Release Date Meet the Fokkens Aug 8, 2012 Limited
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Actors For Meet the Fokkens
Louise Fokkens,Martine FokkensGenres Meet the Fokkens : Documentary
Visitor Ranting & Critics For Meet the Fokkens
User Ranting Meet the Fokkens : 3.7User Percentage For Meet the Fokkens : 69 %
User Count Like for Meet the Fokkens : 2,279
All Critics Ranting For Meet the Fokkens : 7.3
All Critics Count For Meet the Fokkens : 16
All Critics Percentage For Meet the Fokkens : 94 %
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Movie Overview For Meet the Fokkens
Sisters doing it for themselves in Amsterdam's Red Light District. Louise and Martine Fokkens are identical twins. For over fifty years they were working as prostitutes. They freed themselves from the control of their pimps, ran their own brothel, and set up the first informal trade union for prostitutes. They are familiar faces in Amsterdam's Red Light District, but soon they will bid their farewells. The Ladies Fokkens is a portrait of these remarkable women, as well as a history of the Red Light District over the past fifty years.TagLine Meet the Fokkens
They're up to their old tricksTrailer For Meet the Fokkens
Review For Meet the Fokkens
Even if this film were not cordially made, which it is, it would have a considerable jump-start.Stanley Kauffmann-The New Republic
Despite the occasional stumble, the doc never falls, thanks to the sheer strength of its subjects' undaunted and indomitable character.
Rick Groen-Globe and Mail
The doc gives a rare look at the business of plying the world's oldest profession over the past 50 years in the famously tolerant city, but the directors are a bit too hands-off and the narrative wanders.
Linda Barnard-Toronto Star
Year by year, they've shared every part of their lives, and now the Fokkens sashay into the future, sharing memories and viewpoints as well as their neon-bright identical outfits.
Farran Smith Nehme-New York Post
The filmmakers follow the sisters around town, creating a delightful portrait of good-natured extroverts.
Elizabeth Weitzman-New York Daily News
The sisters' struggle for autonomy (they opened Amsterdam's only independent brothel until they were forced out by organized crime) reveals a touching commitment to mutual survival.
Jeannette Catsoulis-NPR
Despite the pleasure of spending a little over an hour with these two warm, loving women, Meet the Fokkens often falters as a film.
Emily Kirkpatrick-Paste Magazine
Amusing and even liberating to watch, but lacks sufficient insight and revelations. How often do you get to see a doc about elderly prostitutes?
Avi Offer-NYC Movie Guru
Schröder and Provaas frame their conversation well, making good use of the color, the reflective surfaces, and the surfeit of exposed younger flesh in the District.
Noel Murray-AV Club
The feminist documentary takes up the battered-wife syndrome, low pay for female workers, forced separation of mothers and children and-finally-a woman-owned business. Gloria Steinem must be happy, though the film centers on 69-year-old twin hookers.
Marsha McCreadie-Film Journal International
Few recent studies of commercialized sex have been character profiles, so Rob Schröder and Gabrielle Provaas's doc is an unusual and welcome polemic.
Joseph Jon Lanthier-Slant Magazine
To what degree the seductive senior siblings for sale are leveling with audiences is up for grabs, but certain truths vividly come into play. Namely, their refusal to act old, along with challenging the cultural norms of what it means to be beautiful.
Prairie Miller-NewsBlaze
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