. Shegives a tour of her eccentric, renovated farm. “I like the eclectic: a nicemix of antiques to space age.”

Life is for the daring. When Bo’s daddy tipped her that there had been nosigns of life in a nearby farm for years, she went looking for the owner. “Itturned out to be an elderly man who was staying in a retirement home. When Iinquired with his sons, they were open to a sale,” says Bo.

Everything is second-hand, from the vases to the animals

“I especially liked the location: in the quiet, next to a meadow and withoutany view from neighbors, and close to my parents and to Brussels. With alittle imagination, the facade had charm, but inside there was not much leftto save. I didn’t have a clear idea of ​​what it should be, but luckily Ifound an excellent architect who could make something of it even with alimited budget. He had all kinds of original ideas, such as the large void,the wide staircase, the columns to create some separation in the open livingspace …”

(Read more below the photo.)

The facade contours and window openings were not affected. The garage door wasreplaced by a window and the kitchen is now located there. © MaartenConstruction

Bo may put the feathers for the original furnishing on her own hat. “I passtrends such as moss green and terracotta. It could be a lot more exuberant andrebellious. I love the interiors of Paulette in ‘t stad and Dries Van Notenand would like to go even further than what you see now, but I also have totake my friend into account. He can barely live with the giant phoenix abovethe TV that comes from a Chinese restaurant, but I had to sell theaccompanying dragon that I wanted to hang next to it. I will try to warm it upfor a striped pattern under the sloping roof wall.”

Except for the table of La Redoute, all furniture and decoration are second-hand. “What started out of financial necessity, grew into a passion and evenmy profession (see box, ed.). While most play it safe and opt for thetypical Scandinavian wooden furniture from the fifties and sixties, I preferthe eclectic: a nice mix of antiques to space age.”

Quote >>> I bought the ducks against the wall in the hallway and the fox on top of the> cupboard in the sitting area from a woman who loved animals.>> bo

Everywhere in the house Bo makes beautiful compositions with her found vases,curiosities and especially animals. They come in all kinds of shapes:figurines, drawings, paintings and mounted. “Those are also pure vintage. Theyusually meant a lot to the people I bought them from. I bought the ducksagainst the wall in the hallway and the fox on top of the cupboard in thesitting area from a woman who loved animals. Because she wasn’t allowed tokeep one in her rented house, she went to a taxidermist. She was very attachedto them and after she passed away, her husband just wanted them to be well.”

From valuable vintage sofa to Urban Outfitters textiles

Maarten theconstruction© Maarten Construction

With the stairwell on the left and the void on the right, two openings havebeen made to the side, which ensure that there is always contact between theoffice on the landing and the ground floor. The cabinet on the left isn’t thatspecial, but it was Bo’s first purchase and therefore it has sentimentalvalue. The sofa is very valuable, because it is an original Roche Bobois copyfrom 1978, for which you can easily pay thousands of euros today. Above thetelevision you see a golden phoenix from a Chinese restaurant.

Maarten theconstruction© Maarten Construction

With the stories behind all the stuff you can fill a book in every room. Evenin a room like the bathroom. Upon entering, look at images of Arthur Rackhamtelling the story of ‘The Storm’ __ of William Shakespeare. “I did get theorder mixed up, otherwise the color balance wouldn’t be right. The eye wantssomething too,” laughs Bo. The painted washbasins come from Poland and are ona wardrobe that actually belongs in the living room. Two Indian masks hang onthe wall.

Maarten the construction© Maarten Construction

Because of the colorful decoration you can’t help but start the daycheerfully. “The textiles are from Urban Outfitters. We had it come over fromAmerica, because they don’t offer it in Europe. Because of its size andappearance, I thought the fan was perfect to play as a headboard.”

A slanted kitchen island and a visible heart for animals

Maarten theconstruction© Maarten Construction

In an open kitchen it is of course the intention that you are involved in therest of the living space. But with an island that sits behind a wall and looksout, that is not obvious. The architect solved this as simply as ingeniouslyby positioning the island at an angle. In this way, there was also more roomto move behind. The kitchen consists of IKEA cabinets that are finished withfronts in untreated MDF. “I couldn’t decide what color I wanted and now I cango either way.” The door handles are from Zara Home.

