Mees Peijnenburg On A Family, Dutch Cinema, And The Emotional Architecture of Divorce
Divorce is rarely one story. It’s four, or five — each told from a different room in the same house. In his new film A Family, Mees Peijnenburg’s puts the…
Show notes
Divorce is rarely one story. It’s four, or five — each told from a different room in the same house. In his new film A Family, Mees Peijnenburg’s puts the camera with the children, and what he finds there is something most films about broken homes don’t often reach: not blame, not sides, but the bewildered love of people too young to know they’re supposed to pick one.
Producer Elliot Bloom sits down with Mees to talk about the film, Dutch cinema, and the emotional instinct at the heart of all his work — this search for the places where people feel safe, or desperately want to. We also get into his friendship with Lukas Dhont, director of Close, and why both filmmakers keep returning to young characters who are overwhelmed by life.
A Family came from somewhere real for Mees, and yet it reaches beyond the personal — holding every perspective in a family coming apart, and asking what love looks like when the structure it lived inside is gone.
Get tickets to A Family @ LAB111
Follow LAB111 on Letterboxd
