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Erik's Heroes

Original title: Soldaat van Oranje
  • 1977
  • R
  • 2h 35m
IMDb RATING
7.6/10
14K
YOUR RATING
Rutger Hauer and Jeroen Krabbé in Erik's Heroes (1977)
Soldier Of Orange: Motorcycle
Play clip3:42
Watch Soldier Of Orange: Motorcycle
2 Videos
60 Photos
Coming-of-AgePeriod DramaDramaRomanceThrillerWar

During World War II, Dutch students join the resistance movement against the German occupation of the Netherlands.During World War II, Dutch students join the resistance movement against the German occupation of the Netherlands.During World War II, Dutch students join the resistance movement against the German occupation of the Netherlands.

  • Director
    • Paul Verhoeven
  • Writers
    • Erik Hazelhoff Roelfzema
    • Kees Holierhoek
    • Gerard Soeteman
  • Stars
    • Rutger Hauer
    • Jeroen Krabbé
    • Susan Penhaligon
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.6/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Paul Verhoeven
    • Writers
      • Erik Hazelhoff Roelfzema
      • Kees Holierhoek
      • Gerard Soeteman
    • Stars
      • Rutger Hauer
      • Jeroen Krabbé
      • Susan Penhaligon
    • 48User reviews
    • 34Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos2

    Soldier Of Orange: Motorcycle
    Clip 3:42
    Soldier Of Orange: Motorcycle
    Soldier Of Orange: Beach
    Clip 1:16
    Soldier Of Orange: Beach
    Soldier Of Orange: Beach
    Clip 1:16
    Soldier Of Orange: Beach

    Photos60

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    + 54
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    Top cast49

    Edit
    Rutger Hauer
    Rutger Hauer
    • Erik Lanshof
    Jeroen Krabbé
    Jeroen Krabbé
    • Guus LeJeune
    Susan Penhaligon
    Susan Penhaligon
    • Susan
    Edward Fox
    Edward Fox
    • Colonel Rafelli
    Lex van Delden
    • Nico
    Derek de Lint
    Derek de Lint
    • Alex
    Huib Rooymans
    • Jan Weinberg
    Dolf de Vries
    • Jack Ten Brinck
    Eddy Habbema
    • Robby Froost
    Belinda Meuldijk
    • Esther
    Peter Faber
    • Will Dostgaarde
    Rijk de Gooyer
    Rijk de Gooyer
    • Gestapo-man Breitner
    Paul Brandenburg
    • SS Lt. Thelen
    Ward de Ravet
    • Resistance Leader
    Bert Struys
    • Resistance Leader
    Reinhard Kolldehoff
    Reinhard Kolldehoff
    • Geisman
    • (as René Kolldehoff)
    Andrea Domburg
    Andrea Domburg
    • Queen Wilhelmina
    Guus Hermus
    • Van der Zanden
    • Director
      • Paul Verhoeven
    • Writers
      • Erik Hazelhoff Roelfzema
      • Kees Holierhoek
      • Gerard Soeteman
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews48

    7.614.4K
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    Featured reviews

    Infofreak

    A first rate war movie that has just about something for everyone. Great stuff!

    Apparently when Spielberg saw 'Soldier Of Orange' he phoned Paul Verhoeven congratulating him and urging him to come to Hollywood. That took about ten years but in retrospect in might have been a big mistake. Despite an excellent Hollywood debut (the savage science fiction satire 'RoboCop', still one of Verhoeven's best), the directors movies have been mostly disappointing ever since. Just compare his most recent movie, the lame 'Hollow Man', to this one. There's no denying that there has been a major drop in quality. 'Soldier Of Orange' is worth mentioning in the same breath as such classic war movies as Kubrick's 'Paths Of Glory', Fuller's 'The Big Red One' and Peckinpah's 'Cross Of Iron'. It's that good. Considering it was made by a director with a reputation for provocation and general outrageousness, it plays it surprisingly straight, and in my opinion is all the better for it. There is some violence, but it is appropriate for the subject matter, and there is very little sex. This is quite an epic story dealing with the fates of six University friends in Holland after the outbreak of WW2. The ensemble cast is excellent, but Verhoeven favourites Rutger Hauer and Jeroen Krabbe are particularly outstanding. Hauer still has a strong cult following despite appearing in a string of b-grade movies for many years. Krabbe is best remembered by most movie fans as a Bond villain, if he's remembered at all. It's such a shame neither actor achieved the international success they both deserved. Check out their performances in 'Soldier Of Orange', Krabbe's in 'The Fourth Man', and Hauer's in 'Flesh & Blood'. Verhoeven certainly got the best out of them both. The supporting cast also includes dependable Brit Edward Fox ('The Day Of The Jackal') and Susan Penhaligon of cult Aussie thriller 'Patrick'. 'Soldier Of Orange' will be quite an eye opener for anyone unfamiliar with Verhoeven's pre-Hollywood output. It's a first rate war movie that has just about something for everyone. Highly recommended, as is the equally good (but very different) 'Spetters' and 'The Fourth Man'.
    8BeneCumb

    Realistic panoramic film

    Based on true events, the film provides a wide temporal overview of different destinies students of different ethnicities and background had to face during World War II. This big war ruined lots of relations and comprehensions, but unlike in Eastern-European countries, occupation and its consequences remained relatively short-time, and the confrontation was still on the so-called centre/right level. For example, fate of the Baltic nations was even more tragic and disruptive...

