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Voor een verloren soldaat

  • 1992
  • Unrated
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
5.1K
YOUR RATING
Andrew Kelley and Maarten Smit in Voor een verloren soldaat (1992)
TragedyTragic RomanceDramaRomanceWar

Set in The Netherlands at the end of WW II, this touching story, told in flashbacks, explores the complex and romantic relationship between an adult soldier and a displaced, lonely adolescen... Read allSet in The Netherlands at the end of WW II, this touching story, told in flashbacks, explores the complex and romantic relationship between an adult soldier and a displaced, lonely adolescent boy.Set in The Netherlands at the end of WW II, this touching story, told in flashbacks, explores the complex and romantic relationship between an adult soldier and a displaced, lonely adolescent boy.

  • Director
    • Roeland Kerbosch
  • Writers
    • Don Bloch
    • Rudi van Dantzig
    • Roeland Kerbosch
  • Stars
    • Maarten Smit
    • Andrew Kelley
    • Jeroen Krabbé
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    5.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Roeland Kerbosch
    • Writers
      • Don Bloch
      • Rudi van Dantzig
      • Roeland Kerbosch
    • Stars
      • Maarten Smit
      • Andrew Kelley
      • Jeroen Krabbé
    • 45User reviews
    • 7Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win total

    Photos37

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    Top cast26

    Edit
    Maarten Smit
    • Jeroen Boman - jong
    Andrew Kelley
    • Walt Cook
    Jeroen Krabbé
    Jeroen Krabbé
    • Jeroen Boman - oud
    Freark Smink
    • Hait
    Elsje de Wijn
    • Mem
    Derk-Jan Kroon
    • Jan
    Wiendelt Hooijer
    • Henk
    Iris Misset
    • Bonden
    Gineke de Jager
    • Elly
    Tatum Dagelet
    Tatum Dagelet
    • Gertie
    Marie-José Kouwenhoven
    • Renske
    Valerie Valentine
    • Laura
    William Sutton
    • Chuck
    Andrew Butling
    • Buikspreker
    Andrew Cassani
    • Winslow
    Moniek Kramer
    • Moeder Jeroen
    • (as Monique Kramer)
    Antoinette van Belle
    • Begeleidster
    Rients Gratama
    • Dominee
    • Director
      • Roeland Kerbosch
    • Writers
      • Don Bloch
      • Rudi van Dantzig
      • Roeland Kerbosch
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews45

    7.55.1K
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    Featured reviews

    8MOscarbradley

    Deeply touching if in the end very controversial 'love' story

    It's unlikely that a movie like "For a Lost Soldier" would be made today. Some might say we live in more 'protective' times; others might say we live in more puritanical times. I have no intention of getting into arguments over the Me2 Movement or indeed about how cinema and the world at large has become more censorial on what we can see or say or do. "For a Lost Soldier" is by no means an explicit film but its theme is clear. It's about a 12 year old boy in war-time Holland who not only develops a friendship with an older Canadian soldier but also falls in love with him as well and, we are lead to believe, probably experiences something sexual with him, too. The boy grows up gay, (he is played in adult life by Jeroen Krabbe), though I would suggest he was always gay and was simply acting on his nature.

    Since the film was made in 1992 the age of consent has gone down and the world in general is thankfully much more accepting of gay relationships in all forms though children are still protected in law from exploitation and rightly so, though someone seeing "For a Lost Soldier" might argue no exploitation takes place while others will argue that Walt, the soldier's relationship with the child is predatory since it is he who initiates the sexual element and may argue that the abuse is at least emotional. Some, on the other hand, will see him as innocent as the boy.

    Of course, what the film basically is is a love story; a tale of first love, the difference being that both protagonists are male and one of them is a child. It was controversial when it was made and it's just as controversial now. It discusses issues that most people still find repugnant and it will always be a film that will have difficulty finding its audience. It isn't that well-made; director Roeland Kerbosch isn't the most proficient of film-makers and the acting is adequate at best but it remains a brave and challenging film and ultimately a very touching one. Unfortunately, times being what they are, it's now almost impossible to see.
    8gftbiloxi

    A Difficult Subject; A Beautiful, Touching Film; A Problematic Stance

    Loosely based on the autobiography of Rudi van Danzi, FOR A LOST SOLIDER tells the story of a Dutch boy's emotional and sexual relationship with a young adult American solider during World War II. The film presents the relationship as a loving and often magical one--and asks the viewer to consider if such relationships are intrinsically abusive or if they might, in extraordinary instances, have validity and even integrity.