Princess Amalia makes her debut on Prince’s Day

Princess Amalia will be there for the first time this year when her fatherKing Willem-Alexander reads the Speech from the Throne. The 18-year-oldPrincess of Orange rides with her parents in the Glass Coach during thedriving tour from Noordeinde Palace to the Koninklijke Schouwburg in TheHague, where the ceremony will take place this year.

Last weekend, De Telegraaf reported that the security measures around PrincessAmalia and Prime Minister Rutte have been increased, because there areindications that organized crime has plans for an attack or kidnapping.

The Government Information Service does not say whether additional measureshave been taken for Budget Day. The police and the Public Prosecution Serviceare also not making any statements about this.

balcony scene

After the Speech from the Throne, Amalia will return with her parents in theGlass Coach to Noordeinde Palace, where they will wave together on the balconyto the crowd that has gathered.

NOS

For the first time in three years, the public will be there as usual onPrinsjesdag. Due to the corona measures, the driving tour and the balconyscene on Prinsjesdag have been canceled for the past two years.

The NOS reports directly on Prinsjesdag from 12.25 – 15.46 on NPO 1, NOS.nland the NOS app. Prinsjesdag can be followed on NPO Radio 1 from 12:00 -16:00. You can also read everything about the driving tour, the Speech fromthe Throne and the presentation of the Budget Memorandum in the live blog onNOS.nl and in the NOS app. Tonight there will be a look back at Prinsjesdag at19.32 on NPO 2.

Due to the renovation of the Binnenhof, the Ridderzaal, where the Speech fromthe Throne is traditionally read, will be unavailable for several years. TheSpeech from the Throne has been read in the Grote Kerk for the past two years.This year the choice was made for the Koninklijke Schouwburg, which has beenmade on the ground floor for the occasion. The chairs from the Ridderzaal havealso been placed there.

In the theatre, Amalia sits next to her aunt and uncle, Prince Constantijn andPrincess Laurentien. In the past, it was still customary for the heir to thethrone to take a seat on the podium on Prince’s Day.

For example, Amalia’s grandmother Beatrix and great-grandmother Juliana sat ona throne next to the head of state from the age of 18. Since the late 1960s,the heir apparent has been sitting in the hall next to other members of theRoyal House.

AP

Princess Juliana (r) sits next to her father Prince Hendrik as QueenWilhelmina reads the Speech from the Throne (1930)

AP

Princess Beatrix sits next to Queen Juliana during her first Budget Day in1956

AP

Princess Beatrix (2nd from right) and her sisters Irene (l) and Margriet (r)on stage on Prinsjesdag 1963

National Archives

Prince Willem-Alexander sits next to his aunt, Princess Margriet, during hisfirst Prinsjesdag in 1985

National Archives

In 1985 Prince Willem-Alexander is at the balcony scene at Noordeinde Palacefor the first time

__

Amalia started her studies Politics, Psychology, Law and Economics (PPLE) atthe University of Amsterdam at the beginning of this month. Where her studiespermit, she will occasionally also perform official duties in her role as heirto the throne, such as her presence today on Prinsjesdag.

The Budget Day survey conducted by agency Ipsos on behalf of the NOS showsthat almost four out of ten Dutch people do not think it is necessary forAmalia to perform in public more often, now that she is 18 years old. The mainreasons given are that the princess is still too young for that and that sheneeds more education.

Almost 30 percent would like to see her in public more often, especially onofficial occasions such as the National Remembrance Day or at official visitsand openings.

Exercise Prince’s Day

Amalia’s interest in Prinsjesdag already became apparent last June, when shetook part in an exercise for the riding tour with her horse Mojito. At her ownrequest, the princess, who loves horseback riding, wanted to experience howthe horses in the city center of The Hague are being prepared for Prinsjesdag.

In this video, the new stable master of the Royal Stable Department, HansVeenhuijzen, explains what it takes to steer the riding tour in the rightdirection.

Stalmeester Veenhuijzen: ‘It is fantastic that there is a driving tour againafter the corona years’

Amalia’s first official public appearance was last December, a day after her18th birthday, when she was ushered into the Council of State by her father.In preparation for the monarchy, she is allowed to attend the meetings of theAdvisory Division, but she does not have the right to vote. She is expected toattend meetings on a regular basis only after her studies.

