Cold Open · Essay · okt 9, 2025

How Rietland Put Dutch Cinema Back on the Map w/ Director Sven Bresser

Sven Bresser's debut feature Rietland is the first Dutch film selected for Cannes in nearly thirty years — an eerie, unhurried drama about a reed cutter who discovers a murdered girl's body and finds the investigation turning inward. Speaking with Elliot, Bresser discusses what it means to make a first film that transforms landscape into moral witness, where the stillness of the Dutch countryside becomes the medium through which a question about violence is asked without being answered. A conversation about a new voice in Dutch cinema and what it takes to see clearly.

Film Journalist · Celebrating Cinema

Sven Bresser’s debut feature Rietland marks a striking moment for Dutch cinema — the first film in nearly 30 years to be selected for Cannes. This eerie, quietly devastating story follows a reed cutter whose discovery of a murdered girl’s body sets off an introspective search for truth, asking where violence really comes from — the world outside or something buried within. Set against the haunting stillness of the Dutch countryside, the film transforms landscape into witness.

Speaking with producer Elliot Bloom, Bresser reflects on why he wanted to tell a story rooted in the land he grew up in, how local truths can hold universal weight, and why casting non-actors brought an essential honesty to the film. Together, they explore what makes Rietland resonate so deeply — both at home and far beyond The Netherlands.

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