WWII thrillers aren’t necessarily rare, but Black Book certainly is one of a kind. This film, the most expensive Dutch film ever made, is full of spies--double and even triple agents--and twists and turns. It is based on true events, all put together for one exciting movie. Coming in at 2 hours and 25 minutes, Paul Verhoeven’s latest could have stood to have been about 10 or 15 minutes shorter, but beyond that, this is a suspenseful movie with action, sex, and intrigue.
Carice van Houten (no relation to Milhouse) plays Rachel Stein, a Jewish woman and former cabaret singer hiding from the Nazis in a country farm outside of
This is a world where not all Gestapo are evil, and where even the evil ones sing, play the piano, and laugh, just as we all do. Likewise, not all Resistance fighters are saints, with some even being anti-Semitic. In
Overall, this is a thrilling, suspenseful, and at times an offbeat film. But I think that what I like most of all, is the authenticity of it. Verhoeven comes from a school of filmmaking that eschews CGI when possible. When a scene calls for airplanes to be flying in the sky he shoots a real B-17 bomber. When he shoots the liberation scenes he uses close to 1200 extras to line the streets, all wearing orange (the color of the
Also check out Sebastian Koch as the Gestapo officer. Last year he played a dissident in a totalitarian state in The Lives of Others, but in this film he plays the agent of a totalitarian state. If you are, like me, tired of the latest American clichéd and meaningless action flick, then you should definitely check this movie out. It has action, suspense, and best of all, meaning.
Final Rating: 8/10
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