Ex-guerrilla fighter Tanja Nijmeijer ‘in mother’s wedding dress’ married to great Farc love | Abroad

The Dutch Tanja Nijmeijer, known for her fight for the Colombian guerillamovement Farc, got married yesterday. In the city of Cali, she gave her yes toBoris Guevara, just like her a former guerrilla fighter. The Dutch artistTinkebell was one of the guests.

They swore eternal love to each other in a solemn ceremony attended by familyand friends, Colombian magazine reports. semana. According to photographerAlexa Rochi, a former guerrilla fighter who, like Nijmeijer, was involved inthe peace agreement between the rebel movement and the Colombian authoritiesin 2016, Tanja used her mother’s wedding dress. She kept the dress for 50years, waiting for one of her daughters to get married in it. And look whathappened: I finally wear the dress on my 44th,” the magazine heard the Dutchsay in a short speech. Her mother was also present at the ceremony.

Nijmeijer and Guevara also celebrated that he recently obtained his diploma invisual communication at the Javeriana University in Calí. “Today I completed acycle in my life,” said Boris. “I validated my experience in design andcommunication, forged in the heat of the armed struggle of the former Farc.”

One of the wedding guests was Victoria Sandino, former peace negotiator inHavana, Cuba and former senator of the Farc-derived political party. FuerzaAlternativa Revolucionaria del Comun (Alternative People’s RevolutionaryForce), nowadays Comunes called. Sandino referred to the couple’s union onher social networks, assuring that love can be built from peace.

“What a thrill to share the joy of my friends and comrades in celebratingtheir marriage, all the happiness for them, that peace is a reason to buildlove,” she wrote on Instagram.

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Tinkebell

The Dutch Katinka Simonse, better known as the artist Tinkebell, was alsopresent at the wedding. She has been a friend of Nijmeijer’s since last yearand was now ‘in charge of the rings’, which she took with her in a box made ofAmsterdam city wood. In her column in the Amsterdam newspaper Het Parool shewrites ‘never cried so much as last weekend’. In a column from November 2021,she already called Nijmeijer ‘a hero’. At that time, the artist came under alot of criticism.

TINKBELL. > @looovetinkebell >

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Nijmeijer, who in her Farc days was known to the outside world as ‘AlexandraNariño’, met her future husband in 2013 during the peace negotiations in Cuba.After a relationship of nine years, they decided to get married.

injustice

Nijmeijer joined the Farc in 2002. During a tour through Colombia, the then24-year-old Denekampse was impressed by the social injustice of the poorpeasant population. After completing her studies in Romance languages ​​andcultures in Groningen, she returned to the South American country. With heraccession she thought she could fight for the ‘good cause’, but the guerrillamovement turned out to be engaged in illegal and punishable practices.’Ellen’, her nickname among the guerrilla fighters, radicalized and wasinvolved in, among other things, attacks in the Colombian capital Bogota. In2007, her diary was found after an attack by the Colombian army on the formerguerrilla camp where she had been staying.

Most of the approximately 7,000 guerrillas surrendered their weapons after thepeace agreement in 2016. This put an end to terror that had lasted more thanhalf a century. Nijmeijer turned her back on her former combatants at thebeginning of 2020.

Sell ​​agricultural products

A prominent female politician from the party of Colombian ex-president IvánDuque called the Dutch a liar in May last year. The ex-guerillas reported onTwitter about violence by the national police and the army against theindigenous population during anti-government demonstrations.

Nijmeijer’s autobiography was published at the end of last year. In it, shelooked back on her Farc days and said that her future lies in Calí, where she,together with Boris and a few other people, has set up a cooperativeenterprise that aims to promote the sale of agricultural products.

In this nostalgic documentary we see the not-unfortunate dismantling of a special garage

The loose ends with which the NOS had left me a bit on Monday after the livebroadcast of the funeral of the British Queen were tied together quitesatisfactorily at Khalid & Sophie. There was Suse van Kleef, former UnitedKingdom correspondent for the NOS; Simon Smits, former ambassador to Londonand yes, a theologian. Someone had to be able to say something about what theQueen’s deeply religious belief had been in. Joost Röselaers is pastor, now ofVrijburg in Amsterdam, until 2017 at the Dutch Church in London. He had“enjoyed” the service.

Also read: If you wanted to understand the Queen ‘s funeral, you had togoogle a lot

Insightful was his observation alone that the service, from biblical texts topsalms, not about the long life of the queen, but from beginning to endabout the afterlife. Former court and television director Rudolf Spoor toldabout the technically clever registration of the bagpiper, who first playedinto the church, turned around, and then walked out of the church in front ofthe coffin. “To the light”, Suse van Kleef saw. “To God” was what the preacherobserved.

