Pieter-Rim de Kroon, born in 1955, is a cinematographer renowned for his documentaries on culture, the environment, and nature. His film Dutch Light received the Netherlands' highest film honor, the Golden Calf. His works are visually impactful, owing much to his expert visual approach and observational storytelling. De Kroon’s films are characterized by the use of natural light, a distinguished combination of wide-angle lenses, intricate camera choreography, precise editing, and original soundscapes. As both a director and cameraman, his work has earned more than 140 national and international awards, including numerous Grand Prix honors at festivals.
Silence of the Tides is a cinematic portrait of the largest tidal wetlands in the world: the Wadden Sea. The film plays witness to the rough, yet fragile relationship between man and nature as it pulsates with the inhaling and exhaling of the tides. It’s a hypnotizing large screen look into the cycles and contrasts of the seasons: life and death, storm and silence, the masses and the individua...
Silence of the Tides is a cinematic portrait of the largest tidal wetlands in the world: the Wadden Sea. The film plays witness to the rough, yet fragile relationship between man and nature as it pulsates with the inhaling and exhaling of the tides. It’s a hypnotizing large screen look into the cycles and contrasts of the seasons: life and death, storm and silence, the masses and the individua...