Jan Teunissen
Known for: Editing
Born: April 14, 1898 in Den Haag - Died: December 23, 1975
Gerardus Johannes 'Jan' Teunissen (1898 - 1975) was a Dutch film director. He made his debut as a director in the early 1930s with short avant-garde films Pierement (1931) and Sjabbos (1932). On request, he then directed the first official Dutch sound film: Willem van Oranje. When the film flopped, he gave up on being a director and worked as an editor on a number of Dutch feature films. In the first years of the Second World War Teunissen joined Anton Mussert's National Socialist Movement (NSB) and became the head of the Filmgilde, producing a number of National Socialist propaganda films. Soon after this he became head of the Rijksfilmkeuring and was offered an honorary membership of the Dutch SS. Because of his collaboration with the Germans, Teunissen was banned from the profession of film director after the war and received a prison sentence of several years.
Known for
Showing 14 of 14 titles
The Propagandist
Self (archive footage)
Een Dag Vol Spanning
Director
Pierement
Director
Forty Years
Editor
Tomorrow It Will Be Better
Editor
Op een avond in mei
Editor
Merijntje Gijzen's Boyhood
Editor
Pygmalion
Editor
Daddy Long Legs
Editor
Somewhere in the Netherlands
Editor
Amsterdam bij nacht
Editor
William of Orange
Director
The Ghost Train
Editor
De big van het regiment
Co-Director