After that, in Slava Ukraine , a look at the pale faces of the people whohave been away from home for weeks. In the first episode of Monday evening weare introduced to the refugees, but also to those who receive them. The familyfrom Urk that has taken in a family with three children, including theirfifteen poodles. Now their household consists of nine men and 33 dogs. Thelady of the house summarizes how coexistence works. “They can’t wash thedishes,” and “they’re raising them very differently.” It is clearly not easy,and cannot be sustained for more than ‘two or three years’. But they do.

Carol from Zoetermeer offers shelter to Valeria and her daughter. Mothers withchildren are cared for in Bloemendaal, in a social housing project withresident caretakers. Housemistress Franka, in one of the first house meetings,lists the “challenges” of a living group—power, money, sex and cleaning. Shemeans: if there is a fight, then about this. Living there voluntarily seems tome to be quite a challenge. In half a year we will see in the second part of_Slava Ukraine_ how these lives go.

love for the car

In The DS Keyzer we see the dismantling of David Kostelijk’s garage. Fortyyears ago he came to the Amsterdam building as a squatter and started arecovery center for Citroëns. The garage is no longer in operation whenfilmmaker Doret van der Sloot comes to film there, she is capturing thefragments of what once was. Love for the car and tinkering with it. Love forthe people who worked there. Love for and from the customer who brought hiscar there. Nostalgia, but for something that we as viewers have not known. Wehave to make do with the parts that are handed to us, but as we glue themtogether, the image turns a quarter turn.

David Kostelijk, originally a nurse, has something fatherly and absent-minded.His former employee speaks of him warmly. Everything was possible, everythingwas allowed and nothing was too crazy. Meanwhile, forty years worth of parts,tools and engine oil are dug out of the garage. As a viewer, you soon findyourself in the atmosphere of a community center, a “crazy little company”where anyone with a blemish could dock. But that seems too romantic. Precious,it also says itself: “My work is professional, the presentation amateurish.”We hear him say something about all the money that went over his dismantleddesk. And at the end of the film, he sighs that he regrets selling it. “Thenyou have a few million. But what good is that to you?”

These are the 6 best horror movies of this year

The horror genre continues to do well. Whether this is on the silver screen,or on a streaming service. Below, we take a quick look at five 2022 horrorfilms that have been very well received on Rotten Tomatoes.

1. The Innocents (97%)


Directed by: Eskil Vogt | Starring: Ellen Dorrit Petersen, MariusKolbenstvedt, Morten Svartveit, Alva Brynsmo Ramstad, Sam Ashraf, Mina YasminBremseth Asheim, Rakel Lenora Fløttum | Look at MyLum


Four children become friends over the summer holidays and discover that theyhave psychic powers. While exploring their newfound abilities, out of sight ofall adults, their innocent play takes a dark turn and strange things begin tohappen. 2. Hellbender (97%)


Directed by: John Adams, Zelda Adams, Toby Poser | Starring: Toby Poser, ZeldaAdams, Rob Figueroa, John Adams, Tannis Kowalchuk, McKenzy Brown, PatriciaAdams, Milli Lupinetti, Lulu Adams, Christine Gould Rodriguez | View on[onbekend]


A lonely teenage girl lives on a mountain with her mother. It is an isolatedand highly protected existence, as the teenager suffers from an immunedisease. One day, however, she discovers that she is descended from women whodeviate from the normal. Her family has supernatural powers that aresuppressed and with which she can ensure reproduction, among other things.With this new knowledge, the teenager discovers another world and looks for away to deal with it.

3. X (94%)


Directed by: Ti West | Starring: Brittany Snow, Martin Henderson, Mia Goth,Kid Cudi, Jenna Ortega, Stephen Ure, Owen Campbell, James Gaylyn | Look atPicl


1979, a group of young porn filmmakers are looking for the next excitinglocation for their new film. They seem to have found these in a remote Texasranch. The hosts, an elderly peasant couple, show great interest in theiryoung visitors. But once night falls, their curiosity quickly turns intosomething far more gruesome, and the desperate crew must fight for theirlives.

