Why We Can’t Watch Buurman en Buurman With My Father

Buurman en Buurman

If you’ve ever watched Dutch children’s television you are probably familiar with Buurman en Buurman. It’s a stop animation show about two neighbours who (in each episode) try to build, fix or invent something. It almost always goes horribly wrong. It does not take long for some small mistake to escalate as they try to find a creative, not well-thought-out, and sometimes life-threatening solution.

I love this show. Because it was originally animated in Czechoslovakia without any dialogue the humour and storytelling is very visual. Everything on screen is fine-tuned to communicate the story and timed perfectly to tell the joke. The fact that the Dutch have dubbed in voices somehow enhances the show even further (rather than detracts from it). It’s a great show…

…that I recently discovered we cannot watch with my father. I discovered this during my parent’s recent Christmas holiday visit, while my five-year-old daughter and my sixty-nine-year-old father were sitting on the sofa watching a few episodes.

It is important to note that one of them is a child who watches each episode in wonder with a smile on her face, laughing and giggling at the humorous events unfolding on the screen, mesmerized by what might happen next. The other is a retired builder.

“That’s not how you do it,” comments my father as Buurman en Buurman try to build a wall by throwing some bricks together.

“You need proper foundations first,” he remarks as they try to make a greenhouse out of empty jam jar pots.

“Use a spirit level at least,” he complains as they try to put up some shelves with randomly found bits of wood.

“Told you so,” he adds later when the shelves fall down.

Before long he was trying to explain the finer points of the building trade to his five-year-old granddaughter. She was very confused. I think he lost her at “foreman oversight.”

I’m glad we have not shown him Bob the Builder. I think he might take issue with the talking sentient vehicles.

Stuart

Stuart is an accident prone Englishman who has been living in the Netherlands since 2001. Even his move to the country was an unintentional accident, the result of replying to a cryptic job advertisement he found one day in a local British magazine. Since then he has learned to love the Dutch (so much so that he married one of them) and now calls the country home. He started the blog Invading Holland in 2006 as a place to share his strange stories of language misunderstandings, cultural confusions and his own accident prone nature.

8 Responses

  1. Aka oscar says:

    Reading the title I thought watching Pat & Mat could be the solution…
    Turns out I was wrong!

  2. vallypee says:

    Haha, Stu! I haven’t seen this. What station is it on? It sounds like a programme I would like and not be as critical as your dad :)

  3. A je To says:

    Even a childrens musical was created in NL. You can go this Saturday in Drachten ;)
    http://www.buurmantheater.nl/

    In other countries it often goes by the name Pat & Mat https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_%26_Mat

    From what I heard “A je to” was/is an expression often used by children.

  4. A je To says:

    Maybe you should start a Youtube channel, Dad watches Pat&Mat. Some shameless self promotion in DWDD. I foresee a meme here.

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