    It should be very obvious that the subject and issues raised are likely to provoke a knee-jerk reaction in most people--but even so, FOR A LOST SOLDIER has remarkable delicacy. The film is not explotational in any way, it is beautifully acted and filmed, and the difficult material is handled by the director, writer, and cinematographer with considerable grace.

    All of this said, however, the film is so careful to avoid the obvious pitfalls that in some respects it fails to make any significant statement. What ultimately emerges is a memory--the film is presented as an extended flashback--but exactly how that memory reverberates in present time is vaguely expressed at best. And while the film does not consider this particular relationship to be deliberately abusive, it begs but never answers the question of intrinsic abusive, leaving the viewer to do battle with that knotty issue entirely on their own.

    Those who watch FOR A LOST SOLIDER thoughtfully and with an open mind will find it forces them to define their own ideas about what is and is not abusive. This may actually be point of the film, to motivate an examination of personal values--but if so it is a point made by a very, at times almost impossibly indirect implication. Recommended for sophisticated viewers, but even they are more likely to find it more problematic than substantial.

    Gary F. Taylor, aka GFT, Amazon Reviewer
    7BeneCumb

    Just a realistic narration of war-time Friesland

    Having lived and worked in the Netherlands and knowing its language, I have been interested in the Dutch cinema as well, particularly if Rutger Hauer or Jeroen Krabbé present. There have lots of films on the WWII been made, nicely versatile ones, as the period was one of the most painful and complex in the country's history. Thus, I was eager to learn how the war era was made compatible with such a sensitive topic like man-boy relationship.

    But the latter was not much visible in Voor een verloren soldaat (perhaps in the autobiographical novel of the same title - I have not read that); it was even not clearly visible if there was some mutual erotics at all. What we saw was a 20+ years foreign soldier acting as a caring mentor, showing a boy far from home and family new angles of life; besides, I do not believe that showing affection towards a boy would have been normally accepted by both the religious Dutchmen and militant Canadians in those days...

    Anyway, the mood in the film is pleasant, performances realistic, and viewers obtain a nice overview of Friesland under slackening Nazi occupation. But do not try to find any sensationalism, as mentioned, it is a good depiction of friendship - with some affection - during a war period when many things and deeds are perceived in another way.
    10thinker1691

    Boyhood Memories and Forbidden Love

    The Film " For A Lost Soldier " has established itself as a classic. Based on the autobiography of Rudi van Danzi who writes of his early experiences in war torn Europe. He shares his boyhood and how he was separated from his family, sent to the dutch countryside for safety. A lonely, shy youth, he shares the freedom of his liberated country with Canadian soldiers. One of which realizes the boy's 'special' loneliness and befriends him. In the process, the two share a brief forbidden love, establishing the later adult memories which Danzi uses to revitalizes his depleted inspiration. Seen by some, as perverted, the film is nevertheless readily accepted by many others as a heartwarming and sympathetic view of youthful homosexuality. The author, director and actors earn fulsome praise. *****
    BBB-6

    A very interesting film

    I have watched this film many times and I recently viewed it again. The only really interesting part of the movie is the relationship between the young boy and the soldier. Everything else that happens in the film is really just to establish why this young man would be drawn to someone kind and caring. What I wish would have been delved into more was how the soldier came to feel the way he does about the kid. He talks a little about his past with his father and mother but never really explains himself personally. He does not look like he would have ever had a problem getting a girl, so his "prediliction" becomes even more a mystery.

    I really applaud the fact that the film maker was able to tell this story so sensitively without it being lurid. It is a shame I think that a film like this could never have been made in America, "the land of the free".

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Film debut of Maarten Smit.
    • Goofs
      Although the story takes place during World War II, the backdrop set used in the show that the Canadian soldiers put on for the townspeople features a red-and-white maple leaf Canadian flag, not adopted until 1965.
    • Quotes

      Walt Cook: I love you... my prince. You're mine.

    • Connections
      References Blanche-Neige et les Sept Nains (1937)

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    FAQ18

    • How long is For a Lost Soldier?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 22, 1992 (Netherlands)
    • Country of origin
      • Netherlands
    • Languages
      • Dutch
      • German
      • English
      • Eastern Frisian
    • Also known as
      • Pour un soldat perdu
    • Production companies
      • Sigma Film Productions
      • Algemene Vereniging Radio Omroep (AVRO)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $386,329
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 32m(92 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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