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IMDbPro

L'homme qui voulait savoir

Original title: Spoorloos
  • 1988
  • 12
  • 1h 47m
IMDb RATING
7.7/10
51K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,092
115
Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu in L'homme qui voulait savoir (1988)
Rex and Saskia, a young couple in love, are on vacation. They stop at a busy service station and Saskia is abducted. After three years and no sign of Saskia, Rex begins receiving letters from the abductor.
Play trailer1:33
1 Video
94 Photos
Psychological ThrillerMysteryThriller

Rex and Saskia, a young couple in love, are on vacation. They stop at a busy service station and Saskia is abducted. After three years and no sign of Saskia, Rex begins receiving letters fro... Read allRex and Saskia, a young couple in love, are on vacation. They stop at a busy service station and Saskia is abducted. After three years and no sign of Saskia, Rex begins receiving letters from the abductor.Rex and Saskia, a young couple in love, are on vacation. They stop at a busy service station and Saskia is abducted. After three years and no sign of Saskia, Rex begins receiving letters from the abductor.

  • Director
    • George Sluizer
  • Writers
    • Tim Krabbé
    • George Sluizer
  • Stars
    • Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu
    • Gene Bervoets
    • Johanna ter Steege
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.7/10
    51K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,092
    115
    • Director
      • George Sluizer
    • Writers
      • Tim Krabbé
      • George Sluizer
    • Stars
      • Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu
      • Gene Bervoets
      • Johanna ter Steege
    • 282User reviews
    • 120Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 6 nominations total

    Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:33
    Trailer

    Photos94

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    Top cast26

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    Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu
    Bernard-Pierre Donnadieu
    • Raymond Lemorne
    Gene Bervoets
    Gene Bervoets
    • Rex Hofman
    Johanna ter Steege
    Johanna ter Steege
    • Saskia Wagter
    Gwen Eckhaus
    • Lieneke
    Bernadette Le Saché
    • Simone Lemorne
    Tania Latarjet
    • Denise
    Lucille Glenn
    • Gabrielle
    Roger Souza
    • Manager
    Caroline Appéré
    • Cashier
    Pierre Forget
    Pierre Forget
    • Farmer Laurent
    Didier Rousset
    • TV Journalist
    Raphaëline Goupilleau
    • Gisele Marzin
    • (as Raphaëline)
    Robert Lucibello
    • Teacher
    David Bayle
    • Lemorne (16 Years)
    Doumee
    • Lady 'Prisunic'
    • (as Doumée)
    Eric Jacquet
    • Pump Attendant
    Aziz Djahnit
    • Pump Attendant
    Linda Wise
    • English Tourist
    • Director
      • George Sluizer
    • Writers
      • Tim Krabbé
      • George Sluizer
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews282

    7.750.6K
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    Featured reviews

    Bill-308

    Brilliant suspense classic

    When I searched for "The Vanishing," all I could find was that abysmal "Americanized" version of the film starring Jeff Bridges. What a horrible mistake of a movie that was. Let's consider, instead, the original film in which a fellow and his girlfriend are on an outing when she vanishes without a trace. He becomes obsessed with discovering what happened to her. Whether he can be completely successful in his quest is the whole point of the movie. Why the original director would remake this little masterpiece in English with a Hollywood ending is completely beyond me. See the original. You won't soon forget it.
    8barberoux

    The Horror

    It is best not to know much about this movie before seeing it. It is sufficient to know that it is about a women who disappears and a man's obsession to try and find out what happened to her. This is not a sappy love story and it bears little resemblance to the pale American remake. Reading more about the story will ruin how it unfolds. It was well filmed and well acted. The ending is a shocker. I think reviewers who write a synopsis of the movie's plot do a disservice to people reading the review. The movie's story should unfold before a viewer. The enjoyment is in how the story is told. This is all the more true regarding "The Vanishing".
    8ToldYaSo

    You won't want to let your loved ones out of your sight after this film

    There aren't too many scenarios like this one. The original version and the Hollywood remake of this film were both directed by the same man, George Sluizer. As I understand from popular opinion, this is one film that was fine the first time round, and not well received on the second go. I cannot fairly compare them, and I have no more desire to see the remake of "Spoorloos" than I do the remake of "La Femme Nikita", namely "The Point Of No Return".

