Philips-Radio
| Philips-Radio[1] | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Joris Ivens |
| Written by | Joris Ivens |
| Cinematography | Joris Ivens Edgar Fernhout Mark Kolthout |
| Edited by | Joris Ivens Helen van Dongen |
| Music by | Lou Lichtveld |
Production company | |
Release date |
|
Running time | 36 minutes |
| Country | Netherlands |
| Language | Dutch |
Philips-Radio is a 1931 Dutch documentary short film directed by Joris Ivens. Commissioned by Philips, the film served as a promotional tool to showcase the latest production processes of Philips radios in the company's facilities in Eindhoven.[2] The cinematography, led by Ivens, captured the rhythmic interaction between machinery and factory workers, portraying the manufacturing procedures. Ivens made the decision to engage a Paris-based studio to integrate sound techniques into the film, making it the first Dutch sound film ever produced.[3]
The film is on permanent display in the 20th-century section of the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.[4][5]
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