4. Prey (93%)


Directed by: Daniel Trachtenberg | Starring: Amber Midthunder, MichelleThrush, Mike Paterson, Julian Black Antelope, Samuel Marty, Dane DiLiegro,Dakota Beavers, Stefany Mathias | Watch now


300 years ago, Naru, a female warrior and tribal leader of her people, livesin the jungle. Naru is eager to prove her fighting skills to her people. Shegets that chance when a strange threat from outside shows up. This one

5. You Won ‘t Be Alone (93%)


Directed by: Goran Stolevski | Starring: Noomi Rapace, Anamaria Marinca,Carloto Cotta, Alice Englert, Arta Dobroshi, Félix Maritaud, Predrag Vasic |View on [onbekend]


You Won ‘t Be Alone is set in an isolated mountain village in Macedonia atthe beginning of the 19th century. A young girl is taken from her mother andturned into a witch by an ancient ghost. At the beginning of the film, theyoung witch accidentally kills a villager one day, whose body she then takesover. Her curiosity makes this a ghastly habit and she lives among thevillagers, monitoring and copying their behavior before taking another victim.

6. Barbara (92%)


Directed by: Zach Cregger | Starring: Georgina Campbell, Bill Skarsgard,Justin Long | In cinemas from November 3rd


In barbarian a young woman who travels to Detroit for a job interview rentsa house. But when she arrives late at night, she discovers that the house hasbeen double booked and that a strange man is already staying there. Againsther better judgment, she decides to spend the evening with him, but soondiscovers that there is much more to fear than just an unexpected house guest.

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A special Prinsjesdag for Amalia: crown princess makes her debut | royal family

Prinsjesdag is extra special for Amalia this year: the crown princess ispresent for the first time at the reading of the speech from the throne. Herfather still takes up the nomination, but since her eighteenth birthday, theprincess is increasingly given a role at official occasions. What does she doon Tuesday and what does she wear?

By Hasna Elbaamranic

Princess Amalia turned eighteen on December 7, 2021, which means that fromthat moment on she has different rights and responsibilities. For example, sheis entitled to a generous salary of 1.6 million euros per year, which,incidentally, she renounces during her student days.

Amalia will also increasingly be asked to perform public duties. For example,she was already present at a dinner of the Council of State last Wednesday andshe made her first official trip to Norway in June. From now on she will alsobe asked more often to attend openings or to cut a ribbon.

On Tuesday, Amalia will be present for the first time on Prinsjesdag with herfather and mother. Because the Binnenhof is currently being renovated, thereading of the speech from the throne will take place until at least 2026 inthe Koninklijke Schouwburg in The Hague. The crown princess does not sit on athrone, but sits – just like her father on his first Prince’s Day in 1985 – inthe hall.

The daughter(s) of Queens Wilhelmina and Juliana and sons of Queen Beatrixwere often present during Prinsjesdag. We may also see Amalia’s sisters, fromtheir eighteenth birthday, on this occasion in the future. Incidentally, it isnot the case that Amalia has to be there every year from now on; her fatheralso sometimes missed a Prinsjesdag because of his studies and militaryservice.

Amalia already knows the route to that room. In June she rode with theprocession that practiced the route to the new location. Then she completedthe route on horseback. On Tuesday she will ride in the Glass Carriage.

Princess Amalia at the Council of State dinner in September.

Photo: BrunoPress

What attracts Amalia?

On Budget Day, of course, the speech from the throne and the presentation ofthe budget statement of millions and the national budget are central, butpeople are also eagerly looking forward to the hat parade. On the thirdTuesday of September, most women traditionally wear headgear.

It remains to be seen whether Amalia will do the same. At least we never sawher with a hat before. Her mother, Queen Máxima, usually opts for colorfulcreations on Prinsjesdag. Her favorite designers are Natan Couture, ClaesIversen and Jan Taminiau. Máxima often wears a headgear.

When Amalia took a seat on the Council of State last December, she was notwearing a hat, which is customary on official occasions. Also on Prinsjesdagthe etiquette applies that women wear a dress with headgear or hairdecoration.

Amalia wears clothing from all kinds of brands, including affordable brandssuch as H&M and Zara. Another brand that we often see the princess in isLaDress. She wore this mark, among other things, on her portrait photos thatwere made in honor of her eighteenth birthday. Another possibility is that sheis wearing something from her mother. The crown princess, like her sisters,regularly dives into Máxima’s closets.