    I saw the original version upon the strong recommendation of a newspaper reviewer proclaiming it one of the most disturbing films they'd ever seen. The photograph of a young couple about to be torn apart in the paper reeled me in.

    A pleasant holiday excursion goes horribly wrong when a man's lady friend goes missing at a crowded rest stop. He grasps at straws in desperation as very little can be done because few clues or leads exist. The abduction is arbitrary and nearly flawless.

    The film was indeed well done and what struck me the most was the focus on that of the villain. It is a portrayal of a normal, respectable family man who trains himself in meticulous detail for an abduction. His cold, calculating approach is probably the most frightening aspect. His inhumanity is difficult to comprehend.

    Many film endings can be shocking and may stick with you forever, and for a lot of people that is certainly the case with this film. That's why I was surprised to learn that the TV commercials for this film gave away the ending. However it didn't ruin the film for me.

    The suspense and chilling setting of this film makes it hard to forget. The viewer constantly wondering, "What would I do?" or "How would I cope?". Impossible questions we all hope we'll never find the answer to.

    Of course, keep a few handy responses in mind should you watch this with your better half when they ask the inevitable, almost rhetorical question, "What would you do if I went missing and you couldn't find me?"

    "I'd surely die, dear."
    baserock_love

    The dry subject matter turns into the most horrific movie I have ever seen. Absolute genius.

    This is not a token 10 out of ten to try and inflate the ratings for a movie I like. This is one of the few perfect movies I can honestly say I have ever seen.

    I'm a huge horror fanatic and I put off seeing this despite it being recommended time and time again because the subject matter is so mundane. This move is the only horror move I have ever seen move that transcended scary to downright shocking to my very soul.

    It was a very unique experience that no movie has ever duplicated before or since. Once it was over, i actually just sat there for about 10 minutes thinking about what I had just seen, it was only after pondering it for a bit that i realized that the pacing and just sheer implications of what i had just seen was probably the most disturbing and awful yet utterly brilliant and in a strange way beautiful thing I had ever seen because as others have stated, it couldn't have possibly ended any other way. The viewer won't want it to end any other way.

    Through impeccable pacing and direction George Sluizer manipulates the viewer in a way I never thought could be possible, it would be criminal to spoil ANYTHING from this movie but I found myself in the same conundrum the protagonist Rex finds himself in at the ending and rooting something yet at the same time dreading to see it's result, but I must see. I can't think of any ending to any movie that was more fitting and a better conclusion than the ending of Spoorloos.

    Fans of psychological horror, this more than anything is required viewing. I await the day that a film can make me feel the way this one did and frankly I doubt it will ever come.

    Bravo, and shame on you George for the abysmal American and Americanized remake that absolutely ruined this movie for so many people I know. This movie is a masterpiece and half the people I know will never be able to enjoy it.
    8Xstal

    A Great Thriller...

    The mark of a great film thriller is that it keeps you guessing until the very end and questioning whether, under the same circumstances, you would behave in the same way - either as the villain or the victim - great film!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Tim Krabbé, who wrote both the novel and the screenplay that was adapted from it, based the story on a newspaper article that he accidentally read about a female tourist who disappeared from a bus trip after buying chewing gum at a gas station in France. The police had searched for two nights without finding a trace of the girl. Ten years later, Krabbé did extensive research and found that the girl had turned up alive and well one day later; she had simply boarded the wrong bus. Krabbé even called her to thank her for providing him with the inspiration for the story.
    • Goofs
      When in the car with his daughter, Raymonde leans over and locks the passenger door, but seconds later the button is no longer pushed down.
    • Quotes

      Raymond Lemorne: You start with an idea in your head, and you take a step... then a second... Soon, you realize you're up to your neck in something intense, but that doesn't matter. You keep at it for the sheer pleasure of it. For the pure satisfaction it might bring you.

    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Queens Logic/Run/Meet the Applegates/The Vanishing (1991)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 20, 1989 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Netherlands
      • France
    • Languages
      • Dutch
      • French
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Desvanecimiento
    • Filming locations
      • Rue des Lombards, Nîmes, Gard, Occitanie, France
    • Production companies
      • Argos Films
      • Co-Productiefonds Binnenlandse Omroep
      • Golden Egg
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $79,970
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 47 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1

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