    Anyway, the film in question is well written, directed and played; names like Paul Verhoeven, Rutger Hauer and Jeroen Krabbé are currently internationally known and appraised, before that they were active mostly in the local scene. Hauer and Krabbé are real character actors, having also distinctive appearance, not just cute face / gleaming smile so characteristic to many US counterparts. On the other hand, if necessary, they are also talented team players, merging well with background and co-performers; the latter are also strong and even, and the Brits and Germans are played by respective native-speakers.

    A powerful film, recommended to all those fond of war dramas.
    FilmFlaneur

    Excellent war drama

    Paul Verhoeven's Soldaat van Oranje (aka: Soldier Of Orange), the religious excesses of his Flesh + Blood (1985) not withstanding, is probably the closest the director has come to an epic. At the equivalent of $2.5 million, it was the most expensive Dutch feature film made at that time. It was also the film which brought him to the attention of Hollywood, exemplified by Spielberg's phone call to him after seeing the film: "What are you doing in Holland? Come to the USA, things are better there!"

    During his childhood in The Hague, Verhoeven had been witness to the activities of the occupying Nazis, which made a great impression on him. He remembers vividly his father hiding in a cellar and seeing dead bodies in the street, for example. As one biographer has noted, Soldier Of Orange "was a theme he could taste, feel, and breathe," a film shot with of honesty and verisimilitude, if less of the director's characteristic excess, though still with his distinctive vision and style. There are some familiar faces in the large cast: Jeroen Krabbé (as Guus Le Jeune) who took the lead in De Vierde Man (aka: The Fourth Man) is a key protagonist, and the svelte and good-looking Rutger Hauer, as the central character Erik Lanshof. The blond Hauer, who had until now been utilised by Verhoeven as a working class hero in such films as Turks Fruit (aka: Turkish Delight, 1973), and afterwards in Spetters (1980) is here transformed into a prosperous war hero, modelled on Erik Roelfzema, the author of the original dramatic memoir. Much of the fraught virility usually associated with Hauer is suppressed here, although it briefly reappears during his dalliance with Susan (Susan Penhaligon).

    That Erik/Hauer is the focus of the film is suggested by his first appearance, although the episodic nature of much that follows in the narrative sometimes sidelines his significance. He is inserted, Zelig-like, into opening newsreel footage, the 'single aide' at the post war return of Queen Wilhemina. Like so many of his Dutch contemporaries, Erik is comfortably well off, a man to whom (if only at first) the conflict seems just another grand adventure. Previously the middle class had been presented in Verhoeven's work as exploiters (as in Keetje Keeple, 1975) or as sexually ludicrous in Wat Zen Ik? (aka: Business Is Business, 1971). Such boisterous social irony is, in the present film, conspicuous by its absence, as if the contemplation of war forced a different responsibility upon the filmmakers. Erik and his class of 1939-40 may sometimes be made effete, but never risible. Made at a time when Netherlanders were starting to face the realities of their wartime existence, unpleasant facts about home collaboration and acquiescence to occupation, Verhoeven's film confronts these issues with a tale of student friends torn apart by war, having to face moral dilemmas and choices. Soldier Of Orange, complete with its stirring title music, is a title with a singular subject, implying a monolithic view of an individual at war. But the film actually focuses on a plurality of men, an ensemble of half a dozen privileged students, each of them responding to the conflict in a different way. Although Erik is the nominal hero, his actions are often ineffectual and have dubious results. His counterweight is Alex (Derek de Lint). Having served in the Dutch army, he sees his mother interned and decides to join the Waffen SS. The two meet only twice after: at a parade, where the Dutch civilians give flowers to the Germans, and at a dance where the two tango face to face, with obvious connotations of identity and mutual resemblance. Of the other friends, Robby (Eddie Habbema) betrays his colleagues to save his girlfriend, while another stays out of it entirely - one of only two surviving out of the initial group picture.

    Soldier Of Orange begins, aptly enough, with an initiation ceremony. Cowed, humiliated, then celebratory, Erik and the others have to undergo rituals to be accepted into the student body. Of course the mocking cruelties they undergo echo the Nazi repression of later on: the fear, the anal torture and the firing squads. More immediately the process confirms for us the circle of friends, frozen in a group photograph, set to be tested further as what begins as a student's club ends as a man's struggle. This opening initiation is the coming conflict in microcosm. Soon it will be the flames of war, rather than the soup comically poured over Erik's head, that offer a definitive rite of passage. Verhoeven manages some exciting set pieces during the course of the film: the bombing attack on the barracks, the beach shootings scene, the initiation and the aborted seaplane rescue being standouts. There are also some quieter, poetic moments, such as the overhead and point-of-view shots of Jean's white shirted execution in the dunes. (A striking scene which makes one regret Verhoeven's recent descent into the special effects laden un-subtlety of the Hollow Man.) The episodic nature of the narrative is both a blessing and a curse: while the number of characters and subplots makes it possible to examine a society from a range of viewpoints, the lack of a single, strong momentum leads to occasional slacking of tension.

