Knol began his career in the audiovisual industry in 2000, working for the Dutch television channel NTR (them NPS), as an editorial intern for the award-winning Dutch history television magazine
Andere Tijden, being mentored by its founder and main editor
Ad van Liempt. After finishing his studies at Leiden University, he started working in 2001 at the production company Pieter van Huystee Film, which mainly specialised in feature length
documentaries for cinema a television,
short films and
experimental films, as well as television fiction. In the years 2001–2007, he worked and was credited under the name “Matthijs Koenen”. From 2004 onwards, he worked as Head of Development, working with documentary filmmakers on creatively developing treatments and setting up financing strategies for their films. He worked closely together with Amsterdam-based Dutch and international filmmakers
Heddy Honigmann (
Dame la Mano),
Mani Kaul (
I Am No Other),
Peter Delpeut (
Go West, Young Man!), Ramón Gieling (
Johan Cruijff – En Un Momento Dado,
Tramontana,
Cine Ambulante,
Welcome to Hadassah Hospital,
BiBaBo), Marjoleine Boonstra (
What Keeps Mankind Alive,
Haven),
Boris Gerrets (
Garden Stories,
Driving Dreams,
People I Could Have Been and Maybe Am), Ditteke Mensink (
Farewell),
Klaartje Quirijns (
The Dictator Hunter), Mercedes Stalenhoef (
Carmen Meets Borat), In 2007, he started working for IDFA, setting up the festival's industry office which contained the co-production and sales markets Forum and Docs for Sale, as well as the educational programme IDFAcademy. In charge of the latter programme, he initiated the IDFAcademy Summer School in 2008.
Berlin years Shortly afterwards, in September 2008, Matthijs Wouter Knol was appointed programme manager of the
Berlinale Talent Campus by
Dieter Kosslick, then director of the
Berlin International Film Festival. In his role as programme manager, he organised numerous and notable seminars, conferences, labs and workshops with an plethora of internationally acclaimed speakers and mentors from the film industry. During his management, the name and profile of the Campus programme were changed into “Berlinale Talents”, and with it the names of the affiliated regional satellite programmes of Berlinale Talents in
Guadalajara (
Mexico),
Buenos Aires (
Argentina),
Durban (
South Africa),
Sarajevo (
Bosnia and Herzegovina). He initiated new Talents programmes in
Tokyo (
Japan, 2011) and
Beirut (
Lebanon, 2014). Subsequently, Knol was appointed in 2014 as director of the
European Film Market (EFM), the Berlinale's annual business platform and the second-largest film industry gathering of the international film industry. He succeeded former long-time director Beki Probst. Focusing on modernising the market place during his tenure, he actively implemented new platforms into the existing market structure and developed new business formats, resulting in an increasing amount of visitors (2020: 11.423) and fast-growing sales and revenue numbers. Among the new, successful platforms were the
EFM Producers Hub,
EFM DocSalon,
Berlinale Series Market & Conference,
Berlinale Africa Hub,
EFM Landmark and
EFM Horizon. He introduced and organised “Country in Focus” programmes at the European Film Market with Mexico (2017),
Canada (2018),
Norway (2019) and
Chile (2020). He continued his work as director of the European Film Market under the new Berlinale management of executive director Mariëtte Rissenbeek and artistic director
Carlo Chatrian in 2019. Matthijs Wouter Knol was a member of the selection committee of the Competition of the Berlin International Film Festival between 2014 and 2019. In 2011, he was one of the co-founders of the “Berlinale Residency” programme, which in its first years was the starting point of award-winning films such as
Foxtrot (Samuel Maoz, 2018) and the Academy Award-winning
A Fantastic Woman (Sebastian Lelio, 2017).
European Film Academy In January 2021, Matthijs Wouter Knol was appointed by the board of the European Film Academy as its new director, succeeding Marion Döring. In the first year of his tenure at the Academy, he initiated the Anti-Racism Taskforce for European Film (ARTEF), addressing widespread institutional racism in the industry and forming a conglomerate of European film organisations and institutions aiming to tackle this. He also acts as a board member of the International Coalition for Filmmakers at Risk (ICFR), of which the European Film Academy is a founding partner. == Extra ==