    The abiding impression gained at the end of this long (167 minutes) film is that nothing in this war has been black and white, and Verhoeven has faithfully suggested the historical revisionism of the time. Out of these moral uncertainties, he has crafted an exciting and engrossing work, one that he now considers his best Dutch project. Although the ambiguities helped make Soldier of Orange's initial critical reception lukewarm, it was exceptionally well received by the Dutch public. Interestingly, for overseas release the film was renamed Survival Run - a change that suggests a work much less of a complex national portrait than it actually is.
    Deusvolt

    An eye-opening film about Dutch resistance against the Nazi German occupation.

    I was told by a Dutch priest friend that his country's soldiers responded to the German invasion riding on bicycles. And they were confronted by Panzer divisions.

    Apart from the films about the Ten Boom family and their heroic exploits in saving Dutch Jews from the death camps (e.g. The Hiding Place), there are few cinematic efforts portraying Dutch resistance against the Nazis. Soldier of Orange was therefore an eye-opener. One would have thought that the Dutch, because of their proximity to Germany, with their cognate languages would have succumbed to Anschluss as did Austria. The stoic courage of Queen Wilhelmina in insisting on staying with her people even after it was clear that Dutch forces had collapsed in the face of the German Blitzkrieg was touching. Only reluctantly did she accept the advice of her ministers that she would be more effective as a symbol of resistance abroad persuaded her to accept the British offer to fly her out of her beloved country.

    And yet, despite the exciting episodes of Dutch resistance and espionage against the German occupiers, what proved more interesting to me was the depiction of student life at the universities. I was both fascinated and appalled at the extent and brutality of the hazing undergone by the lower classmen which included the character of Rutger Hauer. In my country, the Philippines, such hazing have led to several deaths and although condemned in general, they go on.
    9tyguy-2

    Great story of courage and determination

    True story of Erik Hazelhof, a young university lad who becomes involved in the Dutch resistance movement during WWII. We follow him and some of his close friends as they take different paths during the early occupation of Nederland by the Nazis. One of them becomes a nazi collaborator, another is Jewish and does his best to defy the occupational troops, the others join the resistance in varying degrees. The story gets complex in its telling and you get an in depth look at how some civilians did their best to stay alive and help the war effort. The story focuses mostly on a Hauer's character. I thought it was great that he was not a 'John Wayne-Rambo' type of character. Instead we find a chap who is a bit reluctant to do his part and is more concerned with surviving the war years. This movie works on several levels. I love espionage and this has plenty of it. You also can look at it as a human drama to see how the war affects the comradery of the lads. And for you gals out there, there are some love scenes. There are some great scenes that capture the spirit of the time. This movie can be added to the likes of Schindler's List, Das Boot, and Saving Private Ryan as great WWII movies.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The explosions in this movie were provided not by special effects technicians, but by the Dutch Marines. In his DVD commentary on this movie, director Paul Verhoeven states that the explosive charges were held in place with metal. When one of the charges was set off, it blew the metal to bits. One of the flying fragments nearly killed Rutger Hauer.
    • Goofs
      It is correct that Dutch squadrons where not equipped with Moquito airplanes but not every Dutch pilot was flying with a Dutch squadron. Some of them flew with regular RAF squadrons. Erik Hazelhof Roelfzema (played by Rutger Hauer) actually flew Mosquito's for a RAF squadron.
    • Quotes

      Geisman: Did you write that?

      Erik Lanshof: Sir, yes sir.

      Geisman: What did you write that with?

      Erik Lanshof: Sir, with shit, sir.

    • Alternate versions
      The German video version released in 1988 was heavily cut for about 35 min., in 2007 this film was finally released uncut in Germany as part of the "Paul Verhoeven-Klassiker Edition".
    • Connections
      Featured in Sneak Previews: Soldier of Orange/The Human Factor/Coal Miner's Daughter/The Europeans (1980)

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    • How long is Soldier of Orange?Powered by Alexa
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    • Why does Queen Wilhelmina flee The Netherlands? Is that not cowardly when so many of her subjects are bleeding any dying under the Nazis?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 22, 1977 (Netherlands)
    • Countries of origin
      • Netherlands
      • Belgium
    • Languages
      • Dutch
      • English
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Le choix du destin
    • Filming locations
      • Noordwijk, Zuid-Holland, Netherlands(Hotel Huis Ter Duin and beach)
    • Production companies
      • Excelsior Films
      • Film Holland
      • Rob Houwer Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • NLG 5,000,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      2 hours 35 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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